List of Famous people named Augustin
Augustin Hadelich
Augustin Hadelich is an Italian-German-American Grammy-winning classical violinist.
Augustin Legrand
Augustin Legrand is a French actor. He replaced Jonathan Goldsmith as Dos Equis' Most Interesting Man in the World in 2016.
Augustin de Romanet
Augustin Pascal Pierre Louis Marie de Romanet, Comte de Beaune is a French political advisor and business executive, chief executive officer of Groupe ADP since November 2012. He served as the chairman of the Caisse des dépôts et consignations from 2007 to 2012, and held many government positions between 1986 and 2006.
Augustin Ngirabatware
Augustin Ngirabatware is a Rwandan politician who participated in the Rwandan genocide and has been convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.
Augustin Hubert
Augustin Trapenard
Augustin Banyaga
Augustin Banyaga is a Rwandan-born American mathematician whose research fields include symplectic topology and contact geometry. He is currently a Professor of Mathematics at Pennsylvania State University.
Augustin Eduard
Augustin Eduard is a Romanian former professional footballer and currently a manager. As a player, he was signed by FC Argeș in 1976 and grew up in the squad of Leonte Ianovschi, making his debut for the first team of "the White-Violet Eagles" in 1980. Eduard was in that first season part of a squad where Nicolae Dobrin, one of the most important Romanian players ever and a legend of FC Argeș, was the unquestioned leader. In two periods spent at FC Argeș, he played in over 170 matches and then was also part of the Steaua București squad that would go on to win the 1985–86 European Cup, but left the club in summer 1985, after having won a national championship title. In the early 1990s Eduard also played for Steaua's bitter rival Dinamo București and ended his career as a footballer at Gloria Bistrița in 1993.
Augustin Bizimungu
Augustin Bizimungu is a former general of the Rwandan Armed Forces (FAR). On 16 April 1994, at the start of the Rwandan genocide, he was appointed chief of staff of the army and promoted to the rank of Major-General.