This is a list of notable people born, raised or resident in Belfast.
Arts

Brian Desmond Hurst in 1976 (portrait by Allan Warren)

John Lavery

Siobhan McKenna
- Derek Bell (1935–2002), harpist and composer
 - Eric Bell (b. 1947), guitarist; former member of Them and Thin Lizzy
 - James Bingham (1925-2009), artist
 - Doris Blair (born 1915) - artist
 - Kenneth Branagh (born 1960), actor and director
 - Jake Burns (born 1958), musician (Stiff Little Fingers)
 - Vivian Campbell (born 1962), musician (Dio, Def Leppard)
 - Ciaran Carson (1948-2019), poet and novelist
 - Catoan, band
 - Nathan Connolly (born 1981), musician (Snow Patrol)
 - Mairtín Crawford (1967-2004), poet
 - Gerald Dawe (born 1952), poet
 - Gerald Dillon (1916-1971), artist
 - Laura Donnelly (born 1982), actress
 - Jamie Dornan (born 1982), actor
 - Barry Douglas (born 1960), concert pianist
 - Garth Ennis (born 1970), comics writer
 - Padraic Fiacc (1924-2019), poet
 - Olga Fielden (1903–1973), playwright and novelist
 - James Galway (born 1939), musician
 - Joe Graham (1944-2021), writer and historian
 - Stuart Graham (born 1967), actor
 - Ceara Grehan, theatre and opera singer
 - Karen Hassan (born 1981), actress
 - Hector Heathwood (born 1957), photographer of erotica, fetish and burlesque
 - Paul Henry (1876–1958), painter
 - John Hewitt (1907-1987), poet
 - Ciarán Hinds (born 1953), actor
 - P.J. Holden (born 1969), comic artist
 - David Holmes (born 1969), DJ
 - Brian Desmond Hurst (1895-1986), film director
 - Oliver Jeffers (born 1977), artist
 - Brian Keenan (born 1950), hostage and writer
 - Ian Knox (born 1943) comic artist and political cartoonist
 - Sam Kydd (1915-1982), actor
 - Ben Kyle (born 1981), musician, leader of Romantica
 - Sir John Lavery (1856-1941), artist
 - C.S. Lewis (1898-1963), author and scholar
 - Michael Longley (born 1939), poet
 - Ian Masterson, musician[1]
 - Paul Masterson, music producer[2]
 - Gerry McAvoy (born 1951), musician
 - Christopher McCafferty,DJ,Club Promoter
 - Gerard McCarthy (born 1981), actor and television presenter
 - John McCrea (born 1966), comic artist
 - Ian McDonald (born 1960), science fiction author
 - Siobhán McKenna (1922-1986), actress
 - Ali McMordie (born 1959), musician (Stiff Little Fingers)
 - Katie Melua (born 1984), musician
 - Seaneen Molloy, blogger and columnist[3]
 - Brian Moore (1921-1999), novelist
 - Gary Moore (1952-2011), musician, blues and rock guitarist formerly of Thin Lizzy
 - Van Morisson (born 1945), musician
 - Clara Mulholland (1849-1934), writer
 - Ruby Murray (1935-1996), singer/actress
 - Doc Neeson (1947-2014), musician
 - Una O'Connor (1880-1959), actress
 - Jonjo O'Neill (born 1952), actor
 - Patricia Quinn (born 1944), actress in The Rocky Horror Picture Show
 - Stephen Rea (born 1946), actor
 - Bob Shaw, science fiction (1931-1996), author
 - Duke Special (born 1971), musician
 - Bronágh Taggart, actress
 - Austin Trevor (1897-1978), actor
 - Rachel Tucker (born 1981), actress (West End)
 
Business
- Thomas Andrews, shipbuilder
 - Andrew Mulholland, flax manufacturer
 - William Pirrie, 1st Viscount Pirrie, shipbuilder and politician
 - Frank Carson, comedian
 - Nauheed Cyrusi, actress, model, VJ
 - Mary Gormley, beauty queen (Miss Universe Ireland 2000)
 - Mickey Marley, street entertainer
 - Declan Mulholland, actor
 - Ruby Murray, singer
 - Holly Quin-Ankrah, actress
 - Roy Walker, comedian
 - Adrian Zagoritis, songwriter
 
Law
- Robert James McMordie, QC, Irish barrister, politician, and Lord Mayor of Belfast
 - Professor Denis Moloney OBE, solicitor
 
Media
- Gerry Anderson (1944-2014), radio and TV presenter; born and raised in Derry
 - Christine Bleakley (born 1979), TV presenter; born in Newry; grew up in Newtownards
 - Andrea Catherwood (born 1967), newsreader; born and raised in Belfast
 - Eamonn Holmes (born 1959), television presenter; born and raised in Belfast
 - John Irvine, broadcast journalist; born and raised in Belfast
 - Shauna Lowry (born 1970), television presenter; born and raised in Belfast
 - Abeer Macintyre (born 1964), television and radio presenter; born in Amman and moved to Belfast in 1969
 - Lyra McKee (1990-2019), journalist; born and raised in Belfast
 - Colin Murray (born 1977), radio DJ and journalist; born and raised in Belfast
 - Denis Murray (born 1951), broadcast journalist; born in Worcestershire and raised in Belfast
 - Bill Neely (born 1959), broadcast journalist; born and raised in Belfast
 - Stephen Nolan (born 1973), radio and TV presenter DJ; born and raised in Belfast
 - Julian Simmons (born 1952), UTV, TV presenter and public figure; born in Kent and raised in Belfast
 - Fionnuala Sweeney, CNN presenter and reporter; born and raised in Belfast
 
Military
- Bryan Budd, soldier and posthumous VC recipient
 - Patrick Carlin, Victoria Cross recipient
 - Colonel Tim Collins OBE, former commander, Royal Irish Regiment, British Army
 - James Joseph Magennis, submariner and VC recipient
 - William Frederick McFadzean, soldier and posthumous VC recipient
 
Politics
- Gerry Adams (born 1948), republican political leader
 - Paddy Ashdown (1941-2018), former leader of the Liberal Democrats; born in New Delhi, brought up near Comber
 - Tony Banks (1942-2006), later Lord Stratford, politician; born in Befast, grew up in London
 - Sarah "Venie" Barr, political and community activist
 - May Blood, Baroness Blood (1938–2022), Labour member of the House of Lords
 - Robert Bradford (1941-1981), assassinated unionist politician; born in Limavady
 - Sir William Cairns (1826-1886), colonial administrator and Governor of Queensland, Australia
 - Mairead Corrigan (born 1944), Nobel Laureate (Peace)
 - James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon (1871-1940), Prime Minister of Northern Ireland
 - Reg Empey (born 1947), unionist political leader
 - Frank Gault (1826-1896), member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
 - Gerry Fitt (1926-2005), later Lord Fitt, nationalist political leader
 - Chaim Herzog (1918-1997), sixth President of Israel
 - Mary McAleese (born 1951), eighth President of Ireland
 - David McCalden (1951-1990), far-right activist and AIDS victim
 - Arlene McCarthy (born 1960), politician; Member of the European Parliament for North West England for the Labour Party from 1994 to 2014
 - Henry Joy McCracken (1765-1798), leading member of the Society of the United Irishmen
 - Adam McGibbon (born 1988), environmentalist and writer
 - Julia McMordie (1860-1942), Ulster Unionist Party politician; first female High Sheriff of Belfast; born in Hartlepool
 - Peter Robinaon (born 1948), unionist political leader and First Minister of Northern Ireland
 - Bobby Sands (1954-1981), anti H-Block MP for Fermanagh and South Tyrone; hunger striker
 - David Trimble (1944-2022), Nobel Peace Prize winner; first First Minister of Northern Ireland
 - Betty Williams (1943-2020), Nobel Laureate (Peace)
 
Religious
- William Conway (1913-1977), Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh
 - Henry Cooke (1788-1868), Presbyterian minister
 - Robin Eames (born 1936), Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh
 
Science
- Thomas Andrews (1813-1885), chemist and physicist
 - Isobel Agnes Arbuthnot 1870–1963), botanist and botanical collector based in South Africa
 - John Stewart Bell (1928-1990), physicist
 - Jocelyn Bell Burnell (born 1943), astronomer (discoverer of pulsars); born in Lurgan
 - Sidney Elisabeth Croskery (1901-1990), doctor;[4] born in Gortgranagh, Killinure, County Tyrone
 - John Boyd Dunlop (1840-1921), inventor and veterinary surgeon; born in Dreghorn, North Ayrshire, and studied to be a veterinary surgeon at the Dick Vet, University of Edinburgh, moving to Downpatrick, Ireland in 1867
 - George Crawford Hyndman (1796–1867), biologist
 - Charles Lanyon (1813-1889), architect; born in Eastbourne, Sussex; moved to Antrim in 1836 to become county surveyor until 1860; elected Mayor of Belfast in 1862
 - William Lewis (1885–1956), Professor of Physical Chemistry, Liverpool; propounded collision theory
 - William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin, OM, GCVO, PC, PRS, FRSE, (1824-1907), mathematical physicist, engineer, and leader in the physical sciences of the 19th century
 
Sport
- Tom Armstrong, football player
 - George Best, football player
 - Billy Bingham, football player and manager
 - Danny Blanchflower, football player
 - William Clay, football player
 - Sammy Clingan, pro footballer
 - Ray Close, boxer
 - David Cullen, basketball player and 2007 winner of the Arthur Ashe for Courage Award at the ESPY awards for work with Peace Players International
 - Joey Dunlop, international motorcycle champion
 - Dave Finlay, professional wrestler
 - Johnny Flynn, football player
 - John Graham, NASCAR driver
 - David Healy, football player
 - Alex Higgins, former world snooker champion
 - Eddie Irvine, Formula One driver
 - Damaen Kelly, former professional boxer and Olympic bronze medalist
 - Jim Magilton, football player and manager
 - Wayne McCullough, former world champion boxer and Olympic medalist
 - Alexander McDonnell, early 19th-century chess master
 - Sammy McIlroy, football player
 - Eric McMordie, football player
 - Rinty Monaghan, former undisputed world flyweight boxing champion
 - Alanna Nihell, boxer[5]
 - Owen Nolan, Ice hockey player
 - Andrew Patterson, cricketer
 - Mark Patterson, cricketer
 - Mary Peters, athlete and Olympic gold medalist
 - Paul Stirling, cricketer
 - Tucker, professional wrestler
 - John Watson, Formula One driver
 - Norman Whiteside, football player
 
Other
- John Bodkin Adams (1899-1982), doctor and suspected serial killer; born and raised in Randalstown; attended Queen's University Belfast; obtained post as general practitioner in Eastbourne in 1922
 - Hamish Kippen (1887-2008), Canadian fashion photographer and former junior athlete; born in Belfast, emigrated with family to Toronto in 1889
 - Alexander Robinson (c. 1901-1995), boxer and loyalist paramilitary; born and lived in Belfast
 
References
- ↑ "Ian Masterson". Discogs. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
 - ↑ "Paul Masterson". Discogs. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
 - ↑ "Seaneen Molloy", guardian.co.uk, London: Guardian Media Group, 17 December 2010, retrieved 13 January 2011
 - ↑ Sidney Elisabeth Croskery: Whilst I Remember, The Blackstaff Press, Dundonald, 1983, ISBN 978-0-85640-260-9
 - ↑ "Glasgow 2014 - Alanna Audley-Murphy Profile". g2014results.thecgf.com. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
 
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