This is a list of people from Tangier:
Born
- Abdullah al-Ghumari – Muslim cleric
 - Ibn Battuta – Berber scholar and traveller
 - Ralph Benmergui – Canadian TV and radio host at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
 - Alexandre Rey Colaço – Portuguese pianist
 - Karim Debbagh – Moroccan film producer
 - Roger Elliott – first British Governor of Gibraltar
 - Bibiana Fernández – Spanish actress and model
 - Antonio Fuentes – painter described as the 'Picasso of Tangier'[1]
 - Sanaa Hamri – Moroccan music video director
 - Emmanuel Hocquard – French poet
 - Jean-Luc Mélenchon – French politician, currently MEP
 - Zakaria Ramhani – Moroccan visual artist
 - Alexander Spotswood – American Lieutenant-Colonel and Lieutenant Governor of Virginia
 - Heinz Tietjen – German music composer
 - Abderrahmane Youssoufi – former Prime Minister of Morocco
 
Settled or sojurned
- Lancelot Addison – English chaplain and the author of West Barbary, or a Short Narrative of the Revolutions of the Kingdoms of Fex and Morocco (1671)
 - José Luis Alcaine – Spanish-born cinematographer
 - William Bayer – American crime fiction writer, author of the novel Tangier
 - Bill Bird – American journalist and the founder of Tangier Gazette
 - Jane Bowles – American writer; wife of Paul Bowles
 - Paul Bowles – American writer and composer; lived in Tangier for 52 years and died there
 - Claudio Bravo – painter
 - William S. Burroughs – American novelist, essayist, social critic, painter and spoken word performer; lived in Tangier four years
 - Truman Capote – American novelist and writer, who visited Tangier
 - João de Castro – Portuguese naval officer and fourth viceroy of the Portuguese Indies
 - Ira Cohen – American poet, publisher, photographer and filmmaker; published one issue of a magazine called Gnaoua
 - Eugène Delacroix – French Romantic painter
 - Jim Ede – English art collector
 - Malcolm Forbes – publisher of Forbes magazine
 - Sean Gullette – American actor and writer
 - Brion Gysin – English writer and painter
 - Mohamed Hamri – Moroccan painter, described as the 'Picasso of Morocco'[2]
 - Friedrich von Holstein – German statesman
 - Barbara Hutton – wealthy American socialite dubbed by the media as the "Poor Little Rich Girl" because of her troubled life, lived in Tangier during the summer months from 1947 to 1975
 - Gavin Lambert – American (British-born) biographer, novelist and Hollywood screenwriter(and close friend of Paul Bowles), who lived 15 years in Tangier
 - Bernard-Henri Lévy – French journalist and intellectual
 - Henri Matisse – French painter
 - Joseph McPhillips III – American theater director and the headmaster of The American School of Tangier; died in Tangier
 - Mohamed Mrabet – Moroccan storyteller
 - Joe Orton – British playwright
 - Ion Perdicaris – US-Greek playboy who was the centre of the Perdicaris incident, a kidnapping that aroused international conflict in 1904
 - George John Pinwell – English painter
 - Edward Reichmann – Austro-Hungarian and Canadian businessman
 - Reichmann family (including Edward) – rich immigrant Jewish family from Austro-Hungary and Canada
 - David Roberts – Scottish painter
 - Yves Saint-Laurent – French fashion designer
 - J. Slauerhoff – Dutch poet and novelist
 - Kenneth Williams – British humourist
 - Paula Wolfert – American food writer, author of two Moroccan cookbooks, lived in Tangier for eight years
 
Died
- Abdullah al-Ghumari – Muslim cleric
 - Ibn Battuta – 14th-century traveller and diarist; born in Tangier in 1304 and is said to have been buried there in 1368
 - Paul Bowles – expatriate American writer and composer
 - Mohamed Choukri – Moroccan novelist; died in Rabat, buried in the Marshan, Tangier
 - George Elliott – probably the illegitimate son of Richard Eliot; Chirurgeon to the Earl of Teviot's Regiment at Tangier
 - George Fleetwood – one of the regicides of Charles I; brought to trial and sentenced to imprisonment in the Tower of London; may have been transported to Tangier
 - Paul Lukas – Hungarian actor
 - Joseph McPhillips III – American theater director and headmaster of the American School of Tangier
 - John Middleton, 1st Earl of Middleton – commander-in-chief of the troops in Scotland under the reign of Charles II
 
References
- ↑ La Gazette Du Maroc. "La Gazette du Maroc". Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
 - ↑ The Guardian, 28 April 2008
 
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