Beauregard

Look up Beauregard in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Beauregard or Beauregarde may refer to:

People

  • Larry Pitchford (1936–2024), American wrestler, stage name Beauregarde
  • Charles Costa de Beauregard (1835–1909), French historian and politician
  • Christopher Beauregard Emery (born 1957), American White House Usher, enterprise architect, and author
  • DJ Paul (born 1975), American rapper born Paul Beauregard
  • Élie Beauregard (1884–1954), Canadian lawyer and politician
  • Georges de Beauregard (1920–1984), French producer
  • Gilbert de Beauregard Robinson (1906–1992), Canadian mathematician
  • James Beauregard-Smith (fl. late 20th century), Australian life prisoner
  • Jean-Nicolas Beauregard (1733–1804), French-born religious leader
  • Keith Beauregard (born 1983), American baseball coach
  • Nathan Beauregard (1887–1970), American musician
  • Olivier Costa de Beauregard (1911–2007), French relativistic and quantum physicist,
  • P. G. T. Beauregard (1818–1893), Confederate general, inventor, civic leader
  • Pantaléon Costa de Beauregard (1806–1864), French statesman, archaeologist, historian and ornithologist
  • Pierre Raphaël Paillot de Beauregard (1734–1799), French general of the French Revolutionary Wars
  • Robin Beauregard (born 1979), American amateur athlete, water polo
  • Stéphane Beauregard (born 1968), Canadian professional athlete, hockey
  • Miss Violetta Beauregarde, Italian singer and model
  • Harriet Howard (1823–1865), English actress and Comtesse de Beauregard
  • Blanche Lamontagne-Beauregard (1889–1958), Canadian poet
  • Paradime (born 1975), American musician born Freddie Beauregard
  • Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III (born 1946), Attorney General of the United States

Characters

Places

France

United States

Louisiana

Other

Quebec, Canada

Other

Topics referred to by the same term
Disambiguation icon
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Beauregard.
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.