Faure
Faure (pronounced [ˈfawɾe] ⓘ) is an Occitan family name meaning blacksmith, from Latin faber. It is pronounced [fɔʁ] in French (unlike Fauré which is pronounced [foʁe]).
People
Politicians
- Dominique Faure (born 1959), French politician
 - Edgar Faure (1908–1988), French politician
 - Félix Faure (1841–1899), French politician and President of France
 - Fernand Faure (1853–1929), French economist and politician
 - Jacques Faure (ambassador), French co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group
 - Louis-Joseph Faure (1760-1837) French jurist and politician
 - Olivier Faure (born 1968), French politician
 - Martine Faure (born 1948), French politician
 - Maurice Faure (1922–2014), French Resistance leader and politician, last surviving signatory of the Treaty of Rome
 - Sébastien Faure (1858–1942), French anarchist
 - Faure Gnassingbé, president of Togo
 
Writers, artists, and musicians
- Amédée Faure or Victor-Amédée Faure (1801–1878), French painter
 - Jean-Baptiste Faure (1830–1914), French baritone and composer
 - Gabriel Fauré (1845–1924), French composer, organist, pianist and teacher
 - Élie Faure (1873–1937), French art historian and essayist
 - Gabriel Faure (1877–1962), French poet, novelist and essayist
 - Lucie Faure (1908–1977), French writer
 - Renée Faure (1918–2005), French actress
 
Others
- Abraham Faure (1795–1875), South African clergyman
 - Camille Alphonse Faure, French chemical engineer
 - Gunter Faure, American geochemist
 - Jacques Faure (French Army officer) (1904–1988), French Army general and skier
 - Jacques-Paul Faure (1869–1924), head of the French military mission to Japan (1918–1919)
 - Keith Faure, Australian career criminal
 - Luigi Faure (1901–1974), Italian cross-country skier, Nordic combined skier, and ski jumper
 - Sébastien Faure (footballer), French footballer
 
