List of Jesuits
This is an alphabetical list of historically notable members of the Society of Jesus.

Íñigo López de Loyola, recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church, founded the Society of Jesus in 1540.
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A
    
- Piotr Abramowicz (1619-1697), Polish missionary
 - José de Acosta, Spanish historian; author of The Natural and Moral History of the Indies
 - Rodolfo Acquaviva, Italian Jesuit missionary and priest in India
 - François d'Aguilon, Belgian mathematician and physicist
 - Mateo Aimerich, Spanish philologist
 - Giacomo Maria Airoli, Italian Orientalist and scriptural commentator
 - Edward Alacampe, English philosopher; Procurator of Rome
 - Giulio Alenio, Italian missionary to China, called the "Confucius of the West"
 - Claude-Jean Allouez, French Jesuit, missionary to Wisconsin
 - Diego Francisco Altamirano, Spanish author
 - Charles Aylmer, Irish Jesuit, superior of the Dublin Residence
 - Jean Joseph Marie Amiot, French missionary to China
 - José de Anchieta, Spanish missionary in Brazil, founder of São Paulo, Brazil
 - Saint Modeste Andlauer, martyred in China
 - Antal Andrassy, second Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rozsnyó
 - Yves Marie André, French mathematician, philosopher, and essayist
 - Juan Andrés, prolific 18th-century Spanish writer
 - Renatus Andrieux, victim of the September massacres
 - Francesco degli Angeli, missionary to Ethiopia
 - Johannes Arnoldi, German missionary, martyred in Germany
 - Saint Edmund Arrowsmith, one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales
 - Stefano Arteaga, Spanish writer
 - Fr. Pedro Arrupe, 28th Superior General of the Society of Jesus who led the first rescue party in Hiroshima after the dropping of the atomic bomb.
 - Xabier Arzalluz, Spanish Basque leader; later left the Society
 - Berndt David Assarsson (1892-1955), Swedish monsignor, historical author and psalmist
 - Joanna of Austria, Princess of Portugal, reputed to have taken the order's vows under the name Mateo Sánchez
 - Hyacinthe Robillard d'Avrigny (1675-1719), historian
 - Miguel de Ayatumo, venerated Filipino seminarian dubbed as "Saint Aloysius Gonzaga of the Philippines"
 
B
    

Blessed Jan Beyzym, Missionary in Madagascar

Tadeusz Brzozowski (1749-1820) first post-restoration General
- Jakob Balde, German latinist, court chaplain to Maximillian I
 - John Ballard, English Jesuit priest executed for being involved in an attempt to assassinate Queen Elizabeth I of England
 - Hans Urs von Balthasar, 20th-century theologian, Jesuit from 1928 to 1950 when he left the order to found a new community with Adrienne von Speyr
 - Balthazar of Loyola, Moroccan prince who converted to Christianity and became a Jesuit priest
 - Cipriano Barace, Spanish missionary and martyr
 - Ignacio Martín-Baró, martyr in El Salvador
 - Pedro Barreto, Peruvian cardinal proclaimed by Pope Francis in 2018.
 - Augustin Barruel, French writer
 - Florian Baucke, Silesian and Bohemian Jesuit missionary to South America
 - Michel Baudouin, Superior-General of the Louisiana Mission (1749 to 1763)
 - Joseph Bayma, wrote "Molecular Mechanics" in 1866
 - Augustin Bea, German cardinal, Ecumenist at the Vatican II council
 - Nicolas-Ignace de Beaubois, French missionary to Quebec
 - Jan Beckx, Belgian Superior General (1853-1887)
 - Franz Jozef van Beeck, Dutch theologian who taught in the US
 - Joop Beek, Dutch and Indonesian educator and presidential political advisor
 - Johann Adam Schall von Bell, German missionary to China; astronomer
 - Saint Robert Bellarmine, Italian Cardinal and theologian, Doctor of the Church
 - Aloysius Bellecius (1704-1757), Jesuit ascetic author
 - Saint John Berchmans, Jesuit seminarian from Belgium
 - Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Argentinian, first Jesuit to be elected Pope (2013)
 - Thomas V. Bermingham, American academic who worked on The Exorcist
 - Prosper Bernard, Canadian missionary to China, killed by the Japanese
 - Joaquin G. Bernas, Filipino constitutionalist
 - Daniel Berrigan, American political activist, poet, and professor at Fordham University
 - Saint Jacques Berthieu, French Jesuit priest, missionary and first blessed Martyr of Madagascar
 - Blessed Jan Beyzym, Polish missionary to people with Leprosy in Madagascar
 - Giuseppe Biancani, very early selenographer
 - Jacob Bidermann, theologian and playwright - inspired Johann Wolfgang Goethe
 - Jacques de Billy, correspondent of Pierre de Fermat, many early contributions in number theory
 - Erwin Bischofberger, Swedish Jesuit and medical practitioner
 - Leopold Biwald, 18th-century Austrian physics professor and textbook author
 - Saint Andrew Bobola, Polish missionary, martyred by the Cossacks
 - Nicholas Bock, Russian diplomat who later became a Jesuit priest
 - Michael Bordt, German philosopher and academic
 - Saint Francis Borgia, third Superior General of the Society
 - Ruggero Boscovich, Croatian scientist who made many contributions to physics and astronomy
 - Giovanni Botero, Italian thinker, discharged from the Society in 1579
 - Joachim Bouvet, early missionary to China and a leading member of the Figurist movement
 - Louis Bourdaloue, French preacher and orator
 - William S. Bowdern, exorcist who inspired the novel and film The Exorcist
 - Greg Boyle, director and founder of Homeboy Industries
 - Niklaus Brantschen, Swiss Zen master, author, and founder of the Lassalle-Institut
 - Saint Jean de Brébeuf, 17th-century French-Canadian missionary and martyr
 - Saint Alexander Briant, English martyr
 - Frank Brennan, Officer of the Order of Australia for services to Aboriginal Australians
 - Franz Brentano, philosopher who founded his own school of thought, the School of Brentano
 - John Brignon, translator of religious works into French
 - Peter Michael Brillmacher, German preacher during the Counter Reformation
 - Jean de Brisacier, controversialist and opponent of Jansenism
 - Saint John de Brito, Portuguese martyr and missionary to Madura, India (present-day Tamil Nadu)
 - Stephen Brown (Jesuit), founder of the Central Catholic Library
 - Tadeusz Brzozowski, Polish scholar, having secured its continuity during the suppression of the Society until its restoration, elected twentieth Superior General of the Society of Jesus and its first world-wide general.[1]
 - Claude Buffier, aimed to discover the ultimate principal of knowledge, praised by Voltaire
 - Joannes Busaeus, theologian at Mainz University who wrote in defence of the introduction of the Gregorian calendar in Germany
 - William J. Byron, President of the University of Scranton (1975-1982), President of Catholic University of America (1982-1992), Interim President of Loyola University New Orleans (2003-2004), President of St. Joseph's Preparatory School (2006-2008)
 
C
    
- Niccolò Cabeo, many early contributions to physics
 - Pedro de Calatayud, missionary
 - Saint Edmund Campion, English martyr
 - Saint Petrus Canisius, Dutch theologian, writer of the widely used Little Catechism; Doctor of the Church
 - John Carroll, first bishop of the United States and founder of Georgetown University
 - Paolo Casati, Mathematician, supported Galileo
 - John II Casimir Vasa, king of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
 - Louis Bertrand Castel, French scientist
 - Leonardo Castellani, 20th-century Argentine writer and theologian
 - Giuseppe Castiglione, Italian Jesuit brother; artist to the Chinese Emperor
 - Saint Juan del Castillo, martyr of the Río de la Plata
 - Juan Paez de Castro, priest and confessor to King Philip II of Spain
 - Jean Pierre de Caussade, spiritual director, college rector, and author of Abandonment to Divine Providence
 - Jean-Antoine du Cerceau, French Jesuit priest, poet, and playwright
 - Michel de Certeau, French cultural theorist
 - Francesco Cetti, mathematician and zoologist
 - Saint Noël Chabanel, North American martyr
 - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, French paleontologist, theologian/philosopher and spiritual writer
 
- Timoléon Cheminais de Montaigu, 17th century orator
 - Pierre Cholenec, Superior of Montreal
 - Drew Christiansen, nuclear expert and disarmament consultant to the Holy See
 - Walter Ciszek, missionary and religious prisoner in Soviet Union; author
 - Saint Peter Claver, Spanish missionary in South America
 - Christopher Clavius, main architect of the modern Gregorian calendar
 - Saint Claude de la Colombière, preacher to the seventh Duchess of York, Mary of Modena
 - Louis le Comte, early missionary to China
 - Guy Consolmagno, Vatican astronomer
 - Frederick Copleston, English writer, author of the definitive History of Philosophy
 - Honoré-Gaspard de Coriolis, French cleric and historian
 - John M. Corridan, labor activist and "Waterfront priest" whose story inspired the classic film On the Waterfront
 - Horacio de la Costa, Philippine historian and first Filipino Jesuit provincial superior in the Philippines
 - Jacques Courtois, 17th-century French painter
 - François Crépieul, 17th-century French missionary in Canada
 - Saint Roque González de Santa Cruz, Paraguayan missionary and martyr
 - James Cullen, Irish temperance campaigner who founded the Pioneer Total Abstinence Association
 - Johann Baptist Cysat, published the first printed European book concerning Japan
 - Stanislaus Czerniewicz, Lithuanian-Polish priest, elected vicar general for Jesuits in Russia when the Society of Jesus was suppressed
 - Stanisław Czerski, Polish graphic designer
 
D
    

Fr. Joseph O'Callahan (right), a Jesuit priest, is presented with the Medal of Honor by President Truman
- Claude Dablon, Superior General of all the Canadian missions from 1670 to 1680
 - Saint Antoine Daniel, North American martyr
 - Cardinal Jean Daniélou, author, scholar, and member of the French Academy
 - Alfred Delp, German hanged for his opposition to Hitler
 - Saint Paul Denn, martyred in China
 - Robert De Nobili, famous Italian missionary to India (Madurai Mission), who tried to inculturate Christian values to the Indian culture
 - Henri Depelchin, Belgian missionary, pioneer, writer and educator in India and Africa
 - Ippolito Desideri, Italian Jesuit missionary to Tibet
 - Paul de Barry, rector of the Jesuit colleges at Aix, Nîmes, and Avignon, and Provincial of Lyon.
 - Pierre-Jean De Smet, active missionary among the Native Americans of the Western United States in the mid-19th century
 - Richard De Smet, Jesuit Indologist (Sankara specialist), Professor of Phisosophy, JnanaDeep Vidyapeeth, Pune, Maharashtra, India; prolific writer and contributor to the Marathi Encyclopaedia of Philosophy
 - William Detré, 17th century missionary in the Amazon
 - Salvatore di Pietro, Italian missionary and first apostolic prefect to Belize, Central America
 - Pedro Díaz, missionary
 - John Donne, English poet and cleric in the Church of England (no evidence)
 - Eduardo Dougherty, American-Brazilian educator, communicator and leader of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in Brazil
 - Robert Drinan, first Catholic priest to serve as a voting member of U.S. Congress (congressman from Massachusetts)[lower-alpha 1]
 - Gabriel Druillettes, Apostle of Maine, missionary and explorer
 - Francis Bennon Ducrue, Bavarian missionary to Mexico
 - Peter Dufka, Slovakian priest and professor at the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome
 - Cardinal Avery Dulles, American theologian and professor at Fordham University
 - Jacques Dupuis, theologian, edited The Christian Faith which went to seven editions
 
E
    
- Ignacio Ellacuría, rector of University of Central America; murdered in 1989
 - Saint Philip Evans, one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales
 
F
    
- Saint Peter Faber, early companion of Ignatius of Loyola, co-founder of the Society of Jesus; missionary in Germany
 - Honoré Fabri, first to explain why the sky is blue
 - Jean-Charles della Faille, first to determine the center of gravity of the sector of a circle
 - Thomas Falkner, English Jesuit missionary
 - Leonard Feeney, ultra-conservative American theologian
 - Wolfgang Feneberg, German Jesuit convert to Evangelical Lutheranism
 - Richard Michael Fernando, Filipino Jesuit cleric, missionary in Cambodia and Servant of God
 - Joseph Fessio, publisher of Ignatius Press
 - Joseph M. Finotti, pastor of Saint Mary's parish in Alexandria, Virginia; pastor of Saint Ignatius parish in Oxon Hill, Maryland; librarian at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.
 - Pierre-René Floquet, Quebec-based priest sympathetic to the Americans during the American Revolutionary War
 - Jean de Fontaney, missionary to China
 - Balthazar Francolini, attritionist professor at the Gregorian University who wrote Clericus Romanus Contra Nimium Rigorismum Munitus in 1707 against Jansenism
 - Luís Fróis, Portuguese missionary to Japan; author of a history of Japan
 - Fabian Fucan, Japanese Jesuit brother who converted to Zen Buddhism
 - Jon Fuller, medical doctor known for his work with AIDS patients
 
G
    

Robert Bellarmine, one of the most important cardinals of the Catholic Reformation

Saint Melchior Grodziecki, martyr
- Père Louis Gaillard, French missionary to China
 - Marion M. Ganey, pioneer in credit union and coop movement in British Honduras and the South Pacific
 - Saint Henry Garnet, first English Provincial; executed after being implicated in the Gunpowder Plot
 - Saint Charles Garnier, North America martyr
 - John Gerard, English Jesuit; one of the few men to escape from the Tower of London
 - Jean-François Gerbillon, early missionary to China
 - Aquiles Gerste, philologist and linguist best known for his ethnographic and linguistic studies of the indigenous peoples of Mexico
 - Niccolò Gianpriamo, Italian missionary to China, astronomer
 - Filippo Salvatore Gilii, contributor in the field of South American historical linguistics
 - Paul Goethals, Belgian, first Archbishop of Calcutta
 - Saint Aloysius Gonzaga, Italian jesuit; patron saint of students
 - Thyrsus González, Spanish 13th Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - John Goodman, jailed in England during the Long Parliament
 - Saint John Soan de Goto, martyred in Japan
 - Saint René Goupil, Jesuit brother and North American martyr
 - Baltasar Gracián, Spanish prose writer
 - Francesco Maria Grimaldi, 17th-century Italian mathematician, physicist and astronomer; accurately mapped the Moon; one of the first to suggest the wave-like nature of light
 - Saint Melchior Grodziecki, Polish martyr, patron of the city of Katowice
 - Gabriel Gruber, Viennese teacher, elected Vicar General of the Russian province during there suppression of the Society
 - Paul Guldin, father of Guldinus theorem
 - José Gumilla, naturalist who studied the Orinoco, South America
 - Bartolomeu de Gusmão, Brazilian-Portuguese priest and mathematician; said to be an early inventor of the dirigible
 
H
    

Gerard Manley Hopkins, an English poet, Roman Catholic convert, and priest
- Juraj Habdelić, Croatian writer and lexicographer
 - Walter Halloran, assistant in the exorcism which inspired the novel and film The Exorcist
 - John Hardon, wrote The Catholic Catechism and many other works
 - Peter Hasslacher, German preacher
 - Irénée Hausherr, Alsatian specialist in Greek patristic and monastic spirituality
 - Bernhard Havestadt, German missionary in Chile
 - Timothy Healy, late president of Georgetown University and president of the New York Public Library system
 - Martin Heidegger, German philosopher who was briefly a Jesuit novice
 - Raymond Helmick, American theologian and author
 - Daniel S. Hendrickson, 25th president of Creighton University
 - David Francis Hickey, American missionary bishop of Belize, Central America
 - Robert Louis Hodapp, American missionary bishop of Belize, Central America
 - John-Baptist Hoffmann, German Apostle of the Mundas in India
 - Ferdinand Augustin Hallerstein, missionary to China that was made a mandarin
 - Christopher Holywood, Irish priest of the Counter-Reformation
 - Eduardo Hontiveros, Filipino philosopher, theologian and composer of sacred and liturgical music
 - Frederick C. Hopkins, English missionary to Belize Central America; bishop and vicar apostolic
 - Gerard Manley Hopkins, renowned English poet
 - Johann Baptiste Horvath, 18th-century Hungarian/Slovak physics professor and textbook author
 - Vincent Houdry, preacher and writer
 - Gerard W. Hughes, Scottish Jesuit priest and spiritual writer
 - Franz Hunolt, German priest and author
 - Saint Alberto Hurtado, social reformer in Chile
 
I
    
- Blessed John Ingram
 - Saint Rémy Isoré, martyred in China
 - Angelo Italia, 17th century Sicilian architect
 
J
    
- Andreas Jaszlinszky, 18th-century Hungarian physics professor and textbook author
 - Saint Francis de Geronimo, Italian priest and missionary
 - Franz Jetzinger, theology professor, Austrian political figure, and principal biographer of Adolf Hitler's early years
 - Pierre Johanns, Luxemburger priest and missionary in India
 - Saint Isaac Jogues, 17th-century French martyr and missionary to North America
 - Miguel Agustín Pro Juárez, Mexican priest, executed during the persecution of the Catholic Church under the presidency of Plutarco Elías Calles
 - Claude Judde, 18th century French teacher
 
K
    

Athanasius Kircher, a 17th c. polymath

Cardinal Adam Kozlowiecki

Saint Gabriel Lallemant
- Georg Joseph Kamel, Czech botanist assigned to the Philippines; the Camellia flower was named after him
 - Sebastian Kappen, Indian theologian
 - Franciszek Kareu, Polonised architect of British descent who was elected Vice General of the Russian province during the suppression of the Society
 - Blessed Leonardo Kimura, Japanese martyr
 - Eusebio Francisco Kino, missionary and cartographer of Mexico and Arizona
 - Athanasius Kircher, 17th-century German scientist; discoverer of microbes
 - Saint James Kisai, Japanese martyr
 - Lev Kobylinsky, Russian poet, translator and religious theorist
 - Adam Adamandy Kochański, Polish mathematician and clockmaker
 - Anthony Kohlmann, early Catholic priest in New York whose decision not to testify established American precedent for "priest-penitent privilege" or "clergy confidentiality" in law
 - Peter Hans Kolvenbach, linguist; 29th Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - Adam Krupski, professor of philosophy, legal expert on the legislation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, author of the school dialogue.
 - Cardinal Ján Chryzostom Korec, Prisoner for Christ
 - Saint Stanislaus Kostka, patron saint of Jesuit novices
 - George Kovalenko, Russian convert from Eastern Orthodoxy
 - Adam Kozłowiecki, Polish Dachau concentration camp survivor, missionary in Zambia, archbishop of Lusaka and Cardinal
 - Franz Xaver Kugler, Doctor of chemistry and mathematics; famous also for his Babylonian studies
 - Kurien Kunnumpuram, Indian theologian (Ecclesiology)
 - Thomas Kunnunkal, Indian educationist and writer
 
L
    

Włodzimierz Ledóchowski, Superior General 1915-1942
- Saint Jean de Lalande, North American martyr
 - Saint Gabriel Lalemant, North American martyr
 - Quentin Lauer, American priest, philosopher and Hegel scholar
 - Pierre de Lauzon, superior of the Jesuits in New France
 - Włodzimierz Ledóchowski, Polish Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - Gabriel Lenkiewicz, Polish teacher and architect, elected Vicar General of the Russian province during there suppression of the Society
 - Leonardus Lessius, Belgian moral theologian and writer on economics
 - Saint David Lewis, Welsh martyr
 - Constant Lievens, Apostle of Chotanagpur, Flemish Jesuit who worked among the Adivasis of Central India
 - Segundo Llorente, Spanish-born priest in rural western Alaska; was elected by write-in vote to the Alaska House of Representatives in 1960 by residents of the Wade Hampton district,[2] becoming the first Catholic priest to serve in a U.S. state legislature[3]
 - William Lonc, professor of physics and translator of French-Canadian Jesuit records into English
 - Bernard Lonergan, Canadian philosopher and theologian, Companion of the Order of Canada
 - Saint Ignatius of Loyola, co-founder and first Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - Cardinal Henri de Lubac, French theologian, and patrologist
 
M
    

Jacques Marquette, the French Jesuit missionary who founded Michigan's first European settlement
- Marius Macrionitis, Archbishop of Athens
 - Jack Mahoney, ethicist and moral theologian
 - Louis Maimbourg
 - Matt Malone, 14th editor in chief of America magazine
 - Joseph Maréchal, Belgian transcendental philosopher
 - Juan de Mariana
 - Jacques Marquette, French explorer of the Mississippi and Northern Michigan areas
 - James Martin, author of My Life With the Saints and The Jesuit Guide to (Almost) Everything; culture editor of the America magazine
 - Malachi Martin, author of sixteen books, had three Ph.Ds, spoke ten languages
 - Ignacio Martín-Baró, martyr of El Salvador
 - Martino Martini, Italian missionary to China, linguist and published the first Chinese Atlas and the first Ancient History and a chronicle of the tartarian war
 - Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, Italian scripture scholar, Archbishop Emeritus of Milan
 - William Francis Masterson, American educator to the Philippines; (Ateneo de Manila University, Xavier University – Ateneo de Cagayan), founder of the Xavier University - Ateneo de Cagayan College of Agriculture
 - Saint Lèon-Ignance Mangin, martyred in China
 - Juan Francisco Masdeu, historian
 - Blessed Julien Maunoir, 17th-century missionary to the Breton people
 - Blessed Rupert Mayer, Servant of God, resisted the Nazis
 - John McElroy, one of two of the Army's first Catholic Chaplains. Chaplain during the Mexican–American War, founder of St. John's Literary Institute, Boston College High School, and Boston College.[4]
 - Horace McKenna, founder of So Others Might Eat and advocate of the Sursum Corda Cooperative
 - John McLaughlin, American political commentator; left the Jesuits after a failed bid for a Senate seat in Rhode Island
 - Richard McSorley (1914-2002), peace activist; peace studies Professor at Georgetown University.
 - Domingo Patricio Meagher, Spanish writer and university professor of Irish descent
 - Anthony de Mello, Indian spiritual guide and writer
 - Everard Mercurian, Belgian, 4th Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - Brice Meuleman, Belgian, 2nd Archbishop of Calcutta (now Kolkata)
 - Saint Paulo Miki, Japanese martyr
 - Jorge Loring Miró, Spanish Jesuit
 - Ignacio Molarja, explorer and missionary to New Spain
 - Segundo Montes, martyr of El Salvador
 - Saint Henry Morse, English martyr
 - Simon Le Moyne, French New World explorer
 - Franz Magnis-Suseno, German-born Indonesian Jesuit priest and philosopher
 - W. G. Read Mullan, American academic and university president
 - Joseph Anthony Murphy, Irish missionary, bishop and vicar apostolic to Belize, Central America
 - John Courtney Murray, American theologian credited with the drafting of the Second Vatican Council Declaration on Religious Freedom
 

Petrus Canisius, a theologian to whom the restoration of Catholicism in Germany after the Reformation is credited
N
    
- John E. Naus, dean of students and associate professor at Marquette University
 - Bienvenido Nebres, Philippine National Scientist, mathematician & former president of the Ateneo de Manila University
 - Oswald von Nell-Breuning, German 'father' of Catholic social teaching (1890-1991)
 - Terence Netter, painter and former priest
 - Adolfo Nicolás, 30th Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - Roberto de Nobili, Italian missionary to India; linguist
 - Manuel da Nóbrega, Portuguese founder of the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro
 - Charles de Noyelle, Belgian 12th Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 
O
    
- Mikołaj Stanisław Oborski (1576-1646), Polish teacher
 - Bernard Michael O'Brien, New Zealand Jesuit priest and philosopher
 - Joseph T. O'Callahan, U.S. Navy chaplain; awarded Medal of Honor
 - Saint John Ogilvie, Scottish martyr
 - Joseph A. O'Hare, former president of Fordham University and chairman of the New York City Charter Revision Commission and the first New York City Campaign Finance Board
 - Gian Paolo Oliva, Italian 11th Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - John W. O'Malley, American academic and Catholic historian
 - William O'Malley, author and actor (played Father Joe Dyer in The Exorcist)
 - Walter J. Ong, American cultural historian and spiritual writer
 - Wilhelm Josef Oomens, painter
 - John H. O'Rourke, American retreat leader and master of novices
 - Saint Nicholas Owen, martyr saint of England and Wales
 
P
    
- Mitch Pacwa, scholar; host on EWTN
 - Francesco Palliola, Italian missionary and martyr in the Philippines
 - Kuruvilla Pandikattu, Indian philosopher
 - Lorenzo Hervás y Panduro, pioneer philologist
 - Raimon Panikkar, Spanish priest, theologian, philosopher, interfaith dialogist, scholar, writer and chemist
 - Álvarez de Paz, preacher and mystic
 - Péter Pázmány, Cardinal, Archbishop of Esztergom, leader of the Catholic revival in Hungary
 - Ferdinand Perier, Belgian, 3rd Archbishop of Calcutta (now Kolkata)
 - Denis Pétau, French scholar and theologian
 - François Para du Phanjas, French writer
 - Giambattista Pianciani, Italian scientist
 - Joseph Pignatelli, Italian leader of the Jesuits in exile
 - John Pinasco, Italian theologian and educator to America
 - Luca Pinelli, Italian scholar and theologian
 - Bartolomé Pou, Spanish writer
 - John Powell, American author and professor
 - Andrea Pozzo, great artist of the Baroque genre
 
R
    
- Karl Rahner, 20th-century German theologian
 - Samuel Rayan, Indian proponent of liberation theology
 - Saint Bernardino Realino, pastor of Lecce
 - Sebastian Redford, 18th-century author
 - Joseph Redlhamer, 18th-century Austrian physics professor and textbook author
 - Saint John Francis Regis, French rural missionary preacher
 - Karl Leonhard Reinhold
 - Franz Retz, Czech 15th Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - Johann Baptist Reus, German-Brazilian religious leader
 - Alexandre de Rhodes, French missionary to Vietnam; linguist
 - Servant of God Matteo Ricci, Italian missionary to China, linguist and published the first Chinese edition of Euclid's Elements
 - Giovanni Battista Riccioli, 17th-century Italian astronomer; devised the system for the nomenclature of lunar features that is now the international standard
 - William A. Rice, American missionary, founder of Baghdad College, bishop and vicar apostolic in Belize
 - Didier Rimaud, French composer and poet
 - Alberto Rivera, claimed to be ex-Jesuit (disputed by Catholic Church), anti-Catholic activist
 - Saint Alonso Rodriguez, martyr of the Río de la Plata
 - Saint Alphonsus Rodriguez, Jesuit brother; mystic
 - João Rodrigues Tçuzu ("the Translator"), 16th-century Portuguese missionary who served as a translator for Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu, wrote early works on Japanese linguistics, and introduced Western science and culture to Korea through his gifts to the ambassador Jeong Duwon
 - Saint José María Rubio, Spanish priest; canonized in 2003
 - Antonio Ruiz de Montoya, Jesuit missionary in Paraguay
 
S
    
- Grégoire de Saint-Vincent, contributions to the theory of logarithms
 - Karel San Juan, Filipino president of Ateneo de Zamboanga University
 - Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski, Polish Latin poet of the Counter-Reformation, crowned poet laureate by Pope Urban VIII
 - Alonso de Sandoval, missionary to African slaves in Cartagena de Indias, mentor of Saint Peter Claver
 - Johann Schreck, 17th-century German polymath and missionary to China
 - Gaspar Schott, first published mention of the universal joint
 - Angelo Secchi, astronomer
 - Juan Luis Segundo, liberation theologian
 - Gerolamo Sersale, astronomer
 - Thomas Ewing Sherman, son of U.S. Civil War General William T. Sherman
 - Swami Shilananda, Spanish missionary who spent his active years in India
 - Piotr Skarga, Polish polemicist, leading figure of the Counter-Reformation in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and hagiographer
 - Tadeusz Ślipko, Polish ethicist
 - Pierre-Jean De Smet, American explorer and missionary
 

Pierre-Jean De Smet, a missionary to the Native Americans in the Western United States
- Jan Mikołaj Smogulecki, introduced logarithms to China
 - Cypriano de Soarez, author of De Arte Rhetorica
 - Jon Sobrino, author of Christology at the Crossroads, liberation theologian
 - Carlos Sommervogel, scholar and author of Bibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jesus
 - Arturo Sosa, 31st Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - Saint Robert Southwell, Elizabethan poet and martyr
 - Cardinal Tomáš Špidlík, Czech theologian and professor
 - Buck Stanton (Jesuit), naturalist and Jesuit missionary to British Honduras.
 - Walter Steins Bisschop, 19th-century Dutch bishop, Vicar Apostolic of Bombay and then Calcutta and 3rd Bishop of Auckland, New Zealand
 - Andrew Sterpin, Chinese-born Russian priest who was influential in both Russian and French culture
 - Francisco Suárez, scholastic philosopher
 - Blessed John Sullivan (Jesuit)|, Irish convert and teacher; renowned for his special interest in the poor
 - Jón Sveinsson, Icelandic poet and writer
 - Martin Szentiványi, writer
 - Ignacije Szentmartony, Croatian mathematician and astronomer
 - Stan Swamy, tribal rights activist
 
T
    

Teilhard in 1955
- Joel Tabora, Filipino philosopher and president of Ateneo de Davao University
 - Guy Tachard, two important embassies to Siam
 - André Tacquet, Flemish mathematician whose works facilitated the discovery of calculus
 - Michelangelo Tamburini, Italian 14th Superior General of the Society of Jesus
 - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, French paleontologist, theologian and writer
 - Francesco Lana de Terzi, creator of the first realistic technical plans for an airship
 - Richard Thimelby, 17th century English missionary priest, Rector of the College of St Omer
 - Antoine Thomas, Belgian astronomer in China
 - Vitus Georg Tönnemann, German priest who was the only confessor to Emperor Charles VI of France from 1711 to 1740
 - Girolamo Francesco Tornielli, Italian preacher and writer
 - Cosme de Torrès, contemporary of Francis Xavier
 - Diego de Torres Bello, pioneer of the Paraguay province
 - Pascal Tosi, Italian co-founder of the Alaska Mission
 - Nicolas Trigault, early missionary to China
 - Michael Alphonsius Shen Fu-Tsung, first Mandarin-speaking Chinese to become a Jesuit
 - John Nepomuk Tschupick, Austrian preacher
 - George Tyrrell, Anglo-Irish modernist theologian and scholar
 
U
    
- Juan José Urráburu, scholastic philosopher
 
V
    

Francis Xavier, one of the first seven Jesuits and missionary to Asia
- Luca Valerio, corresponded with Galileo Galilei
 - Alessandro Valignano, Italian canonical visitor to the Asian missions; promoter of an inculturated missionary approach
 - Carlos G. Vallés, writer of Gujarati, English and Spanish languages; and mathematics
 - Albert Vanhoye, Biblical scholar and cardinal
 - John Vattanky, Indian classical philosopher
 - José María Vélaz, founder of Fe y Alegría
 - Ferdinand Verbiest, Belgian missionary to China; astronomer and mathematician
 - António Vieira, 17th-century Portuguese missionary and diplomat
 - Juan Bautista Villalpando, Isaac Newton referred to his works
 - Grégoire de Saint-Vincent, Flemish mathematician
 - Claude de Visdelou, early missionary to China
 
W
    
- Edmund A. Walsh, founder of the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University
 - Saint Henry Walpole, English martyr
 - Heinrich Wangnereck, German theologian, preacher, and author
 - Anthony Watsham, entomologist with emphasis on scelionidae
 - Andrew White (Jesuit), 17th century English Jesuit, influential figure in the early Maryland Colony who led efforts to convert and improve relations with local Native American tribes.
 - George J. Willmann, American priest regarded as the "Father of the Knights of Columbus in the Philippines" and Servant of God
 - Garry Wills, Pulitzer Prize-winning author (briefly a Jesuit)
 - Jakub Wujek, scholar and translator
 
X
    
- Saint Francis Xavier, co-founder of the Society of Jesus and missionary to Asia who initiated a large conversion movement in India, Malacca, and Japan
 - Georges Xenopulos, Greek bishop
 
Z
    
- Domenico Zipoli, Italian composer and musician
 - Petrus Josephus Zoetmulder, expert in the Old Javanese language and literature
 - Giovanni Battista Zupi, mathematician, astronomer
 
See also
    
    
Notes
    
- Father Gabriel Richard was briefly in the U.S. Congress in the 1820s, but as a territorial representative. Under guidelines released by Pope John Paul II, Catholic clergy are expected not to serve in positions of civil authority. Drinan did not seek re-election as a result of the issuance of these guidelines.
 
References
    
- Robert Aleksander Maryks; Jonathan Wright, eds. (2014). Jesuit Survival and Restoration: A Global History, 1773-1900. Studies in the History of Christian Traditions (revised reprint ed.). BRILL. p. 393. ISBN 978-9-0042-8387-9.
 - Official Returns - General Election - November 8, 1960 (PDF). Juneau: Office of the Alaska Secretary of State. 1960. p. 27. Retrieved January 23, 2012.
 -  Tsong, Nicole (December 30, 2004). "Abuse claims breathe life into dead priests' past". Anchorage Daily News. Anchorage. p. A1. 
A popular Jesuit priest -- the country's first Roman Catholic priest to serve in a state Legislature
 - O’Conner, Thomas H. "Breaking the religious barrier", The Boston Globe, 10 May 2004.
 
External links
    
    
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