While researching on Mersenne numbers, I often stumble upon statements of this nature (it is not verbatim):
Huldaricus Regius in 1536 proved that $2^{11}-1$ is not prime, providing a factorisation and shattering the common misconception that all numbers of the form $2^p-1$ are primes for $p$ prime.
This is of course an important step in the history of Mersenne Primes -- and this made me wonder the following. You can find his name in different variations (Huldalrichus Regius, Hudalrichus Regius, Ulricus Regius, etc) and in multiple sources: this table (English), in this brief history of Mersenne primes (Italian) and in this one too (Italian). Although I can't read French, this book (French) could also come in handy.
He seems an interesting figure, but I could find little to no information about him. Was he real? Does anyone know more about him? I'm asking this of course for historical interest, but also because Huldaricus Regius is ominously similiar to "Huldaricus Regius [x]", which in Latin could possibly hint to a title or a group of people -- depending on the truncated [x].