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285 Sentences With "correspondance"

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L'histoire tourne autour d'un garçon de onze ans et de son improbable correspondance avec un acteur secrètement homosexuel, correspondance qui sera tournée en scandale.
Belgian Surrealism emerged with the magazine Correspondance in 1924, the same year as Breton's First Surrealist Manifesto, and would prove to be equally as seminal, if not now as famous.
Her pleasure was in her associations with members of her own family, in her correspondance with a few — a very few — persons, with whom she established terms of delightful intimacy, and finally in her communion with nature.
Edited by Paul Nougé (chief theorist of the Belgian Surrealists), Camille Goemans, and Marcel Lecomte, Correspondance was printed on different colored papers and distributed by post to select recipients (practices Broodthaers would incorporate into his early poetry).
The royal family was not reportedly not made aware of the decision ahead of the duke and duchess&apos announcement, and they released a correspondance obtained by Insider saying there are "complicated issues that will take time to work through" in regards to the move.
Though originally published in 1967 for a pocket collection, it's a perfect choice for this delightful 4 x 6 inch clutch of unconventional three, as it sustains the scale and ephemeral quality of the Correspondance impetus (as indeed does the format for all three works).
The Belgian Surrealists made an intentional choice to resist the doctrinaire and spine-bound trappings of the French Surrealists, choosing ephemeral and more intimate approaches to writing, publication, and distribution; indeed, the texts in Correspondance were largely witty and trenchant, if sometimes oblique, responses to their counterparts' literary debates in Paris.
Upon receiving them, Nougé paid a visit to the author to confirm they'd been sent in earnest (apparently he suspected a ruse), but so convinced, invited him to a Correspondance meeting the following Sunday, where he would meet Camille Goemans, René Magritte, E. L. T. Mesens and Paul Hooreman; and the rest is history.
Correspondance of course was not only a publication but also the moniker this group of avant-garde writers, artists, and musicians pushing the boundaries of alternative communication and aesthetic liberty, used to describe themselves; indeed, Belgian Surrealist writing and art were not disseminated by mail-born missives alone — more often that not, they were performed and experienced.
Marlet (ed.), Correspondance d'Odet de Coligny, p. 8, note 2 and p. 11. On 20 October 1550 Cardinal Odet de Châtillon was appointed Abbot Commendatory of Saint Jean de Sens.L. Marlet (ed.), Correspondance d'Odet de Coligny, p.
With Eugène Catalan and Paul Mansion, he founded the journal Nouvelle correspondance mathématique. This journal was founded to honour the earlier journal Correspondance mathématique et physique, which had been edited by Lambert Quetelet and Jean Garnier. Correspondance was published until 1880; after this, Catalan advised Mansion and Neuberg to continue publication of a new journal. They followed his advice, creating Mathesis in 1881, which is perhaps Neuberg's best-known journal.
Marc Tiffeneau (ed.) (1918). Correspondance de Charles Gerhardt, tome 1, Laurent et Gerhardt, Paris, Masson.
In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Volume 38 (1914), (pp. 327-350). on the nearby monument of the opisthodomos,Courby Fernand. Monument étolien de la place de l'opisthodome à Delphes. In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Volume 50 (1926), (pp. 120-123) (with P. de La Coste-Messelière).
Delage R. Emmanuel Chabrier. Paris, Fayard, 1999. Chabrier E. Correspondance. Ed Delage R, Durif F. Klincksieck, 1994.
Scheid, John, "Scribonia Caesaris et les Cornelii Lentuli", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, 100 (1976), pp. 485-491.
Correspondance générale, Vol. 6, p. 78 (edited and annotated by Claudine Lacoste-Veysseyre). Librairie Droz Cruciani, Alessandra (1998).
Archives du Canada. "Lettre de Talon au ministre," 13 novembre 1666, vol. 2, fol. 229-230v. In Correspondance officielle.
Correspondance générale, Vol. 6, p. 78 (edited and annotated by Claudine Lacoste-Veysseyre). Librairie Droz Wyndham, Henry Saxe (1913).
"Hadrien et l'Asklépieion de Pergame". In: Bulletin de correspondance hellénique. Volume 100, livraison 1, 1976. pp. 347–372. Available at .
Si le parfait oubli peut s'appeler ainsi, l'auteur a raison d'être reconnaissant (Grimm, Correspondance littéraire, philosophique et critique February 1763).
J. A. Dainard, ed. Correspondance de Mme de Graffigny, Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 1985-- (in progress), vol. 1, pp. 28-66.
Déposition à l'enquête du coroner sur la mort de William Mason, 20 août 1849, in Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine. Correspondance générale. Tome III.
Picard, Charles. L'École française d'Athènes de 1914 à 1919. In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Volume 44 (1920), (pp. 25-35).Matthieu, René- Hubert.
There are some claims that he was also a scientist.Rodolphe Töpffer, Jacques Droin, Danielle Buyssens, Jean-Daniel Candaux. Correspondance complète. (Complete correspondence of Rodolphe Töpffer).
45 (1992), pp. 75–76 (75)Raepsaet, G. & Tolley, M.: "Le Diolkos de l’Isthme à Corinthe: son tracé, son fonctionnement", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, vol.
His correspondence as internuncio was published in 1993.L. Vos (ed.), La correspondance d'Andrea Mangelli internonce aux Pays-Bas, 1652-1655 (Brussels and Rome, 1993).
Marie-Aurore's tears leave traces on the paper.Nathalie Desgrugillers: Ma grand-mère Marie Aurore de Saxe : Correspondance inédite et souvenirs, Clermont-Ferrand, ed. Paleo, coll.
Clyman, Toby W. & Diana Greene (eds.). Women writers in Russian literature. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1994. Correspondance entre Romain Rolland et Maxime Gorki 1916–1936.
Diderot's most intimate friend was the philologist Friedrich Melchior Grimm. They were brought together by their common friend at that time, Jean- Jacques Rousseau. In 1753, Grimm began writing a newsletter, the La Correspondance littéraire, philosophique et critique, which he would send to various high personages in Europe. In 1759, Grimm asked Diderot to report on the biennial art exhibitions in the Louvre for the Correspondance.
He wrote several book reviews in the South Bend Tribune's literary section, "The Reading Lamp". He also had correspondance with Herman B. Wells and Richard Nixon.
Dainard, ed., Correspondance, vol. 4, letters 557-558. Although only a small fragment of a manuscript exists, the process of composition can be followed in the author's correspondence.
Early in the morning, while he is still in Novara, he wrote to General Lannes informing him of the victory over Ticino (Bulletin No. 5389 "Correspondance générale de Napoléon Bonaparte").
Penn-Logan Correspondance, II., 35. Clarke served as president of the courts of Pennsylvania and the Lower Counties until his death, and was succeeded in this office by Jasper Yeates.
Johann Sebastian Bach: Correspondance Catalogues Zwang — Schmeider at This list was published in 1982 as Guide pratique des cantates de Bach in Paris, . A revised edition was published in 2005 ().
" See Ornella Volta (ed)., "Satie Seen Through His Letters", Marion Boyars Publishers, London, 1989, p. 78, and "Erik Satie: Correspondance presque complete", Fayard, Paris, 2003. leading to his wry observation, "It's odd.
Although none of the works he published was reissued in his lifetime, his Correspondance avec le duc d'Aumale, as well as his Journal intime, remain important sources on the history of Orléanism.
Guide pratique des cantates de Bach. Paris, 1982. . See Johann Sebastian Bach: Correspondance Catalogues Zwang — Schmeider at More recently, this cantata is, however, no longer considered to have been composed in 1724.Günther Zedler.
He studied under the painters Achille Devéria and Eugène Devéria and taught Paul-Maurice Duthoit and his son Pierre-Paul-Léon Glaize. Born in Montpellier,Théophile Gautier. Librairie Droz, 1993. Correspondance générale. p. 327.
In 1819 he published his conclusions in the journal Correspondance astronomique, and predicted correctly its return in 1822 (2P/1822 L1). It was recovered by Carl Ludwig Christian Rümker at Parramatta Observatory on 2 June 1822.
La tholos du trésor de Sicyone à Delphes. In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Volume 35 (1911), (pp. 132-148). the east pediment of the archaic templeCourby, Fernand. Le fronton oriental du temple archaïque d'Apollon à Delphes.
François de Salignac de La Mothe; "Correspondance de Fenelon". P. 212 Digitized . In 1713 Hompesch was appointed Governor of Luxembourg, then in 1714 of Namur, and finally of ’s-Hertogenbosch from 1718 until his death in 1733.
Fortuny, sa vie, son ouvre, sa correspondance. París, 1875. More than sixty textile pieces, dating from the thirteenth to the eighteenth centuries, were placed on auction. Those that did not sell formed the basis of her new personal collection.
Bernard Le Calloc'h, Un temoignage capital sur la vie d'Alexander Csoma de Kőrös: Le journal et la correspondance de Victor Jaquemont, Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae Vol. 41, No. 1 (1987), pp. 83–124, at p. 109 note 5.
For a month after that, Françoise de Graffigny was a virtual prisoner at Cirey, until her lover Desmarest passed through en route to Paris and took her on the final leg of her journey.Dainard, ed., Correspondance, vol. 1, letters 60-91.
Hicks is a member of the editorial board for the Fondation Napoléon’s e-periodical, Napoleonica La Revue, and the historical committee for publication of the complete correspondence of Napoleon I, Editions Fayard/Fondation Napoléon, Napoléon Bonaparte, Correspondance générale, vols. 1-7.
A letter to Correspondance Mathématique et Physique dated 5 December 1829 included pictures of a disc and the resulting image as an illustration of these "new species of anamorphoses". Plateau revisited this concept several times in the Correspondance Mathématique et Physique and by January 1836 he finally decided to have the device itself published. He sent a box with the instrument to Michael Faraday on 8 January 1836 since they both studied these kind of phenomena. Faraday had previously inspired Plateau to use a mirror with revolving discs, which helped Plateau to develop his Fantascope a.k.a. Phénakisticope.
D. W. Smith et al., eds., Correspondance générale d'Helvétius, Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 1981, vol. 1. Earlier that same summer, she moved from her house on the rue Saint- Hyacinthe to another on the rue d'Enfer, with an entrance into the Luxembourg Garden.
Correspondance presque complète (Fayard/IMEC, 2000), p. 664. Bardac inherited Debussy's Blüthner piano and took it to Meyssac when he retired. This piano was acquired by the at Brive-la-Gaillarde in 1989.Cahiers Debussy (Centre de documentation Claude Debussy, 2007), p. 84.
He specialized in painting landscapes. Taunay first exhibited his work at the Jeunesse and Salon de la Correspondance. In 1784 he was admitted as an assistant at the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture. He was now able to exhibit at official shows.
Jerram, Mike. "European Correspondance". Flying, Volume 118, No. 9, September 1991. p. 22. ; SOCATA TB-200 Tobago XL GT :Improved version of the TB-200 Tobago XL. ; SOCATA TB-360 Tangara :An unrelated proposed aircraft based on the Gulfstream American GA-7 Cougar.
In 2018, Lavoie and his brother Jasmin published Frères amis, frères ennemis, a collection of their correspondence over a year when Frédérick was working in India while Jasmin, also a journalist, was working in Pakistan."Correspondance fraternelle". Ici Radio-Canada, September 12, 2018.
99 (1979), pp. 152–155 (152)Drijvers, J.W.: "Strabo VIII 2,1 (C335): Porthmeia and the Diolkos", Mnemosyne, Vol. 45 (1992), pp. 75–76 (75)Raepsaet, G. & Tolley, M.: "Le Diolkos de l'Isthme à Corinthe: son tracé, son fonctionnement", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, Vol.
Nathalie Desgrugillers: Ma grand-mère Marie Aurore de Saxe : Correspondance inédite et souvenirs, Clermont-Ferrand, ed. Paleo, coll.: "La collection de sable", 15 June 2011, 178 p., "Repères biographiques", pp. 9-10. On 22 October 1775 at Paris, Marie Rinteau died aged 45.
Translated from French, after: Liszt-d'Agoult: Correspondance II, p. 411. This last point of view is very much resembling Hanslick's opinion. It is therefore not surprising that Liszt and Hanslick were not enemies. Whenever they met they did it with nearly friendly manners.
A biographer and indefatigable authority of Mirbeau's work, Michel has published critical editions of all his work: novels, plays, articles and correspondence. Pierre Michel was awarded the Sévigné prizePrix Sévigné. in October 2003 for his edition of the first volume of Mirbeau's Correspondance générale.
Charlevoix, History (Shea). "Correspondance échangée entre la cour de France et le gouverneur de Frontenac, pendant sa seconde administration (1689–1699)," APQ Rapport, 1927–28, 38–39. NYCD (O'Callaghan and Fernow)Coleman, New England captives. W. J. Eccles, Frontenac: the courtier governor (Toronto, 1959).
Crackerjack Kid, a.k.a. Chuck Welch, mail artist, Photo self- portrait, 2-4-16 Ray Johnson and CrackerJack Kid, Feb 1984 Chuck Welch chose the pseudonym "CrackerJack Kid" because as a mail artist he went to the mail box each day never knowing what surprise he was going to find inside. Welch was first exposed to mail art through the exhibition Omaha Flow Systems curated by Ken Friedman at the Joslyn Art Museum in Nebraska in 1973, and he became actively involved in fluxus mail art in 1978. Welch was a member of Ray Johnson‘s New York Correspondance School, also spelled "New York CorresponDance School".
L. Marlet (ed.), Correspondance d'Odet de Coligny, p. 10, note 2, places the date of the grant on 20 October 1550. He held this benefice until he was deposed in 1563, though the abbey was sacked by the Huguenot army of the Prince de Condé in 1562.
Notes topographiques et chronologiques sur le sanctuaire d'Apollon délien. In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique Volume 45 (1921), (pp. 174-241). With Charles Picard, he prepared the enhancement of the excavations of the city and the Temple of Zeus by a mission to Stratos (Acarnania).Courby, Fernand.
She wrote "La correspondance administrative et diplomatique" her first novel after that but it was never published because she could not afford to pay for the cost of a typewriter. As of February 2017, she has been the president of the Alliance of Central African Publishers.
In the mid-19th century, the area was known as Haouch Legata.N. Robin, 1875, Correspondance, Revue africaine, p. 429 It was home to the Ben-Kanoun family, which owned some 4000 hectares in the area.Charles-Claude Bernard, 1877, Notice topographique et médicale sur le plaine d'Isser, pp.
A reliquary in the form of a sarcophagus containing some of the bones of Trophimus was discovered at Schifout Kassaba (Synnada) in 1907, and transported to the museum at Bursa; this monument may date back to the third century.See Mendel in Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, XXXIII (1909), 342 sq.
At the Salon de la Correspondance in 1786, he showed landscapes of Malta and Constantinople. That same year, Louis XVI decided to have depictions of the French naval victories of the War of American Independence made, and he chose Cercy to make them. He died in 1804 in Paris.
He and the Domnitor went to Istanbul for the firman, which was granted to them by Abdülaziz. Carol signaled his refusal of direct vassalage by making Știrbei read the document, which signaled to Abdülaziz that he considered himself an equal.Badea-Păun, pp. 110–111. See also Iorga, Correspondance, p.
Liszt himself, as it seems, shared their opinion. For many times he assured, his fantasies and transcriptions were only worthless trash. He would as soon as possible start composing his true masterworks.For example, see his letter to Marie d'Agoult of October 8, 1846, in: Liszt-d'Agoult: Correspondance II, p.
Mathesis: Recueil Mathématique was a Belgian scientific journal for elementary mathematics, established in 1881 by Paul Mansion and Joseph Jean Baptiste Neuberg.. See in particular p.20, which mentions the founding of Mathesis in the context of a brief biography of Paul Mansion. An earlier Belgian mathematics journal, Nouvelle Correspondance Mathématique, was established in 1874 by Mansion and Neuberg together with Eugène Catalan. In 1880, Nouvelle Correspondance ceased publication, and Mansion and Neuberg together launched its successor, Mathesis, in 1881.. Mathesis ceased publication in 1915 because of the war in Europe, but restarted again under the editorship of Neuberg and Adolphe Mineur in 1922 as the official journal of the Belgian Mathematical Society, which itself was founded in 1921.
In 1934 L. Demey founded the "ASSOCIATION BELGE DES JOUEURS d'ECHECS PAR CORRESPONDANCE" (AJEC). He also negotiated with the Postal Administration to enforce in Belgium the cheaper rate of printed matter to include chess cards. This favourable rate was abolished in 1984. AJEC organised the first Belgian championship in several categories.
La Religieuse (also called The Nun or Memoirs of a Nun) is an 18th-century French novel by Denis Diderot. Completed in about 1780, it was first published by Friedrich Melchior Grimm in 1792 (six years after Diderot's death) in his Correspondance littéraire in Saxony, and subsequently in 1796 in France.
Reverend William Crowell sent a letter inquiring about his conversion and the Mormon faith in general. Spencer's responses to this and other epistles were published and remain of interest to many Latter-day Saints today.Crowel, Rev William & Spencer, Orson. Correspondance Between the Reverend W. Crowel, A.M. and O. Spencer, B.A.
Regis Brun. La Societe Historique Acadienne, July/ August 1969, Moncton, New Brunswick (This article references the primary source as Archives nationals, Fonds des Colonies, C. 12 (Correspondance generale, Sainte Pierre et Miquelon, vol. 1, f. 22-26.)) Also see Manuscripts of Chief Justice Deschamps 1750-1800, NSARM- Family Papers - Deschamps, Isaac - Vol. 32.
Isinda () was a town of ancient Lycia. Isinda formed a political union (Sympoliteia) with three neighboring cities Aperlae (which was the union's seat), Apollonia and Simena.Louis Robert, "Documents d'Asie Mineure" in Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Year 1983, Volume 107, Issue 107-1, p. 500 Its site is located near Belenli, Asiatic Turkey.
André Lorant, Le compromis austro-hongrois et l'opinion publique française en 1867, pp. 183–184. Geneva: Librairie Droz, 1971. . See also Iorga, Correspondance, pp. vii–viii During the final years of the Empire, Știrbei served Napoleon III as a diplomat, and was made by him a Commander of the Legion of Honor.
Les Lazaristes de Madagascar: Correspondance avec Vincent de Paul (1648–1661), textes établis, introduits et annotés par Paris. Presses de l’Université Paris-Sorbonne. n.a. (?). La fonction Missionnaire: Sur la Mission Lazariste à Fort-Dauphin (1648–1674) From AnthropologieEnLigne.com and the Malagasy Lutheran Church, both established in Fort Dauphin (now Tôlanaro) in the 1890s.
Sur les femmes (Essay on Women) is an essay by Denis Diderot published in Correspondance littéraire in 1772. It contains a response to Antoine Léonard Thomas's Essay on the Character, Morals, and Mind of Women in Different Centuries, which was also published in 1772, and includes Diderot's own views on the subject.
Published 2006 From 1771 he went to France and exhibited canvases at salons. Soon afterwards, he returned to Germany and in 1772 he became an official painter in Weimar. Later on, he became painter of Louis XV's daughters. In 1779 and 1782 he exhibited at the "Salon de la Correspondance" in Paris.
The critic Camille Lemonnier, a fellow member of the Sociéte Libre, praised him for "sincerity", one of the ideals prized by their group.Assuming Lemonnier is the L. who wrote "Correspondance de Belgique," La Chronique des arts et de la curiosité (Paris, 1883), p. 128, a publication to which he was a major contributor.
8–19 (11) Periander's change of heart is attributed variously to the great expense of the project, a lack of labour or a fear that a canal would have robbed Corinth of its dominant role as an entrepôt for goods.Werner, Walter: "The largest ship trackway in ancient times: the Diolkos of the Isthmus of Corinth, Greece, and early attempts to build a canal", The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology, Vol. 26, No. 2 (1997), pp. 98–119 Remnants of the Diolkos still exist next to the modern canal.Verdelis, Nikolaos: "Le diolkos de L'Isthme", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique (1957, 1958, 1960, 1961, 1963)Raepsaet, G. & Tolley, M.: "Le Diolkos de l’Isthme à Corinthe: son tracé, son fonctionnement", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, Vol.
He was made a marshal of France on 2 January 1768.Victor-François de Broglie, Correspondance inédite de Victor-François, duc de Broglie, maréchal de France, avec le prince Xavier de Saxe,..., Albin Michel, Paris, 1903, volume 1, page 30 On 18 January 1774 he died of apoplexy at Versailles in the cabinet du roi.
His extensive annotated herbarium is conserved at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and his correspondance is held in several archives, including Cambridge University Library. Over living 6600 specimens were recorded in his garden including exotic plants and trees. Some were transferred to Kew Gardens after his death. The collection included 81 different willow species.
Buta-ul and Buyla are names preserved by an inscription on one of the vessels found in the hoard. The inscription is written in the Greek alphabet and reads: :BOYHΛA.ZOAΠAN.TECH.ΔYΓΕTOIΓH.BOYTAOYΛ.ZΩAΠAN.TAΓPOΓH.HTZIΓH.TAICH ::(Transliteration: bouēla zoapan tesē dygetoigé boutaoul zōapan tagrogē ētzigē taisē).Francis Dvornik, "Deux inscriptions gréco-bulgares de Philippes", Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, 1928 Vol.
When military chief Nader Shah expelled the Afghans, Mirza Mehdi Khan supported him in the Safavid court. During his long service to Nader, he first functioned as "head of the royal correspondance" (Monshi-ol-Mamalek), until Nader's coronation at the Mugan plain in 1736. Afterwards, he became his official biographer and historiographer. During Nader's Dagestan campaign, he accompanied him.
Correspondance Huygens generally wrote in French or Latin. While still a college student at Leiden he began a correspondence with the intelligencer Mersenne, who died quite soon afterwards in 1648. Mersenne wrote to Constantijn on his son's talent for mathematics, and flatteringly compared him to Archimedes (3 January 1647). The letters show the early interests of Huygens in mathematics.
There are indications that communication and cooperation between Serbs and Greeks of the Greek mainland had also been established early. For example, in 1806 the French consul in Thessaloniki reported that “the Turks are very furious against the Greeks because of their communications with the Serbs”.Ministėre des Affaires Etrangėres, Correspondance Consulaire, Salonique, vol. 15 bis (1795-1809) 312a.
Sadoul held the Entente's "shortsightedness" as the main cause of this pact.Vincent Monteil, "Correspondance. Un témoin de la première heure", in Le Nouvel Observateur, No. 371, December 1971, p. 48 General Niessel's mission was not evacuated from Petrograd, but continued to negotiate its retreat with Trotsky, who took over as People's Commissar for Military and Naval Affairs.
117 (1993), pp. 233–261 The Diadoch Demetrius Poliorcetes (336–283 BC) planned to construct a canal as a means to improve his communication lines, but dropped the plan after his surveyors, miscalculating the levels of the adjacent seas, feared heavy floods.Gerster, Béla, "L'Isthme de Corinthe: tentatives de percement dans l'antiquité", Bulletin de correspondance hellénique (1884), Vol.
There are indications that communication and cooperation between Serbs and Greeks of the Greek mainland had also been established early. For example, in 1806 the French consul in Thessaloniki reported that "the Turks are very furious against the Greeks because of their communications with the Serbs".Ministėre des Affaires Etrangėres, Correspondance Consulaire, Salonique, vol. 15 bis (1795-1809) 312a.
The site also includes a comprehensive collection of printed documents providing educational tools as well as grammar exercises and information on the French language test. Since 1995, the CCDMD has also been publishing a newsletter called Correspondance three times a year. This publication is aimed at anyone concerned with improving the French language in the college network.
René Vaillot, Avec Mme Du Châtelet, Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 1988, pp. 58–62. Voltaire, who often wrote to Mlle Quinault for advice, told Françoise de Graffigny that the actress "was constantly imagining subjects for comedies and tragedies, and offered them to authors, urging them to work on them." Dainard, ed., Correspondance de Mme de Graffigny, vol.
Bouré's Freedom of Association (1864) was created for the Chambre des Représentants.Marchal, p. 697. People at the base of Bouré's Gileppe Dam lion show its colossal proportions Bouré's portrait busts of notable Belgians include Joseph Poelaert, the architect of the Palais de Justice; the surgeon and iodotherapist Limange;L. (Lemmonier), "Correspondance," La Chronique des arts, p.
At that time Valbelle was about 51 years old, a man of medium height, swarthy, nervous and agile. As an adventurous young man he had been attractive to women and had various affairs. His secret correspondance with the king and his ministers Colbert and Seignelay shows he had an original turn of mind, was witty, bold and familiar.
Almost certainly with modern technology the Greek part would yield more but the inscription was lost during the occupation of the island in World War II. Despite searches over 70 years, it has not been found. The other Dreros inscription was also published by Van Effenterre in 1946.Henri Van Effenterre in Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, vol. 70 (1946), p.
In the following years, he practised at the Hôpital de la Charité in Paris. Melchior Grimm wrote: "He joined a lot of knowledge and literature, a strong and pleasant spirit and all the qualities of a good man".Correspondance de Grimm. 15. March 1759. He wrote the article Docteur en médecine for the Encyclopédie by Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d’Alembert.
Louis-François L'Héritier, also known under the name L'Héritier de l'Ain (30 May 1788Date given by Roger Pierrot in his critical study about Honoré de Balzac's Correspondance, published in 1960 by Garnier (p. 766). Joseph-Marie Quérard, Les Supercheries littéraires dévoilées, vol.5, 1853, (p. 251-252) (read online) indicates 30 May 1790 and provides 13 July 1852 for death date.
Ganache or crème ganache was originally a kind of chocolate truffle introduced by the Paris confectioner Maison Siraudin in about 1862 and first documented in 1869.'Jeanne', "Correspondance: Jeanne à Florence", Journal des Demoiselles 37:27 (1869) It was named after a popular vaudeville comedy by Victorien Sardou, Les Ganaches ("The Chumps")Oxford English Dictionary 3rd edition online, 2015, s.v. (1862).
August Ferdinand Mehren, "Correspondance du philosophe soufi Ibn Sab´in Abdou l-Haqq avec l´empereur Frédéric II de Hohenstaufen", Journal Asiatique, 7. série, 14 (1879), pp.341-454 (French translation of Question IV) to Italian,Mario Grignaschi, "Ibnu Sab´în, Al-Kalâmu ´alâ-l-masâ´ili -ç-çiqiliyyati, Trattato sulle domande siciliane. Domanda II. Traduzione e commento", Archivio Storico Siciliano, 3.
His were collected in 1818. The "," and translations from the German, were published in . Besides the histories of the time, see further details vol. x. of the ; a paper on Jordan and Madame de Staël, by Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, in the Revue des deux mondes for March 1868 and R Boubbe, "Camille Jordan à Weimar," in the Correspondance (1901), ccv.
Portrait of Madame Louis composing music, circa 1777, Paris Marie-Emmanuelle Bayon Louis (6 June 1745, Marcei – 29 March 1825, Aubevoye) was a French composer, pianist, and salonnière. Contemporaries credited Mlle Bayon (or Baillon) for making the fortepiano popular in France.Quoting Correspondance secrète, politique et littéraire (news of the French court, society, and culture), ed. Métra (London: J. Adamson, 1787), vol.
Its frequently overzealous and clandestine methods often hindered rather than helped the Church in its combat with modernism. Benigni also published the journal La Corrispondenza Romana/Correspondance de Rome which initiated press campaigns against practical and social modernism throughout Europe. Benigni fell out with Cardinal Secretary of State Rafael Merry del Val in 1911. The Sodalitium was eventually dissolved in 1921.
A polytechnician (1817), he had to leave the École polytechnique for health reason and became a lawyer (1823) then decided to devote himself to music. A student of Cherubini and Reicha, he became librarian at the Conservatoire de Paris (1831–1846).Robert Wangermée, Correspondance, Mardaga, 2006, p.86 He was the son of inventor Auguste Bottée de Toulmon (1764–1816).
When the Dowager Duchess of Lorraine died of a stroke, at Commercy, on 23 December 1744, ownership of the château reverted to Stanislas Leszczyński, under whom it had its golden age. He and his court made frequent visits to Commercy, where etiquette was more relaxed and social pleasures were the main occupation.Dainard, ed. Correspondance de Mme de Graffigny, especially vols.
Napoleon realized that the only Ottoman troops of any worth on the battlefield were the Mamluk cavalry. He exhorted his troops, saying, "Forward! Remember that from those monuments yonder 40 centuries look down upon you."The Campaigns of Napoleon, Volume 1, By David G. Chandler; page 224Eugène de Beauharnais, Mémoires et Correspondance Politique et Militaire du Prince Eugène de Beauharnais, tome premier, p.
Lycurgue about to hit Ambrosia who transform into a vine, greek mosaic from Delos, end of the IId before. J.-C.For more, see Nonnus, Dionysiaca, XXI, 1-68. For a detailed study of this mosaic, see Claude Vatin and Philippe Bruneau, « Lycurgue et Ambroisie sur une nouvelle mosaïque de Délos », in Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, 1966, vol. 90, 90-2, p.
Evidence indicates that there was 6 to 8.5 km long Diolkos paved trackway, which transported boats across the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece from around 600 BC.Verdelis, Nikolaos: "Le diolkos de L'Isthme", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, Vol. 81 (1957), pp. 526–529 (526)Cook, R. M.: "Archaic Greek Trade: Three Conjectures 1. The Diolkos", The Journal of Hellenic Studies, Vol.
Correspondance 1864 - 1927 (in German, partly French). Verlag Hans Huber, Bern, pp. 82, 85, 487 After her clinical studies in Vienna and Paris, she returned to the United States. As the all- male North Carolina Medical Society would only grant her honorary membership, Dimock rejoined the New England Hospital for Women and Children, where she was appointed resident physician on August 20, 1872.
Horse-drawn trams were the predecessor of nowadays electric trams. The first mention for the existence of the «American Tram» (fr. Tramway Américain) as the horse tram was referred to, was in correspondance addressed to the citywide proprietors Ed. Paujaurd’hui and A. Edvard on June 27, 1865. However, just 6 years later (March 14, 1871) the city council allowed for the construction of tram lines.
It was sent to Maurice Schlesinger, editor of the Gazette musicale. Schlesinger, however, following the advice of Berlioz, did not publish it.See the letter by Berlioz to Liszt of April 28, 1836, in: Berlioz, Hector: Correspondance générale II, 1832–1842, éditée sous la direction de Pierre Citron, Paris 1975, p. 295. In the beginning of 1837, Liszt published a review of some piano works of Sigismond Thalberg.
Nicole Groult (Poiret's sister) provided a creepy face mask that hid all but the dancer's eyes.Ornella Volta (ed.), "Erik Satie: Correspondance presque complete", Fayard, Paris, 2003, pp. 700-701. Caryathis in the 1921 premiere of La belle excentrique. Costume designed by Jean Cocteau, with face mask by Nicole Groult Cocteau also wrote a programmatic text for La belle that caused friction between the collaborators.
306), Cantor states that his paternal grandparents were members of the Sephardic Jewish community of Copenhagen. Specifically, Cantor states in describing his father: "Er ist aber in Kopenhagen geboren, von israelitischen Eltern, die der dortigen portugisischen Judengemeinde...." ("He was born in Copenhagen of Jewish (lit: 'Israelite') parents from the local Portuguese-Jewish community.")Tannery, Paul (1934) Memoires Scientifique 13 Correspondance, Gauthier-Villars, Paris, p. 306.
4, 1, 724.Queensland State Archives, Home Secretary’s Office, Series SRS 5263/1, General Correspondance, Item HOM/J717, 1929/3999, memo re Aboriginal Reservations. By 1900, Aboriginal populations in the Cape York Peninsula area had been decimated as a result of introduced disease, exclusions from traditional hunting grounds, and by the brutality of the Native Police and Somerset's Police Magistrates, most notoriously Frank Jardine.
Hippolyte Aubert, Fernand Aubert, Henri Meylan Correspondance de Théodore de Bèze: 1590 Francken's printer was arrested in Poland.Robert Wallace, Sketches of the lives and writings of distinguished antitrinitarians On July 9, 1587 Franken was in Prague and introduced to John Dee. Later, on Oct.13 1592, Dee would show Franken's book of "blasphemie" (Poland 1585) to John Whitgift, the Archbishop of Canterbury, desiring it be confuted.
The design include four corner bastions, called Bowes, Wyndham, Taylor, and Tiberio, after the commanders. Francisco Tiberio was the leader of a company of Italian mercenaries. The French ambassador was told that the tollbooth, a tall and solid stone structure, had been filled with earth to form a gun platform called a cavalier.Merriman, Marcus, (1982), 719–721: Correspondance politique de Odet de Selve, 52, 366.
He accompanied Francesco Barberini on his unsuccessful mission to Spain in 1625–26.Raissa Teodori, "Lagonissa, Fabio", Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, vol. 63 (2004). In March 1627 he was appointed papal nuncio to the Southern Netherlands.Lagonissa's correspondence as nuncio has been calendared in the series Analecta Vaticano-Belgica as Correspondance du nonce Fabio de Lagonissa, 1627-1634, edited by Lucienne Van Meerbeeck (Brussels and Rome, 1966).
Roger Désormière conducted the first performance of the Cinq Grimaces on May 17, 1926, during a "Hommage à Satie" concert at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris.Paul Collaer, "Correspondance avec des amis musiciens", Editions Mardaga, 1996, p. 227 and note 3. In 1928 Milhaud published his solo piano reduction of the work through Universal Edition, which issued the original orchestral score the following year.
For much of the 1740s the two men fought side by side in the Italian campaigns of the War of the Austrian Succession. Saint-Lambert spent the winter quarter in Lunéville in 1745-46, and according to François- Antoine Devaux, he became at that time the lover of the Marquise de Boufflers.J. A. Dainard, ed., Correspondance de Madame de Graffigny, vol. 8, pp. 156-57.
Jean-Louis Couasnon was born in Culan, Cher, in 1747. He studied under the sculptor Jean-Baptiste d'Huez. In 1777 he was working for the Menus-Plaisirs du Roi, for whom he made painted cartoons of Louis XVI of France and Marie Antoinette He exhibited at the Salon de la Correspondance in 1779 and in 1785. He exhibited at the Salons du Louvre from 1795 to 1802.
Marie-Victoire Lemoine mainly painted portraits, miniatures, and genre scenes. She took part in numerous Salons, for example Pahin de la Blancherie's Salon de Correspondance in 1779, where she exhibited a portrait of the Princess Lamballe (57 x 45 cm). Following this salon, she continued to display her works of art to the public in the salons of 1796, 1798, 1799, 1802, 1804 and 1814.
Gourdan was made bankrupt in May 1778. On November 28 that year, Marguerite Gourdan died in a bedroom on the first floor of her home on the rue Dussoubs. Her death was caused by complications of syphilis. A song was composed about her funeral: A collection of letters between Gourdan and her clients, called Correspondance de Madame Gourdan, dite la petite comtesse was published in 1883.
He died at Ixelles in 1883 in what was marked as the prime of his life, and was buried next to his brother.Après trente ans de séparation, la mort les réunit sous la même pierre. … il est frappé dans la maturité de l'âge, as expressed by L. (Lemonnier), "Correspondance de Belgique," La Chronique des arts et de la curiosité (Paris, 1883), p. 128 online.
The ‘opérette’ was first performed on 1 May 1879 as part of an evening's entertainment organized by the ‘Cercle international’ in the Boulevard des Capucines, with piano accompaniment by Chabrier himself. It was revived in March 1910 in Monte Carlo and on 9 January 1911 at the Théâtre des Arts conducted by Gabriel Grovlez. In December 1918 Jane Bathori mounted the piece at the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier.Chabrier E. Correspondance.
Alice of Bigorre (1217/1220-1255), also known as Alice or Alix de Monfort was suo jure ruling Countess of Bigorre between 1251 and 1255\. She was the eldest daughter of Petronilla, Countess of Bigorre and her third husband Guy de Monfort.Alfonse de Poitou Correspondance Tome II, 2087, p. 597. Alice was married twice during her lifetime and from her first marriage, she gained the title of Lady of Chabanais.
The opera was first performed at the Théâtre Royal de la Cour at Fontainebleau on 26 October 1765. The elaborate medieval staging cost 20,000 livres according to Grimm in his Correspondance littéraire. It was revived at the Comédie-Italienne on 4 December 1765 and given over 100 times in the following years, popularizing medieval settings for other operas such as Richard Coeur-de-lion and Aucassin et Nicolette.
Marie was the ninth of fourteen children born to Louis of Lorraine, Count of Armagnac and Catherine de Neufville. Her father was a member of the House of Guise, cadet branch of the House of Lorraine, where he held the rank of a prince étranger at the French court. Mademoiselle d'Armagnac.Rabutin, Roger de, Correspondance de Roger de Rabutin, Comte de Bussy avec sa Famille et ses Amis, p.
266-267 She produced and distributed so much artwork in this fashion that the value of her work dropped. With the landlords of successive grand apartments, Kolin bartered artwork for rent, and with her two large dogs turned at least one dwelling into a squalid mess.Thaler, pp. 274-275 Kolin was a longtime friend of artist Ray Johnson and an early member of his New York Correspondance School.
Retrieved 19 October 2018. Macdonald was appointed in 1967 as the inaugural general editor of the New Berlioz Edition published by Bärenreiter; 26 volumes were issued between 1967 and 2006 under his editorship."New Berlioz Edition" , Bärenreiter-Verlag. Retrieved 28 October 2018 He is also one of the editors of Berlioz's Correspondance générale, and author of a 1978 study of Berlioz's orchestral music, and of the Grove article on the composer.
Flaugergues was born in Viviers, the son of magistrate Antoine-Dominique Flaugergues, whose family originated from Rouergue. His mother was Jean-Marie-Louise de Ratte, of a family of Montpellier gentry and the sister of mathematician and astronomer Étienne-Hyacinthe de Ratte. He first gained an interest in astronomy at the age of eight through reading Alain Manesson Mallet's Description de l'Univers.Xaver, Franz Correspondance astronomique, géographique, hydrographique et statistique, 1820, p.
Hellmann, Marie-Christine. Les architectes de l'École française d'Athènes. In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Volume 120, livraison 1 (1996),(pp. 191-222). At Delos, he became interested in 1906 in the proto-history of the sanctuary, unearthed the Portico Antigone with one of the tombs of the Hyperborean Virgins (the Theke), and discovered the remains of a Minoan and Mycenaean Delos in the sanctuary of Apollo and Artemis.
La restauration de l'autel d'Apollon à Delphes. In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique103, (pp. 479-500). It was in Delos that Fernand Courby started his study on Les vases grecs à reliefs (from prehistoric to Roman times), which he made the subject of his doctoral thesis published in 1922. This book of reference on the pottery of ancient Greece earned him the medal of the Institut de France in 1926.
She had been under the care of Arthur Kronfeld, a noted Berlin psychotherapist. She also saw Alexandra Ramm-Pfemfert. She was married to Franz Pfemfert, the founder of Die Aktion, a journal of expressionism, and translator of books by Trotsky.see The Prophet Outcast: Trotsky, 1929-1940 (1963) and Jacquy Chemouni Le Père: son attitude à l'égard des troubles mentaux et la psychanalyse de sa fille Zina (à travers sa correspondance inédite).
Vidal conducted at the Opéra National de Paris where he made his first appearance directing Gwendoline in 1894 (he had coached the singers for the Paris premiere in 1893Chabrier E, Correspondance. Ed Delage R, Durif F. Klincksieck, 1994. 93-36n.), and later conducted the first performance of Ariane and the Paris premieres of Roma by Massenet, and L'étranger by d’Indy. He co-founded the Concerts de l’Opera with Georges Marty.
Tomb in Mechelen Cathedral Thomas Philip Wallrad de Hénin-Liétard d'Alsace named Cardinal d'AlsaceLe cardinal Thomas-Philippe d'Alsace, archevêque de Malines et le Saint-Siège: correspondance tirée des Archives du Vatican, 1703-1759 (Brussels, 12 November 1679 – 5 January 1759), was a Cardinal and Archbishop of Mechelen, Belgium. He participated in 4 conclaves; during the conclave of 1758, in which he did not participate, he was Cardinal Proto- Priest.
Further excavations have since uncovered the river bridge, the gymnasium, Greek and Roman villas and numerous tombs etc. Parts of the lion monument and tombs were discovered during World War I by Bulgarian and British troops whilst digging trenches in the area. In 1934, M. Feyel, of the École française d'Athènes (EfA), led an epigraphical mission to the site and uncovered further remains of the lion monument (a reconstruction was given in the Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, a publication of the EfA which is available on line).Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique The silver ossuary containing the cremated remains of Brasidas A. Agelarakis, “Physical anthropological report on the cremated human remains of an individual retrieved from the Amphipolis agora” in “Excvating Classical Amphipolis” by Ch. Koukouli-Chrysantkai, (eds.) Stamatopoulou M., and M., Yeroulanou, BAR International Series 1031, 2002: 72-73 and a gold crown (see image) was found in a tomb in pride of place under the Agora.
The weather caused severe difficulties for both sides. Mild autumn weather had lasted longer than usual.Petre "Poland", 2001 ed, p354 Normally, frosts made the inadequate roads passable after the muddy conditions of autumn but on 17 December there was a thaw,Correspondance de Napoleon Ier, XI 497 followed by a two-day thaw beginning on 26 December.Petre "Campaign in Poland", 2001 ed, p40 The result was that both sides found it very difficult to manoeuvre.
Guy, John, Queen of Scots: The True Story, (2005), pp.469-480: Chantelauze, Régis de, ed., Marie Stuart, son procès et son exécution: d'après le journal inédit de Bourgoing, son médecin, la correspondance d'Amyas Paulet, son geôlier et autres documents nouveaux, Plon, (1876) Walsingham wrote to Paulet from Windsor Castle on 25 August that Elizabeth ordered that Mary should not leave Tixall. However, on that day, Paulet brought Mary back to Chartley.
He married Anne-Catherine Le Prince, daughter of the Painter to the King, Jean-Baptiste Le Prince. After the Académie of Saint Luc was suppressed, he continued to exhibit at the Salon de la Correspondance of the Académie royal and became a good friend of Jean-Baptiste Greuze. He exhibited there until 1785. When the French Revolution abolished academic privilege, he switched to the Salon de Louvre and exhibited there from 1791 to 1799.
Rose-Adélaïde Ducreux (1761 – July 26, 1802) was a French painter and musician, born in Paris. Eldest daughter of Joseph Ducreux, with whom she also studied, she showed at the Louvre Salons in 1791, 1793, 1795, 1798, and 1799. She was accomplished both as a performer and as a composer. Ducreux first exhibited at one of Pahin de la Blancherie's bi-weekly exhibitions, known as the Salon de la Correspondance, in 1786.
Under Captain Jean Dornal de Guy, Manche captured the 16-gun gun brig , Lieutenant William Fitzwilliam Owen commanding, on 28 September 1808 near Bengkulu.Fonds marine. On 26 April 1809, Manche departed Port-Napoléon Correspondance de Napoléon in a squadron under Captain Hamelin, along with and . The squadron managed to re-take Foulpointe in Madagascar, captured three prizes at the Action of 18 November 1809, and raided the British settlement at Tarapouly, in Sumatra.
Correspondance of Vincent van Gogh, No. 459A, cited in John Gage, Couleur et Culture: Usages et significations de la couleur de l'Antiquité à l'abstraction. In another letter he wrote simply, "there is no orange without blue."Eva Heller, Psychologie de la couleur: effets et symboliques, p. 152. Van Gogh, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and many other impressionist and post-impressionist painters frequently placed orange against azure or cobalt blue, to make both colours appear brighter.
The first founders of the lodge, however, separated a few years after its inception.J.-B. Aymard, La naissance de la loge "La Grande Triade" dans la correspondance de René Guénon à Frithjof Schuon in Connaissance des religions, special issue on René Guénon, n° 65–66, pp. 17–35. The integral version of this text can be found here (in French). Nevertheless, this lodge, belonging to the Grande Loge de France, remains active today.
Formey's principal works are La belle Wolfienne (1741–1753); Le Philosophe chrétien (1740); L'Emile chrétien (1764), intended as an answer to the Emile of Rousseau; and Souvenirs d'un citoyen (Berlin, 1789). He also published an immense number of contemporary memoirs in the transactions of the Berlin Academy. His correspondence with Prosper Marchand was published in 2012.Jan Schillings, 'La correspondance entre Formey et Marchand (1736–1749)', Lias 39:2 (2012), pp. 231–320.
Jacques Hadamard: a universal mathematician. American Mathematical Society, 1999. ; p. 271Michèle Audin, Correspondance entre Henri Cartan et André Weil (1928-1991), Documents Mathématiques 6, Société Mathématique de France, 2011, p. 259-313 The first woman to give an ICM plenary lecture, at the 1932 congress in Zürich, was Emmy Noether. The second ICM plenary talk by a woman was delivered 58 years later, at the 1990 ICM in Kyoto, by Karen Uhlenbeck.
Ornella Volta (ed.), "Erik Satie: Correspondance presque complete", Fayard, Paris, 2003. He then proceeded to break with the Nouveaux jeunes group of musicians he had recently founded, an act that set the stage for their eventual regrouping as Les Six. By the summer of 1919 his creative energies had revived, though his spirits remained hard- bitten and gloomy. "I have changed a lot during these last months", he mused to singer Paulette Darty.
In his memoirs, Carrillo states that the letter was written on 7 March. However, journalist and historian Carlos Fernández published the letter in 1983, as it had been published in Correspondance International; it was dated 15 May. After the military collapse of the Republican Government, Carrillo fled to Paris and worked to reorganise the party. Carrillo spent 38 years in exile, most of the time in France, but also in the USSR and other countries.
The Chansons gaillardes (Ribald songs) FP 42, are a song cycle of eight pieces composed by Francis Poulenc in 1925–1926 "In euphoria and post-war"Guide de la mélodie et du lied, p. 497 on anonymous texts of the 17th century. The work was dedicated to Mme Fernand Allard. This cycle was premiered in concert on 2 May 1926, salle des Agriculteurs8 in the 9th arrondissement of Paris,Correspondance 1910-1963, p.
Evidence indicates that there was a 6 to 8.5 km long Diolkos paved trackway, which transported boats across the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece from around 600 BC.Verdelis, Nikolaos: "Le diolkos de L'Isthme", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, vol. 81 (1957), pp. 526–529 (526)Cook, R. M.: "Archaic Greek Trade: Three Conjectures 1. The Diolkos", The Journal of Hellenic Studies, vol. 99 (1979), pp. 152–155 (152)Drijvers, J.W.: "Strabo VIII 2,1 (C335): Porthmeia and the Diolkos", Mnemosyne, vol.
Dr G.P. Billot, and J. P. F. Deleuze and recorded discussing and documenting seances from the 1820s.Billot, G. P.. Recherches psychologiques sur la cause des phénomènes extraordinaires observés chez les modernes voyans, improprement dits somnambules magnétiques, ou correspondance sur le Magnétisme vital, entre un solitaire et M. Deleuze (2 vols.) . Paris, 1839. Of the early French Spiritualist, Alphonse Cahagnet, publisher of spirit messages such as "Arcanes de la vie future devoiles" (1848), is one of its foremost cases.
Acquainted with many of Vienna's prominent literary and musical figures, such as Arthur Schnitzler,Moriz Scheyer, 'Arthur Schnitzler', in Escape to Yesterday, pp. 170-6 Joseph RothAsylum, p. 286 and Bruno Walter, he was a personal friend of Stefan Zweig,Asylum, pp. 107; 260-2; 285-6. Zweig mentions Scheyer in letters to the French author Georges Duhamel in 1922 and 1923: Duhamel, Correspondance: l'anthologie publiée de Leipzig, Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2001, pp. 114, 124; F. Zweig, Stefan Zweig, p.
Ruzha Lazarova (Bulgarian Cyrillic, Ружа Лазарова; Sofia, 1968) is a Bulgarian French language writer who currently lives in Paris. She studied at the Lycée Français de Sofia and she later studied French literature at the Sofia University. She started publishing short stories in Bulgarian and was awarded with Young Prose Bulgarian Prize in 1990. She has also published two short stories in French and a play, which was performed at the “Festival de la Correspondance” in Grignan.
His first Orientalist works date from 1856. He also held showings in Vienna and London, where he was awarded several medals. In 1860, he created an album of twenty charcoal drawings, with text by his friend Théophile Gautier, that he offered to the General Council of the Vosges as a gift for Napoleon III.lettre de J.J. Belle à Th. Gautier, 4 7bre 1863, correspondance générale That same year, he was decorated with the Legion of Honor.
" The committee recommended a church-wide study, which was implemented. In 1986 she became the first laywoman elected to the post of United Church Moderator. (Robert McClure, 23rd Moderator 1968–1971, was the first layperson elected to the post.) During her time in office, Squire was the target of much vitriolic correspondance from church members who opposed the ongoing study on human sexuality and ministry. In 1987, Squire told Maclean's magazine, "“It is difficult to find a neutral person.
Monsignor Benigni proved to have special gifts for relations with the press. Beginning in 1907, he provided a daily news bulletin, La Corrispondenza di Roma, which became from 1909 to 1912 La Correspondance de Rome and in 1913-1914 Cahiers de Rome. This gave him influence over the contents of publications in many countries. He set up among his contacts the Sodalitium Pianum (Fellowship of Pius X), to report to him those thought to be teaching Modernist doctrines.
171–182), the authors of the French edition of Skylitzes' history, Bernard Flusin and Jean-Claude Cheynet, and by the editors of Daphnopates' correspondence, J. Darrouzès and L. G. Westerink. Daphnopates' correspondence, including an epitaph on Romanos II, was published in a critical edition by J. Darrouzès and L. G. Westerink: Théodore Daphnopatès, Correspondance, Paris: CNRS (1978). For his theological and hagiographical works, cf. V. Latyšev, "Dve reči Feodora Dafnopata", PPSb 59 (1910), pp. 15–38.
Hagia Sophia was built in Trebizond during the reign of Manuel I between 1238 and 1263.Eastmond, Anthony. "The Byzantine Empires in the Thirteenth Century" in Art and Identity in Thirteenth-Century Byzantium: Hagia Sophia and the Empire of Trebizond. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2004, p. 1. The oldest graffiti carved in the apses of the church contain the dates 1291 and 1293.Gabriel Millet, "Les monastères et les églises de Trébizonde", Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, 19 (1895), p.
Daniel Lérault, Jean Rière, "D'un atermoiement à l'autre. La publication de la correspondance Panaït Istrati–Romain Rolland", in Études Romain Rolland – Cahiers de Brèves, Issue 41, July 2018, pp. 47–48 Lăzăreanu was similarly involved, in 1952, with the Romanian orthographic reform, voted in as a member of the Linguistics Institute, and nominally implementing locally the objectives stated in Marxism and Problems of Linguistics.Ana Selejan, Literatura în totalitarism. Vol. II: Bătălii pe frontul literar, pp. 115–116.
Born into a family of writers and academics, graduated from the École des chartes, Léon de Wailly became a close friend of Alfred de Vigny and worked as private secretary for .Correspondance d'Alfred de Vigny: août 1830-septembre 1835, 1989, PUF, (p. 555) He became known for his numerous translations of English writers (poetry) and his collaboration with P. J. Stahl in the adaptation of British classics (including William Shakespeare). Gustave de Wailly was his brother.
In 1901 Bluysen left the Journal des Débats and became owner and director of the Correspondance républicaine libérale. On 27 April 1902 he again tried for election as deputy for Pondicherry, but was decisively beaten by Henrique- Duluc. In 1906 he became director of the Annuaire de la presse française et étrangère et du monde politique. At this time he was elected syndic of the Paris press and was made a Knight of the Legion of Honour.
The anamorphic disc image (A) and the perceived image when spun (B) as illustrated in Correspondance Mathématique et Physique - Tome VI (1830) As a university student, Plateau noticed in some early experiments that when looking from a small distance at two concentric cogwheels, which turned fast in opposite directions, an optical illusion of a motionless wheel appeared. He later read Peter Mark Roget's 1824 article Explanation of an optical deception in the appearance of the spokes of a wheel when seen through vertical apertures that addressed a similar illusion. Plateau decided to investigate the phenomenon further and later published his findings in Correspondance Mathématique et Physique in 1828 On 9 June 1829, Plateau presented his yet nameless anorthoscope as "une espèce toute nouvelle d'anamorphoses" (a totally new sort of anamorphoses) in his doctoral thesis Sur quelques propriétés des impressions produites par la lumière sur l'organe de la vue, at the University of Liège. It was later translated and published in the German scientific magazine Annalen der Physik und Chemie.
Etcheto, Les Scipions, p. 191. It was long believed the consul of 16 BC was the son of a hypothesized Publius Cornelius Scipio, the first husband of Scribonia, later the wife of Octavian.The history of this mistake is set forth in John Scheid, "Scribonia Caesaris et les Cornelii Lentuli", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, 100 (1976), pp. 485-491 This belief was erroneous inasmuch as Suetonius, our source for information about Scribonia, clearly states her first marriage did not produce any children.
Sometime during the reign of Alfonso II of Aragon, the Battler's grandnephew, a man came forward claiming to be Alfonso the Battler. The only contemporary references to this event are two letters of Alfonso II addressed to Louis VII of France; they were carried to Louis by Berengar, the Bishop of Lleida, but are not dated.They were first published in the Recueil des Historiens des Gaules et de la France (Correspondance de Louis VII), XV (Paris: 1878), 2nd ed., no.
Captain François-Marie Renaud d'Avène des Méloizes (1655 – April 22, 1699) was a French Cavalry officer who came to New France in 1685 in command of the Troupes de Marine and led the successful expedition against the Senecas. The Comte de Frontenac considered him "one of the best and wisest officers" in Canada.La prévôté de Québec, registre de 1695, 25 novembre, 128–130. Correspondance de Frontenac (1689–99) He is buried in the vaults of Notre-Dame Basilica-Cathedral, Quebec City.
The remains at Ano Fteri, as is also the case of Kastrorakhi, has been linked with the ancient polis of Spercheiai, but this theory has yet to be proven.F. Stählin, Das hellenische Thessalien — Landeskundliche und geschichtliche Beschreibung Thessaliens in der hellenischen und römischen Zeit, Stuttgart 1924. The body of a female statue in tufa was found here in around 1973, no other finds have been published.Aupert Pierre, "Chronique des fouilles et découvertes archéologiques en Grèce en 1977" in Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Vol.
" His recent books include Belief: A Memoir (Beil, 2007) and two connected epistolary novels, Correspondence: An Adventure in Letters (Godine, 2011) and Bibliophilia: A Novel (Godine, 2016). Of Correspondance, Colleen Mondor writes that the book “serves as an armchair education on Victorian literature. . . . These are literary lessons at their most amiable and a tonic to the chaos of the world around us." In addition, Hall has edited and introduced many books for Oxford World’s Classics, Yale University Press, Arno Press, and others.
234 where he became Chair of geography in 1899. Under his direction, the geography department of this university became important. His career received the encouragement and support of Georges Perrot, director of l'École normale supérieure; Théophile Homolle, Director of the École française d'Athènes, and Charles Bayet, rector of Lille university. In 1905 he became rector of the University of Besançon.Catherine Valenti, « Les membres de l'École française d'Athènes : étude d'une élite universitaire (1846-1992) », Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, 120-1, 1996, p.
In 1879, he left the Opéra-Comique and sang in other European countries. From 1885 to 1889 he was a leading tenor with Le Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie in Brussels, singing in the world premieres of Litolff's, Les templiers (1886), Chabrier's Gwendoline (1886), Godard's Jocelyn (1888), and Mathieu's Richilde (1888). His elder son Joseph (José) Engel (born Joinville-le-Pont 13 August 1868) was a painter, who left portraits and caricatures of Chabrier;Chabrier E, Correspondance. Ed Delage R, Durif F. Klincksieck, 1994. 86-44n.
Badea- Păun, p. 111; Chiper, p. 206; Iorga, Correspondance, p. viii He was a widower from July 1919, when the aged Princess Valérie died at Pontaillac."Nécrologie" in Le Gaulois, July 3, 1919, p. 2; "Nouvelles diverses", in Le Petit Journal, July 3, 1919, p. 3 Știrbei himself died a nonagenarian on the morning of August 15, 1925. His funeral service was held with military honors at the Catholic church of Saint-Charles-de-Monceau, and his burial took place at Père Lachaise Cemetery.
On 21 October 1615 he was appointed papal nuncio to the Brussels court of the Archdukes Albert and Isabella.Gesualdo's correspondence as nuncio in Brussels has been calendared in the Analecta Vaticano-Belgica, as Correspondance des nonces Gesualdo, Morra, Sanseverino avec la Secrétairerie d'Etat pontificale, 1615-1621, edited by L. Van Meerbeeck (Brussels, 1937). On 17 June 1617, he was transferred to Prague as Apostolic Nuncio to the Emperor. On 25 June 1618, he was appointed by Pope Paul V as Titular Patriarch of Constantinople.
The American Declaration of Independence did not elicit enthusiasm from everyone in the Dutch Republic once it became known there in August 1776. The stadtholder wrote to the griffier of the States-General, Hendrik Fagel, that it was only "... the parody of the proclamation issued by our forefathers against king Philip II".William V to H. Fagel, 20 August 1776, in: Kramer, F.J.I (ed.), Archives ou correspondance inédite de la maison d’Orange-Nassau, 5th series, 3 vols. (Leiden 1910-1915), vol I, p. 449.
Grimm wrote a very flattering letter about the Mozart children dated 15 July 1766 in his Correspondance littéraire. Commenting on Mozart's remarkable progress in all areas of music-making, Grimm predicted the future operatic success of the young composer: "He has even written several Italian arias, and I have little doubt that before he has reached the age of twelve, he will already have had an opera performed at some Italian theatre."A full copy of this letter is to be found in Otto Erich Deutsch, Mozart.
Within weeks of his appointment, a French critic commented, "Under M. Mancinelli's baton, his orchestra has achieved the homogeneity that it lacked at first; now it is worthy of Covent Garden"."Correspondance Anglaise", Le Figaro, 13 June 1888, p. 3 When Harris and Mancinelli took over, the house was officially known as "The Royal Italian Opera House", and operas of any nationality were sung in Italian – Die Zauberflöte being given as Il flauto magico etc."Royal Italian Opera: Il flauto magico", The Era, 30 June 1888, p.
John Scheid, "Scribonia Caesaris et les Cornelii", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 100 (1976), p. 490 Not long after Cornelia's death, he married Claudia Marcella Minor, one of the daughters of consul Gaius Claudius Marcellus Minor and Octavia the Younger, as her maternal uncle was the Roman emperor Augustus. The marriage of Marcella and Paullus linked two honored republican houses and tied them closely to the imperial circle. At some point after 11 BC, Marcella bore him a son, Paullus Aemilius Regulus,Syme, The Augustan Aristocracy p.
Correspondance littéraire du président Bouhier n°8 : Lettres de Mathieu Marais (1724-1737), vol.1, 1974.) His nickname was "the lawyer of the women" (l'avocat des dames), because he pleaded for a lot of them. He aspired to French Academy. He was very fond of Jean de La Fontaine, and the wrote an Histoire de la vie et des ouvrages de M. de La Fontaine (History of The Life and Works of Mr. de La Fontaine) published in 1811 by Simon Chardon de La Rochette.
Madeleine-Élisabeth Pigalle, sometimes known as Madelon (1751–1827), was a French painter. Born in Sens, Pigalle was distantly related to Jean-Baptiste Pigalle; he is said to have provided her with lessons upon visiting her hometown in 1766 and finding that she had artistic talent. Her father was the merchant Gervais-Protais Pigalle (1724–1802). In 1782 she showed an oil painting at the Salon de la Correspondance, and in 1785 she produced a pastel head of a woman which received some notice.
Courby, Fernand. Vases à reliefs appliqués du musée de Délos. In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Volume 37 (1913), (pp. 418-442).Courby, Fernand. Les vases grecs à reliefs. Bibliothèque des Écoles françaises d'Athènes et de Rome, fascicule 125, 598 pages, Paris, De Boccard (1922). Appointed a professor of Greek philology and epigraphy at the University of Lyon in 1922, Fernand Courby founded in 1923 the Institut d'épigraphie grecque, which in 1961 took the name Institut Fernand Courby (a laboratory of the CNRS since 1967).
Jean-Jacques Pillot is often grouped with Théodore Dézamy (1805–1850), Richard Lahautière (1813–1882), Albert Laponneraye (1808–1849) and Jules Gay (1807–1887) as a representative of materialist communism in France and was cited as a forerunner by Karl Marx.Jean-Louis Lacascade, « Bévue de Proudhon et/ou traquenard de Marx. Lecture symptomale de leur unique correspondance » [archive], Genèses, n° 46, 2002/1, p. 138-158 Pillot was not only a metaphysical materialist but is also credited with a rudimentary class analysis of political conflict.
Vetturie, 1692–1695, Paris, Tuileries Garden As a student of the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture Le Gros was awarded the prestigious Prix de Rome to study at the French Academy in Rome, where he arrived in 1690. There, he renewed his close friendship with his cousin Pierre Lepautre, also a sculptor, and struck a friendship with the Academy's other fellow, the architect Gilles-Marie Oppenordt.Anatole de Montaiglon and Jules Guiffrey (eds.), Correspondance des directeurs de l’Académie de France à Rome avec les surintendants des bâtiments, vol. I-XVIII, Paris 1887–1912.
Le Maistre's brother Louis-Isaac Le Maistre de Sacy, studio of Philippe de Champaigne Le Maistre's portrait was painted by Philippe de Champaigne (1602–1674), a painter who was closely connected with Port-Royal des Champs.Lesaulnier, Jean, Philippe de Champaigne et Port-Royal: témoignages, chapter 4, 'Les secrets d'une correspondance: à propos du portrait d'Antoine Le Maistre' A copy exists, but the original is lost.Liste des oeuvres de Champaigne Philippe de (1602-1674) dans la catégorie "Peintures" at photormn.com, accessed 25 June 2008 The portrait was later engraved by Charles Simonneau.
On 14 February 1920, he gave the first public performance of Socrate at the . Dedicatee of Erik Satie's 2nd Nocturne for piano, he was also the first performer, alongside the composer, of the Trois petites pièces montées (19 December 1920).Ornella Volta, Erik Satie. Correspondance presque complète, Fayard/IMEC, 2000, Co-founder, with the composer Amable MassisAmable Massis (second violin of the Carembat Quartet), of the Conservatoire de Musique de Troyes where he taught piano, he was forced to cease his functions under the Occupation, finding refuge in Aix-en-Provence.
Pauline de Tourzel married Alexandre Léon Luce de Galard de Brassac de Béarn, and was thereafter known as Comtesse de Bearn. Because of their well known sympathies for the Bourbon family, they were not well regarded by emperor Napoleon and their correspondance was reportedly surveilled by the secret police. Pauline and Marie Thérèse were reunited on 29 April 1814 at the Palace of Compiegne following the Bourbon restoration. Pauline became a lady-in- waiting to Marie Thérèse and went with her to the graves of her parents Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette.
After several attempts and many difficulties he constructed a working model of the phénakisticope in November or December 1832. Plateau published his invention in a 20 January 1833 letter to Correspondance Mathématique et Physique. He believed that if the manner of producing the illusions could be somehow modified, they could be put to other uses, "for example, in phantasmagoria". Stampfer read about Faraday's findings in December 1832 and was inspired to do similar experiments, which soon led to his invention of what he called Stroboscopischen Scheiben oder optischen Zauberscheiben (stroboscope discs or optical magic discs).
While attending a ceremony removing Zola's ashes to the Panthéon on 4 June 1908, Dreyfus was wounded in the arm by a gunshot from a right-wing journalist, Louis Gregori, in an assassination attempt. In 1937 his son Pierre published his father's memoirs based on his correspondence between 1899 and 1906. The memoirs were titled Souvenirs et Correspondance and translated into English by Dr Betty Morgan. Dreyfus had started corresponding with the marquise Marie Arconati Visconti in 1899 and began attending her Thursday (political) salons after his release.
Gérard is known especially for his scholarly works on the composers Luigi Boccherini and Camille Saint-Saëns. He has also made significant contributions to the study of the chamber music of late-18th century Italy, Spain, and Austria, and to French music of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians writes that his major work has been on the writings of Hector Berlioz. In 1983 he co-edited volume 4 of Berlioz's Correspondance générale, and in 1996 he co-edited Volume 1 of the composer's Critique musicale.
Sanseverino's correspondence as nuncio in Brussels has been calendared in the Analecta Vaticano-Belgica, as Correspondance des nonces Gesualdo, Morra, Sanseverino avec la Secrétairerie d'Etat pontificale, 1615-1621, edited by L. Van Meerbeeck (Brussels, 1937). In July 1621 he was created cardinal by Pope Gregory XV. He took part in the conclave of 1623 that elected Pope Urban VIII, and died in Salerno on 25 December the same year. He was buried in his cathedral.Pope Gregory XV (1621-1623): Consistory of July 21, 1621 (III), The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church: Biographical Dictionary.
During the late 19th century and early 20th century, the Miller & Lux corporation built an agricultural monopoly centered around cattle. The corporation can be characterized as a precursor to corporate farming transforming the yeoman farmer into wage workers. The success of the business can be attributed to founder Henry Miller's direct management style which is reflected in his detailed correspondences to his subordinates.Henry Miller Papers Collection, "Correspondance to Superintendant Turner," 18 July 1912, Special Collections, Henry Madden Library, California State University, Fresno During recent years, dairy farming has greatly expanded in importance.
He published his findings in Correspondance Mathématique et Physique in 1828 and 1830. In 1829 Plateau presented his then unnamed anorthoscope in his doctoral thesis Sur quelques propriétés des impressions produites par la lumière sur l'organe de la vue. The anorthoscope was a disc with an anamorphic picture that could be viewed as a clear immobile image when the disc was rotated and seen through the four radial slits of a counter-rotating disc. The discs could also be translucent and lit from behind through the slits of the counter-rotating disc.
His brother Captain Hugh Luttrell had fought at Boulogne, but he deserted and was thought to have tried to betray the town to the French.de Selve, Odet, Correspondance Politique, 308, 311. The painting's complex allusions to Luttrell's military service and to the role of sea power in the war with Scotland and France were expounded by Dame Frances Yates in 1967."The Allegorical Portraits of Sir John Luttrell", in Essays in the History of Art Presented to Rudolf Wittkower (London, 1967), pp. 149–60, cited and summarized in Hearn, p.
The results obtained by the Morea scientific expedition underscored the need to create a permanent, stable structure that would allow its work to continue. From 1846, it was possible to systematically and permanently continue the work initiated by the Morea scientific expeditionCavvadias, General Ephor of Antiquities, “Discours pour le cinquantenaire de l'Ecole Française d'Athènes”, Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique., XXII, 1899, p. LVIII. due to the creation on rue Didot, at the foot of Mount Lycabettus, of a French scientific institution, in the form of the French School at Athens.
Voltaire was shattered, and according to his friend Devaux, so was Saint-Lambert, who nonetheless moved to Paris around 1750 and to all appearances soon recovered from his grief.See D. W. Smith, "Nouveaux regards", and J. A. Dainard, ed., Correspondance de Madame de Graffigny, vol. 9. It was at this time that he gave himself the title Marquis de Saint-Lambert, to which he had no right; it was once claimed that he was not even of noble birth, but the evidence refuting that charge was published long ago.
In June 1791, Lavoisier made a loan of 71,000 livres to Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours to buy a printing works so that du Pont could publish a newspaper, La Correspondance Patriotique. The plan was for this to include both reports of debates in the National Constituent Assembly as well as papers from the Academy of Sciences.Chronicle of the French Revolution, Longman 1989 p. 216 The revolution quickly disrupted the elder du Pont's first newspaper, but his son E.I. du Pont soon launched Le Republicain and published Lavoisier's latest chemistry texts.
Woestyn met Victor Hugo at 14 and had him read his poems.Florence Colombani, Je ne puis demeurer loin de toi plus longtemps, 2010, read online He later became a critic and editor for Le Figaro,Claire Blandin, Le Figaro, histoire d'un journal, 2014, read online and by his profession, left a correspondence with authors like Honoré de Balzac from 1840.Roger Pierrot, Correspondance: Textes réunis, classés et annotés, 1966, p.98-99, 913 He also participated with the Journal du dimancheHenri Gourdin, Léopoldine: L'enfant-muse de Victor Hugo, 2007, p.
Francis Poulenc's Concerto pour deux pianos (Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra) in D minor, FP 61, was composed over the period of three months in the summer of 1932. It is often described as the climax of Poulenc's early period. The composer wrote to the Belgian musicologist Paul Collaer: "You will see for yourself what an enormous step forward it is from my previous work and that I am really entering my great period."1 October 1932 letter in Francis Poulenc, Correspondance 1910–1963, Myriam Chimènes, ed.
In March 1921, Artaud moved to Paris to pursue a career as a writer (against his father's wishes). While training and performing with directors including Charles Dullin and Georges Pitoëff, he continued to write both poetry and essays. At the age of 27, he mailed some of his poems to the journal La Nouvelle Revue Française; they were rejected, but the editor, Jacques Rivière, wrote back seeking to understand him, and a relationship via letters developed. Their compilation into an epistolary work, Correspondance avec Jacques Rivière, was Artaud's first major publication.
In the rational atmosphere of the Enlightenment, Mme du Deffand observed "il n'y a que le premier pas qui coûte", "it's only the first step that matters"; her mot was repeated in Baron Grimm's Correspondance littéraire, 15 May 1764. Although St Denis is the best known of the saintly head-carriers, there were many others; the folklorist Émile Nourry counted no less than 134 examples of cephalophory in French hagiographic literature alone.Les saints céphalophores. Étude de folklore hagiographique, Revue de l’Histoire des Religions (Paris), 99 (1929), p. 158-231.
Less than three weeks after the evacuation, Bonaparte wrote to Masséna, "I am not able to give you a greater mark of the confidence I have in you than by giving you command of the first army of the Republic [Army of Italy]."Bonaparte to Masséna, 25 June 1800, Correspondance de Napoléon Ier, No. 4951, VI, 489-90. Even the Austrians recognized the significance of Masséna's defense; the Austrian chief of staff declared firmly, "You won the battle, not in front of Alessandria but in front of Genoa."James Marshall- Cornwall, Marshal Massena, 115.
Although Škroup is not well known for his compositional output, he had several brushes with fame as a result of his professional work. He was one of Hector Berlioz’s hosts during the French composer’s visits to Prague in 1846. In January and April of that year, Berlioz gave a total of six concerts; Berlioz mentioned Škroup (spelled “Scraup”) in a letter about preparations for his second stay in Prague.Monir Tayeb and Michel Austin, The Hector Berlioz Website, Berlioz in Germany (and Central Europe): Prague, citing Hector Berlioz's Correspondance Générale, VIII: Suppléments, ed.
" Roger Delage (1922–2001) – Éditeur scientifique", Bibliothèque nationale de France. Retrieved 18 September 2018 Delage also published a catalogue of the works of Charles Koechlin (1975). Delage contributed to musical journals in France and Britain, beginning in 1963. Among his subjects were "Chabrier et Wagner" and "Correspondance inédite entre Emmanuel Chabrier et Félix Mottl" (Revue de Musicologie); "Manet et Chabrier" (Revue de l'art); "En Alsace" (La Nouvelle Revue des Deux Mondes); "Emmanuel Chabrier in Germany" and "Ravel and Chabrier" (The Musical Quarterly) and "The Literary World of Emmanuel Chabrier" (The Musical Times).
Bouré's Ulpian, Palais de Justice On the monumental gate of Berchem in Antwerp, Bouré's statue of the Belgo-gallic leader Ambiorix was paired with that of the Nervian general Boduognatus by Pierre Armand Cattier.E. Warmenbol, "La statue de Boduognat à Anvers (1861–1954): Portrait d'une autre Gaule," in Belgian Archaeology in a European Setting II (Leuven University Press, 2001), p. 59 online; L. (Lemonnier), "Correspondance," p. 128. Their works were brought together again at the Palais de Justice in Brussels, where a pair of Bouré's griffins also preside over the portal.
In Paris, on 6 June 1771 Armand, duc d'Aiguillon (Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs), took Tort's side ill-advisedly, whereas the Queen defended her friend de Guînes, and the affair was taken up by the antagonistic parties of Choiseul and Aiguillon.A volume of Correspondance de Monsieur le Duc d'Aiguillon au sujet de l'Affaire de M. le Comte de Guînes et du Sieur Tort et autres intéressés was published in Paris, 1775. De Guînes was eventually proven not guilty, by a narrow margin, in a specially convened Council of State commanded by King Louis XVI.Mme de Campan, Memoirs Vol. iv. ch.
The subject and the style of the book earned Dupré to be attached to the movement of the Hussards. Guy Dupré joined the publishing house Plon, which has long specialized in military memorabilia. He prepared a biography of General Charles Mangin that was never completed but whose face would appear in Le Grand coucher. He made an anthology of Maurice Barrès (Mes Cahiers, Plon, 1962), an anthology of the Chroniques de la Grande Guerre of the same (Plon, 1968), as well as the cross-correspondence between Maurice Barrès and Charles Maurras: La République ou le Roi, correspondance 1888-1923, Plon, 1970.
Trécul, Auguste-Adolphe-Lucien (1818-1896) IdRefTrécul, Auguste Adolphe Lucien (1818-1896) Correspondance familiale His main research dealt with plant anatomy, physiology and organogenesis. He published important papers on the structure of different members within the botanical family Nymphaeaceae, and was the author of a significant monograph on Artocarpeae. Many of his scientific articles were published in the Annales des Sciences Naturelles (from 1843 onward) and the Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences.Natural Science: A Monthly Review of Scientific Progress, Volume 9 In his studies of fermentation, he differed with the conclusions reached by Louis Pasteur.
Fontrier, A., "Le monastere de Lembos", Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, XVI, 1892. However, Buca started to develop as of the end of the 17th century when the French consulate in İzmir moved there following the 1676 plague and the 1688 Smyrna earthquake that seriously shook İzmir's core as an international trade center. Its rich Levantine residents who acquired the surrounding vineyards typically had Latin backgrounds, as opposed to those who originally came from Britain and who preferred Bornova. But in the case both of Bornova and of Buca, the concentration in terms of ethnic backgrounds was far from having an exclusive nature.
Guy, John, Queen of Scots: The True Story, (2005), pp.469-480: Chantelauze, Régis de, ed., Marie Stuart, son procès et son exécution: d'après le journal inédit de Bourgoing, son médecin, la correspondance d'Amyas Paulet, son geôlier et autres documents nouveaux, Plon, (1876) When Mary was returned to Chartley two weeks later, Bastian was offered the keys to Mary's room, but the Queen told him not to accept and had an English officer open her things. She found her papers had been taken away whereupon she said two things could not be taken from her, her English blood and her Catholic religion.
A number of churches are believed to have stood where the present structure now stands. During the heyday of the Empire of Trebziond, it was used as the resting-place for a number of dignitaries including Emperor John II Megas Komnenos in 1297, Metropolitan Niphon in 1364, and Emperor Alexios IV Megas Komnenos in 1429.Gabriel Millet, "Les monastères et les églises de Trébizonde", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, 19 (1895), p. 423 The church became a mosque after the Ottoman conquest and first prayer was attended by Mehmet II, who adjoined a madrasah (Fatih Madrasa) to the building.
Lucius Aemilius Paullus (born before 29 BC14 AD) was the son of Lucius Aemilius Lepidus Paullus (suffect consul 34 BC and later censor) and Cornelia, the elder daughter of Scribonia. He was married to Julia the Younger, the eldest granddaughter of the Emperor Augustus. He is first mentioned in the elegy of his mother Cornelia's death in the same year her brother became consul. This year has been argued to be 18 BCJohn Scheid, "Scribonia Caesaris et les Cornelii Lentuli", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, 100 (1976), pp. 485-491 and 16 BC.Syme, The Augustan Aristocracy, pp.
Henry Miller Papers Collection, "Correspondance to Superintendant Turner," 18 July 1912, Special Collections, Henry Madden Library, California State University Fresno His company, the Miller & Lux Corporation, was headquartered in Los Banos on a site currently housing the Mexican restaurant España's and the Canal Farm Inn. Los Banos has a long history of Portuguese and Spanish immigrants, as do many of the nearby towns on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley. This is reflected both in local restaurants and in several festivals and parades that take place during the year. There is also a significant community of Basques.
Comparison between the original engraving and the heliography of Joseph Nicephore Niepce. left: Engraving of Portrait of Georges d'Amboise, 1650 right: Heliography (Heliogravure) of the engraving, 1826 Niépce prepared a synopsis of his experiments in November 1829: On Heliography, or a method of automatically fixing by the action of light the image formed in the camera obscuraBonnet, M., & Marignier, J.-L. (2003). Niépce, correspondance et papiers. Saint-Loup-de-Varennes: Maison Nicéphore Niepce which outlines his intention to use his “Heliographic” method of photogravure or photolithography as a means of making lithographic, intaglio or relief master plates for multiple printed reproductions.
Written on July 21, 1776, the Letter LXIII became infamous for its frank talk of human sexuality. Mathieu-François Pidansat de Mairobert published the letter in his 1779 book, "L'Espion Anglois, Ou Correspondance Secrete Entre Milord All'eye et Milord Alle'ar" (aka "L'Observateur Anglais or L'Espion Anglais") ("The English Spy, or Secret Correspondence Between my Lord and my Lord All'eye Alle'ar [aka The English Observer or The English Spy]"). In 1791, Revolutionary France (and Andorra) adopted a new penal code which no longer criminalized sodomy. France thus became the first West European country to decriminalize homosexual acts between consenting adults.
137 He expressed himself in "Rabelaisian language" and "laced with a profusion of racy slang".Myers, p. 129 In 1994 the musical scholar Roger Delage, with Frans Durif and Thierry Bodin, produced a 1,300 page edition of the composer's correspondence, containing 1,149 letters, ranging from those to his family and Nanine, exchanges with contemporary friends in the musical world (sometimes with musical quotations),Correspondance, 89–14 is a message set to music to d'Indy. negotiations with publishers, and one a commiseration with his son André on the death of his pet bird (with gentle reproach for having over-fed the creature).
Robert de Wierre de Bonnières (7 April 1850 in Paris - 7 April 1905) was a French poet,composer, novelist, travel writer, journalist at Le Figaro and Le Gaulois, and literary critic.Théophile Gautier Correspondance Generale Page 516 ed Claudine Lacoste, "Robert de Bonnières (1850-1905), chroniqueur au Figaro et au Gaulois sous les pseudonymes de Janus et de Robert Estienne, rient un salon littéraire fort couru. Ses chroniques ont été publiées en 1885 sous le titre Mémoires d'aujourd'hui." He was well acquainted with all literary figures of the period - Guy de Maupassant dedicated his novela La Folle to Bonnières in 1882.
He was considered by the French as a "Father of the American Revolution" because he loved America. However, in 1789, the new French Revolutionary Government seized Le Ray's assets, including his beloved Château de Chaumont. Aerial view Madame de Staël acquired the château in 1810. The comte d'Aramon bought the neglected château in 1833, undertook extensive renovations under the architect Jules Potier de la Morandière of Blois, who was later inspector of the works at the château de Blois;Françoise Boudon, "La correspondance de Duban ou les trois humeurs de l'architecte", in Félix Duban: les couleurs de l'architecte, 1798-1870, Bruno Foucart, ed.
On 27 June 1617 Pope Paul V appointed him papal nuncio to the Brussels court of the Archdukes Albert and Isabella, with responsibility for the missions in England and Holland as well as the Catholic Church in the Southern Netherlands. He arrived in Brussels in August 1617.Morra's correspondence as nuncio in Brussels has been calendared in the Analecta Vaticano-Belgica, as Correspondance des nonces Gesualdo, Morra, Sanseverino avec la Secrétairerie d'Etat pontificale, 1615-1621, edited by Lucienne Van Meerbeeck (Brussels, 1937). In 1619 he returned to Italy for family reasons, being replaced as nuncio by Lucio Sanseverino.
All the many letters of recommendation carried by Leopold proved ineffectual, except the one to Melchior Grimm, which led to an effective connection. Grimm was a German who had moved to Paris at age 25 and was an advanced amateur of music and opera, which he covered as a Paris-based journalist for the aristocracy of Europe. He was persuaded "to take the German prodigies under his wing." Grimm published a highly supportive article on the Mozart children in his Correspondance littéraire of December 1763, to facilitate Leopold's entrée into Parisian high society and musical circles.
Marie-Victoire Davril (sometimes d'Avril or Davrel) (1755–1820) was a French portrait painter. Born in Paris, Davril was a pupil of Adélaïde Labille- Guiard, and exhibited in 1783 at the Salon de la Correspondance and the place Dauphine; at the former a miniature portrait of her by Marie-Madeleine Frémy. She appears to have been close to her fellow pupil Marie-Gabrielle Capet, being remembered in the latter's will. She was the universal heir of wine merchant Edmé-Jean Cottin; the couple were not married, but were evidently closely connected, although the exact nature of their relationship remains unknown.
Diderot reported on the Salons between 1759 and 1771 and again in 1775 and 1781. Diderot's reports would become "the most celebrated contributions to La Correspondance." According to Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, Diderot's reports initiated the French into a new way of laughing, and introduced people to the mystery and purport of colour by ideas. "Before Diderot", Anne Louise Germaine de Staël wrote, "I had never seen anything in pictures except dull and lifeless colours; it was his imagination that gave them relief and life, and it is almost a new sense for which I am indebted to his genius".
When the film was first shown in France in December 1948, the critical reception of it was overwhelmingly favourable and Cocteau was repeatedly congratulated on having produced an original piece of cinema out of a work of the theatre: for example, "It is what one may rightly call pure cinema... The correspondence between image and text has never been so complete, so convincing"."...c'est aussi ce qu'il est convenu d'appeler du cinéma pur... La correspondance entre l'image et la parole n'a jamais été aussi complète, aussi probante." - Robert Chazal, in Cinémonde, 6 déc.1948. See also Henri Magnan, in Le Monde, 2 déc.
Louis de Buade de Frontenac held him in high esteem, considering him to be "one of the best and wisest officers" in Canada.La prévôté de Québec, registre de 1695, 25 novembre, 128–130. Correspondance de Frontenac (1689–99) At the time of his marriage his wife's grandfather gave him the fief of La Cloutièrerie, within the Seigneury of Beauport, selling it in 1693. He also owned some property in the Upper Town of Quebec City. Renaud d’Avène des Méloizes died 22 April 1699 at Quebec and was buried in the vaults of the Notre-Dame Basilica-Cathedral.
Jean de Glymes de Berghes or Jan van Bergen (died 1583), Lord of Waterdijk, was an officeholder in the Habsburg Netherlands. Jean was the son of Dismas de Glymes, one of the thirty-six recognised bastards of John III of Glymes, lord of Bergen op Zoom.Félix Victor Goethals, Dictionnaire généalogique et héraldique des familles nobles du royaume de Belgique, vol. 2 (Brussels, Polack-Duvivier, 1849), pp. 447-448. After graduating in canon and civil law, he became an alderman of Bergen op Zoom, serving as mayor in 1545.Correspondance du Cardinal de Granvelle, 1565-1586, vol.
Fouilles archéologiques sur l'emplacement de la nécropole d'Éléonte de Thrace. In Bulletin de correspondance hellénique Volume 39 (1915), (pp. 135-240) (with Édouard Dhorme and Joseph Chamonard.) He cumulated these archaeological activities with the function of officer-interpreter by the 2nd office of the General Staff of the Armies of the East in Salonika. His role in the development of the victorious offensive which forced Bulgaria to ask for an armistice September 29, 1918 earned him the Greek Medal of Military Merit and the French Croix de Guerre with citation to the order of the Eastern Army.
In Une correspondance sur les fantômes avec Sergio SarraEnglish translate: A correspondence on ghosts with Sergio Sarra. between Sarra e Nicolas Bourriaud in May 2007, the French critic and theorist wrote: In 2000 in Rome, his works were exhibited at the Fondazione Volume!.Fondazione Volume! website. In the same year, Sarra curated at Palazzo Chigi Odescalchi the group exhibition Conversione di Saulo that was developed around the painting of the same name, painted in 1600 by Caravaggio. Also in 2000, Sarra married Elisabetta Ruscitti in Amalfi, with whom he lived for a short time in Naples.
Up until 1923 Souris composed a great deal of music under the strong influence of Claude Debussy, but after discovering other musical styles at the Pro Arte Concerts, he repudiated these early works and adopted Erik Satie and Igor Stravinsky as his models. Joining the Belgian surrealists of the group Correspondance around Paul Nougé, he wrote deliberately banal music, beginning with the Choral, marche et galop for four brass instruments (1925), which became his op. 1—a work clearly indebted to L'Histoire du soldat (Vanhulst 2001). He lived in Italy, France, and Austria, and died in Paris .
He was also involved, with his fellow-Christian Hunayn ibn Ishaq, in an epistolary exchange with the Muslim astronomer, Abu Isa Yahya ibn al-Munajjim, who had invited them to embrace Islam. Both refused, and provided their reasons for rejecting al-Munajjim's Islamic faith. Sydney H. Griffith, The Church in the Shadow of the Mosque: Christians and Muslims in the World of Islam, Jews, Christians, and Muslims from the Ancient to the Modern World (Princeton University Press, 2008), p. 86; Samir Khalil Samir and Paul Nwyia, Une correspondance islamo-chrétienne entre ibn al-Munaggim, Hunaym ibn Ishaq et Qusta ibn Luqa, Patrologia Orientalis, 40:4, no.
But he was one of the first theorists to put theory and practice at the same level: "Practice being joined to theory, or theory to practice, is much better than when they are separated." However, Cousu was still strangely attached to explaining the ancient signs of measurements and ligatures, whereas their use was already falling into disuse (which supports the hypothesis that the treaty had been composed a few decades earlier). This is also apparent from a letter from Mersenne to Giovanni Battista Doni, which quotes Cousu and his work in 1635:Letter from Mersenne to Doni, 2 February 1635: cf. Correspondance de Mersenne, vol.
Work by Decreux has also been misattributed to her contemporaries Antoine Vestier and Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun. In her brief career, Ducreux exhibited at a number of important exhibitions beginning in 1786 and continuing until 1799, including the January 1786 Salon de la Correspondance. Ducreux made her debut at the Louvre Salon in 1791, for which she submitted a portrait of a young woman and a life-size, full-length self- portrait in which she is depicted playing the harp; the latter oil on canvas is now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, though many of her works remain untraced today. She never signed her work.
During her lifetime, Vigée Le Brun's work was publicly exhibited in Paris at the Académie de Saint-Luc (1774), Salon de la Correspondance (1779, 1781, 1782, 1783), and Salon of the Académie in Paris (1783, 1785, 1787, 1789, 1791, 1798, 1802, 1817, 1824). The first retrospective exhibition of Vigée Le Brun's work was held in 1982 at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas. The first major international retrospective exhibition of her art premiered at the Galeries nationales du Grand Palais in Paris (2015—2016) and was subsequently shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City (2016) and the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa (2016).
The Flag of the Lieutenant Governor of Jersey 23px23px Flag of Jersey before 1981. Flag ratio: 3:5 Jersey Red Ensign, Civil Ensign since 2010 Government Ensign since 1907Actes et correspondance au sujet de l'emploi par le vapeur "Duke of Normandy" de pavillons distinctifs, Jersey 1907 The flag of Jersey is composed of a red saltire on a white field. In the upper quadrant the badge of Jersey surmounted by a yellow "Plantagenet crown". The flag was adopted by the States of Jersey on 12 June 1979, proclaimed by Queen Elizabeth II on 10 December 1980 and first officially hoisted on 7 April 1981.
To avoid confusion with Claude, as both were called "de l'Isle", Jérôme was sometimes known as "the son of the Baillie of Orleans". He had been brought up with James VI at Stirling Castle. When he left in July James gave him 200 French crowns to fund his journey to Navarre with James's answers.H. Aubert, Correspondance de Théodore de Bèze: 1575, XVI (Geneva, 1993), pp. 189-191: Natasha Constantinidou, Responses to Religious Division (Leiden, 2017), p. 63: Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 37, 116: Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp.
Girard de Beaulieu, better known by the incorrectly recorded name Lambert de Beaulieu (? – after 1587) was a French bass singer, instrumentalist, and composer.Jean Balsamo Philippe Desports (1546-1606) 2000 "Girard de Beaulieu, par erreur prénommé « Lambert » dans une correspondance" He was employed at the court of Henri III as basse singer and composer from 1559. He was associated with the Académie de Baïf, one of whose aristocratic poets, Nicolas Filleul de La Chesnaye, the king's almoner, was to provide the lyrics for the ballet Circé in the first French ballet de cour, the Balet Comique de la Royne of 1581, for which Beaulieu and Jacques Salmon provided the music.
In the ensuing decades, she has worked extensively with Steve Paxton, in particular on two improvisation duets that they performed together for several decades: PA RT (1978) and Night Stand (2004). Throughout the 1990s, in collaboration with K. J. Holmes, Karen Nelson and Scott Smith, she developed the ensemble structure of the Tuning Scores, that she teaches internationally. She is recognized for her editorial and journalistic contributions on dance and improvisation and is the co-editor of the bi-annual dancer's journal Contact Quarterly. Her writings have appeared in Nouvelles de Danse, Contact Quarterly, Writings on Dance, ballettanz, Movement Research Critical Correspondance, and sarma.be.
In the second half of the 1990s, Huby also played with Didier Lockwood/Onztet de Violon Jazz, Luc Le Masne, Riccardo Del Fra, Jean-Charles Capon and Denis Colin. In 1998 he recorded his debut album Le Sentiment des Brutes on which among others Noël Akchoté participated. Since 1999 he has played with the quartet of Yves Rousseau, with which several albums (most recently 2014 Akasha) were published. From the 2000s, he also worked with Denis Badault, Gérard Pansanel, Claude Tchamitchian, Olivier Benoît, and Guillaume Séguron, and in the ensemblews Sound of Choice (Album Invisible Correspondance, with Fredrik Lundin, Guillaume Roy, and Hasse Poulsen among others).
Flaubert at about the age of 50. Portrait by Eugène Giraud The letters of Gustave Flaubert (French: la correspondance de Flaubert), the 19th-century French novelist, range in date from 1829, when he was 7 or 8 years old, to a day or two before his death in 1880. They are considered one of the finest bodies of letters in French literature, admired even by many who are critical of Flaubert's novels. His main correspondents include family members, business associates and fellow-writers such as Théophile Gautier, the Goncourt brothers, Guy de Maupassant, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, George Sand, Ivan Turgenev and Émile Zola.
11 (On-line text). The trial's aftermath rankled; it was among the reasons for the dismissal of Aiguillon, having incurred the Queen's and others' lasting displeasure. Saint- Esprit On his return to France he was created Duc de Guînesagain upon Queen Marie-Antoinette's recommendation, according to the Swedish Ambassador. (Marie Florimond-Claude Mercy-Argenteau, Marie-Antoinette: Correspondance secrète entre Marie-Thérèse et le comte de Mercy-Argenteau (Paris) 1875:447, note (16 May 1776) and remained in royal favour, being appointed Chevalier of the Order of the Holy Spirit on 1 January 1784.État Militaire de France pour l’année 1789 A Knight of Malta through his family, he also received the Mérite militaire and Grand Cross of Saint-Louis.
On 10 March 1778, Corry wrote to the Secretary of State, "Having been in an indifferent State of Health the Doctors recommend my going in Summer to the German or English Baths, which I hope your Lordship will indulge me in, as I shall leave my Nephew Mr. Scott here to carry on my Correspondance." The Secretary of State replied "I have laid your Letter ... before The King, & have the Satisfaction to acquaint You, that His Majesty [King George III] is graciously pleased to grant You the Leave of Absence which You desire." It was not until early May 1779 that Corry actually got to Bath.Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette. 6 May 1779.
In any case, a programme should be added to a piece of music only if it was necessarily needed for an adequate understanding of that piece. Still later, in a letter to Marie d'Agoult of 15 November 1864, Liszt wrote: > Without any reserve I completely subscribe to the rule of which you so > kindly want to remind me, that those musical works which are in a general > sense following a programme must take effect on imagination and emotion, > independent of any programme. In other words: All beautiful music must be > first rate and always satisfy the absolute rules of music which are not to > be violated or prescribed.Translated from French, after: Liszt-d'Agoult: > Correspondance II, p. 411.
Correspondance concernant les actes de violence et de brigandage des Albanais dans la Vieille Serbie (Vilayet de Kosovo) 1989-1889 (Ministère des Affaires Etrangères, Belgrade 1899). After a brief appointment to Paris in 1900, Novaković was reassigned to St. Petersburg, where he remained to be the envoy of Kingdom of Serbia until 1904. Bust of Novaković in his hometown Šabac He retired in 1905. Nevertheless, as the most senior of Serbian statesmen, Novaković was appointed Prime Minister of the all-party government (1908–1909) during the Bosnian crisis provoked by the annexation of Bosnia & Herzegovina by Austria-Hungary, considered both as a violation of the Treaty of Berlin of 1878 and of legitimate Serbian interests.
A year earlier, Allison had been cutting logwood in the Bay of Campeche. Tay had met him then, purchasing some of his logwood, and being sociable with Allison and his crew: “during our stay there [Allison] kept amicable correspondance with us, Eateing, Drinking and Lodging frequently on board our said Shipp,” and Tay had kept the Good Hope close for the additional protection of Allison's guns. Because he was familiar with Allison, and because Tay's English-flagged ship would have been prey for French privateers if caught alone, Tay let him aboard again to drink converse, and let his men visit Allison's ship. Thinking himself secure, Tay sent all his men ashore to collect salt.
Plateau decided to investigate the phenomenon further and later published his findings in Correspondance Mathématique et Physique in 1828. In a letter to the same scientific periodical dated December 5, 1829 he presented his (still nameless) Anorthoscope, a disc that turns an anamorphic picture into a normal picture when it is spun fast and seen through the four radial slits of a counter-rotating black disc. This invention was later marketed, for instance by Newton & Co in London. On 10 December 1830 Michael Faraday presented a paper at the Royal Institution of Great Britain called On a Peculiar Class of Optical Deceptions about the optical illusions that could be found in rotating wheels.
Catherine gave detailed instructions: "I pray you do me the pleasure that I may soon have a painting of the queen of England of small volume, in great [de la grandeur], and that it be well portrayed and done in the same fashion as the one sent be by the earl of Leicester, and ask, as I already have one in full face, it would be better to have her turning to the right."Jollet, 50: Correspondance Diplomatique De Bertrand De Salignac De La Mothe Fenelon, vol. 6, (1840), 229-231, 3 July 1571 The large group of portraits from Catherine's collection, now at the Musée Condé, Château de Chantilly, reveals her passion for the genre.
Hôtel Guimard, by Ledoux, designed ca. 1766 In the early 1770s, in defiance of the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Paris, she opened the gorgeous hôtel Guimard in the Chaussée d'Antin designed by Claude-Nicolas Ledoux in the latest neoclassical taste, decorated with paintings by Fragonard, and with a theater seating five hundred spectators.R. Carter, "Claude Nicolas Le Doux: Architecture and Social Reform at the End of the Ancien Regime", Eighteenth-Century Studies, 1992. The house was almost finished March 1773 when Grimm's Correspondance littéraire reported the famous anecdote of Fragonard's revenge:La Guimard had quarreled with the painter, who had depicted her as Terpsichore in large panels of her salon, and found a substitute.
The 'Rue Montal' in Charleroi was named after him by the city council in 1860, commemorating his period as governor from 1667–1678. His sister Adrienne married Edmé Renaud d'Avesnes des Méloizes and in 1685, their son François-Marie (ca 1655–1699) was posted to New France in command of the Troupes de Marine; Frontenac considered him "one of the best and wisest officers" in Canada.La prévôté de Québec, registre de 1695, 25 novembre, 128–130. Correspondance de Frontenac (1689–99) He married Françoise-Thérèse (1670–1698), daughter of Nicholas Dupont de Neuville (1632–1716), a member of the Sovereign Council of New France and is buried in Notre-Dame Basilica- Cathedral in Quebec.
In July 1832 Plateau sent a letter to Faraday and added an experimental circle with apparently abstract figures that produced a "completely immobile image of a little, perfectly regular horse" when rotated in front of a mirror. After several attempts and many difficulties Plateau managed to animate the figures between the slits in a disc when he constructed the first effective model of the phénakisticope in November or December 1832 . Plateau published his then unnamed invention in a January 20, 1833 letter to Correspondance Mathématique et Physique. Simon Stampfer independently and almost simultaneously invented his very similar Stroboscopischen Scheiben oder optischen Zauberscheiben (stroboscopic discs or optical magic discs) soon after he read about Faraday's findings in December 1832.
During his career he became stadtholder of Gelderland (from 1556) and Order of the Golden Fleece. He opposed the centralizing policy of Philip II of Spain. During the Dutch Revolt, however, he remained loyal to the crown of Spain, and in June 1568 defended Groningen successfully against Louis of Nassau.M. Gachard, Correspondance du duc d'Albe sur l'invasion du comte Louis de Nassau en Frise, in tirée des Compte-rendus de la commission royale d'histoire de Belgique Dying without direct descendants, his titles passed on to his niece Marie of Brimeu (born in 1550 – died in Liege on 18 April 1605), wife of Lancelot of Berlaymont then (from 1580) of Charles III de Croÿ.
The correspondences demonstrate his attention to detail, especially in regards to the weather conditions and the amount of food and water the ranches contained.Henry Miller Papers Collection, "Correspondance to Superintendent Turner," 18 July 1912, Special Collections, Henry Madden Library, California State University, Fresno In 1910, his upstream water rights to the San Joaquin River, which crossed much of the company's land, were acquired by the Big Creek Hydroelectric Project; the project's planned reservoir storage of snowmelt would greatly reduce flooding and increase river flow during the dry season. At the time of his death, in California, Miller's estate was appraised at some US$40 million dollars, somewhat less than during his prime.Taper, Bernard.
Only half a year after the opening of the Aix-Marseille line on October 15, 1877, in a letter to Émile Zola dated April 14, 1878, Cézanne praised the Mont Sainte-Victoire, which he viewed from the train while passing through the railway bridge at Arc River Valley, as a "beau motif (beautiful motif)",Paul Cézanne, Correspondance, recueillie, annotée et préfacée par John Rewald, nouvelle édition révisée et augmentée, Paris: Bernard Grasset, 1978, p. 165. and, in about that same year, he began the series wherein he tropicalized this mountain. These paintings belong to Post-Impressionism. Cézanne is skilled at analysis: he uses geometry to describe nature, and uses different colours to represent the depth of objects.
Example of an International Business Reply Service envelope that would be accepted by the United States Postal Service for free delivery to addresses outside the USA. International freepost also exists and is known variously as ‘International Business Reply Service’, ‘International Business Reply Mail’, 'International Business Response Service', 'IBRS' and, in French, "Correspondance Commerciale-Réponse Internationale" (CCRI). Like USPS business reply mail, international business reply mail must conform to certain format requirements, including the prominent notice "REPONSE PAYEE" (French for "reply paid"), and a number indicating the account that will pay for the postage. §382. International Business Reply Service is a convenient way for international customers to reply to the sender with pre-paid cards and envelopes, at no cost to them.
Born in Paris to a family originally from Marseille which, in the eighteenth century, gave several consuls and leaders of trade centers in North Africa,In particular Beaussier Bonaventure, who was chancellor at Tripoli in 1774, Alexandria in 1776, vice-consul at Aleppo in 1776, Nafplio in 1779, Koroni in 1780, Sidon in 1786, chancellor at Constantinople and then consul in Smyrna in 1796, consul general in Tunisia in 1796 and finally in Tripoli from 1797 until his death in 1814 (Eugène Plantet (ed), Correspondance des beys de Tunis et des consuls de France avec la cour, 1577-1830, published under the auspices of the Ministre des affaires étrangères, Paris, F. Alcan, 1899, p. 279). Marcelin Beaussier studied Arabic in Tunisia.
This is not a story, Madame de La Carlière and the Supplément au voyage de Bougainville together make up a trilogy of moral stories written in 1772 that partially appeared in the Correspondance littéraire in 1773. The intention of Diderot himself was for the three stories to be considered together: "le troisième conte donnera son sens aux deux premiers" (the third story will give meaning to the first two), he tells the reader. This intention is confirmed by the initial title of Madame de La Carlière, Second conte (French for Second story), and by the allusions to characters or developments of one of the stories in another. Subsequently, though, the editors did not respect this material and intellectual unity and the texts were edited separately.
See page 109: Article 28 of Text B. In 1895, The Swiss Bank für Orientalische Eisenbahnen purchased 30000 stocks out of 100000 issued, giving it a minority shareholding.Le Temps, 11 juin 1894 (In French) Bank für Orientalische Eisenbahnen was also the owner of the Chemins de fer Orientaux and of the Salonica Monastir Railway. The main objective of the Chemins de fer Orientaux was to secure an alternate route between Serbia and Istanbul, through Greece should the main route through Bulgaria be closed by the Bulgarian government. After the end of Balkan Wars in 1913, the line ended fully in Greek territory. The Greek government purchased the JSC in 1920La Correspondance d’Orient, 15 août 1920 (in French) and the railway became part of the Hellenic State Railways.
Boucheporn read law at the University of Paris and was received as a counselor to the parliament of Metz in 1761, becoming a General Counsel in 1768. In that capacity, in 1771, he pleaded the cause of Mr Le Boeuf de Valdahon in a famous case against the Émile Bégin – Biographie de la Moselle (tome premier) – Metz, 1829 – pages 118 and fol. who was opposing Valdahon's marriage to his daughter, on the ground that he had seduced her eight years before, while she was still under-age.On this famous case, see: Friedrich Melchior, Baron von Grimm, Lettre du 15 mars 1765, in: Correspondance littéraire, philosophique et critique de Grimm et de Diderot depuis 1753 jusqu'en 1790 – Tome quatrième – Chez Furne, Libraire – Paris, 1829 – pages 216 and fol.
William S Burroughs 1952 letter to Allen Ginsburg concerning Eukodal, in Collected Correspondance, pp 141-2 During Operation Himmler, Skophedal was also reportedly injected in massive overdose into the prisoners dressed in Polish Army uniforms in the staged incident on 1 September 1939 which opened the Second World War.Merck 1930 package insert for Skophedal (German) The personal notes of Adolf Hitler's physician, Theodor Morell, indicate Hitler received repeated injections of "eukodal" (oxycodone) and Scophedal, as well as Dolantin (pethidine) codeine, and morphine less frequently; oxycodone could not be obtained after late January 1945. In the early 1970s, the U.S. government classified oxycodone as a schedule II drug. Purdue Pharma — a privately held company based in Stamford, Connecticut, developed the prescription painkiller OxyContin.
The gruelling siege of some sixty days had ended but it played an important role in Bonaparte's strategy. By forcing the Austrians to deploy vast forces against him at Genoa, Masséna made it possible for Bonaparte to cross the Great St Bernard Pass, surprise the Austrians, and ultimately defeat General Michael Melas's army at Marengo before sufficient reinforcements could be transferred from the siege site. Less than three weeks after the evacuation, Bonaparte wrote to Masséna, "I am not able to give you a greater mark of the confidence I have in you than by giving you command of the first army of the Republic [Army of Italy]."Bonaparte to Masséna, 25 June 1800, Correspondance de Napoléon Ier, No. 4951, VI, 489-90.
In 1946, he met Cornelius Castoriadis who came to Paris from Greece. Right away, they formed a faction in the Trotskyist Parti Communiste Internationaliste called "Chaulieu–Montal Tendency", that left the party and became the Socialism or Barbarism group and which, in 1949, started a journal with this name. Socialism or Barbarism considered the USSR to be an example of state capitalism and gave its support to anti-bureaucratic revolts in Eastern Europe — especially the uprising in Budapest in 1956. Differences of opinion brought about a schism within Socialism or Barbarism, and Lefort sided with Henri Simon, one of the founders of the groupInformations et Liaison Ouvrières (Workers' Information and Liaison)—later renamed "Informations et Correspondance Ouvrieres" (Worker's Information and Correspondence)—in 1958.
In 1897, he defended his thesis on the mines of Laurion, the silver mines near Athens, whose rich deposits and intense exploitation played a key role in the development of Athenian power in the classical period; it still remains a reference work on this subject. He also carried out excavations in the port of Delos and visited the Cyclades, Ionia, Lydia and Rhodes. In June 1894 he married a young Greek girl while he was in Athens, with whom he went on to have two children. From November 1896 he was in charge of a geography programme in the faculty of Arts at Lille,Michel Sivignon, « Cinquante ans de géographie de la Grèce, d’Élisée Reclus à Jules Sion », Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, 123-1, 1999, p.
In 1925, Bertrand Guégan published a new edition from an original manuscript that corrected most of the mistakes. It is only in 1992, when an original calligraphed manuscript was acquired by the Bibliothèque nationale, that the book could be published accordingly to the will of its author, with accurate display of the text and illustrations. In 1862, Charles Baudelaire admitted in a letter he was deeply influenced by Bertrand's work when writing “Spleen de Paris.Charles Baudelaire, Lettre à Arsène Houssaye, Noël 1861, Correspondance, tome II, éd Cl. Pichois, Gallimard, Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, 1973, . Théodore de Banville, an admirer and later rival of Baudelaire, also quoted Bertrand as a main inspiration in the opening of his book “La Lanterne Magique” in 1883.
After he played at Lille in 1768, then in La Rochelle and Poitiers from 1773 to 1775, he was hired by the Théâtre de la Monnaie in Brussels that latter year. He was in Ghent in 1777, where he created L'Illustre voyageur, ou le retour du comte de Falkenstein dans ses États, comedy in homage to Joseph II, in Nancy in 1778, in Nantes in 1779, then he joined Jean-Baptiste Hus and Félix Gaillard to direct the newly built Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux from 1781 to 1783. Arrived in Paris in 1783, he had the Comédie Italienne perform his Henri d'Albret, ou le roi de Navarre, which had no success, and wrote Le Soldat laboureur, announced at the Théâtre- Français by La HarpeLa Correspondance littéraire, letter 182. but not played.
When the Trotskyist Youth, the Jeunesses socialistes révolutionaires, was set up in 1936, he was a member of its Central Committee. From 1937 he joined the Parti Communiste Internationaliste (International Communist Party) of Pierre Frank and Raymond Molinier, was elected onto its Central Committee, and was a founder and leader of the Jeunesses Communistes Internationalistes. When the Molinier tendency sent its delegation abroad at the outbreak of war, when it was made illegal, Comrade Prager represented the youth on this committee, and along with Georges Vereeken and Molinier and Frank edited its Correspondance Internationaliste. From December 1939 to May 1940 Comrade Prager was imprisoned but in July 1940 he returned to Paris illegally and helped to reconstruct the Trotskyist organisation that later assumed the name of the Comité Communiste Internationaliste (International Communist Committee).
The sculpture of Aeneas carrying Anchises was begun in Rome, where Lepautre made numerous terracotta bozzetti for it.Mentioned in correspondence between Matthieu de La Teullière and the director of the Bâtiments du Roi, published in Anatole de Montaiglon, Correspondance des Directeurs de l'Académie de France à Rome avec les surintendants des bâtiments (vol. I, Paris, 1887), especially letters of 16 April and 31 July 1696 and 19 November 1697, noted in Bresc-Bautier 1986 and by Betsy Rosasco, "A Terracotta 'Aeneas and Anchises' attributed to Laurent Guiard", Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 45.2 (1986:2-15); Rosasco notes the former misattribution to Lepautre of terracottas of this subject, based on references in the correspondence. The sculpture gained renown for Lepautre: bronze reductions of it were made for collectors.
Bank erosion at the western end The chief engineer of the Corinth Canal, Béla Gerster, conducted extensive research on the topography of the Isthmus, but did not discover the Diolkos. Remains of the ship trackway were probably first identified by the German archaeologist Habbo Gerhard Lolling in the 1883 Baedeker edition. In 1913, James George Frazer reported in his commentary on Pausanias on traces of an ancient trackway across the Isthmus, while parts of the western quay were discovered by Harold North Fowler in 1932. Systematic excavations were finally undertaken by the Greek archaeologist Nikolaos Verdelis between 1956 and 1962,Verdelis, Nikolaos: "Le diolkos de L'Isthme", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, (1957, 1958, 1960, 1961, 1963) and these uncovered a nearly continuous stretch of and traced about in all.
N Sharp, Footprints Along the Cape York Sand Beaches (Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra; 1992), 55-58.J Richards, The Secret War: a True History of Queensland’s Native Police (Queensland University Press, St Lucia; 2008) 42. By 1915, remnants of the Aboriginal population had autonomously regrouped at Red Island Point (later known as Seisia) and Cowal Creek (known then as Small River and later as Injinoo).N Sharp, Footprints Along the Cape York Sand Beaches (Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra; 1992) 85-87. Both communities approached the Queensland Government for land to establish gardens, leading to the creation of an Aboriginal reserve at Cowal Creek in 1915.Queensland State Archives, Home Secretary’s Office, Series SRS 5263/1, General Correspondance, Item HOM/J129 1914/9001 Chief Protector of Aboriginals: Report of Chief Protector of Aboriginals on Annual Inspection of Northern Institutions, 195.
The origins of the phrase pre-date its use in Spider-Man, though its exact origins are unknown. In a Plan de travail, de surveillance et de correspondance, proposé par le Comité de Salut Public aux Représentants du Peuple, députés prés des Armées de la République of the French National Convention in 1793, there is this sentence: Ils doivent envisager qu'une grande responsabilité est la suite inséparable d'un grand pouvoir ("They [the Representatives] must contemplate that a great responsibility is the inseparable result of a great power"). In 1817, British Member of Parliament William Lamb is recorded saying, "the possession of great power necessarily implies great responsibility." In 1906, Under-Secretary of the Colonial Office Winston Churchill said, "Where there is great power there is great responsibility," even indicating that it was already a cultural maxim invoked toward government at the time.
Last is an elegy written by Sextus Propertius, a message addressed to Lucius Aemilius Lepidus Paullus from his dead wife, Cornelia.Propertius, IV.11 John Scheid has drawn from these three sources five definite facts about her:Scheid, "Scribonia Caesaris et les Cornelii Lentuli", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, 100 (1976), p. 486 # Before marrying Caesar Octavian, Scribonia had two consular husbands, the second of which made her mother; # Scribonia had a son named Cornelius Marcellinus; # Scribonia had a daughter named Cornelia; # Cornelia died the year of her brother's consulate; # Cornelia was the wife of Paullus Aemilius Lepidus. Scheid expands on the last point, noting that Cornelia must have died before her husband had in 13 BC, for Lepidus went on to marry Claudia Marcella, who in turn married Marcus Valerius Messalla Barbatus after the death of her husband.
Her pseudo-memoires are written in the form of a sort of autobiographic romance, L'Histoire de Madame de Montbrillant, begun when she was thirty but never published in her lifetime. It intersperses fictionalized set pieces exhibiting the sensibilité of the earliest generation of Romantics,"Madame d'Épinay's memoires are not a book", Sainte-Beuve observed, "they are an epoch". (quoted Steegmuller 1991:5) with genuine letters and autobiographical material. Bequeathed to Baron Grimm, a mangled version of the manuscript was edited by J. P. A. Parison and J. C. Brunet (Paris, 1818) as Mémoires et correspondance de Madame d'Épinay with all the names changed to identify the supposed originals: Madame d'Épinay figures in it as Madame de Montbrillant, and René is generally recognized as Rousseau, Volx as Grimm, Gamier as Diderot, who is sometimes credited with major interventions in the text.
Soldier at a Game of Chess (in French Soldat jouant aux échecs, or Le Soldat à la partie d'échecs, also referred to as Joueur d'échecs),Correspondance échangée entre Léonce Rosenberg et Jean Metzinger, 25 May 1916, Bibliothèque Kandinsky, Centre de documentation et de recherche du MNAM/Cci, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (Metzinger mentions the paintings as titled Joueur d'échecs) is a painting by the French artist Jean Metzinger. While serving as a medical orderly during World War I in Sainte-Menehould, France, Metzinger bore witness to the ravages of war firsthand. Rather than depicting such horrors, Metzinger chose to represent a poilu sitting at a game of chess, smoking a cigarette. The military subject of this painting is possibly a self-portrait. During March 1915, Metzinger was called to serve the military,L'Intransigeant, La Boîte aux Lettres, 23 March 1915, p.
Line 4 with extension Layout no 4 was adopted by the STIF Council on 11 April 2012.STIF Press Package - April 2012 archiveLe T4 a trouvé sa voix, Le Parisien, 12 April 2012. The new T4 branch will therefore create a direct route between Clichy-sous-Bois and Montfermeil. It will connect with the RER E and the forthcoming Line 15 of the Grand Paris Express in Bondy and the forthcoming Line 16 of the same network in Montfermeil.Implantation de la gare de Clichy - Montfermeil de la ligne rouge du Grand Paris Express et correspondance avec la ligne 4 du tramway This six- kilometre-long route will include eleven new stations built on average of every 400 to 600 metres; an estimated 38,000 passengers are expected to travel daily along the section between Bondy and Montfermeil.
Louis Engelbert, Count of La Marck, the last of his name, and the father-in-law of Charles, 5th Duke of Arenberg, was the officer of a regiment of German infantry in the service of France, and, having no son, proposed that Prince Auguste should enter the French service, offering, if he did so, to give him his regiment. The proposition was accepted, and it was further arranged that on the death of his maternal grandfather, the young prince should take the title of Comte de La Marck, by which he subsequently became known.Honoré-Gabriel de Riquetti Mirabeau (comte de), Auguste Marie Raymond Arenberg (prince d', comte de La Marck), Adolphe Fourier de Bacourt. Correspondance entre le comte de Mirabeau et le comte de La Marck: pendant les années 1789, 1790 et 1791 volume 1, V. Le Normant, 1851 p.
Details about his personal life are scarce. What little is known comes from scattered hints throughout his work, the letters of his friend and admirer Pliny the Younger, and an inscription found at Mylasa in Caria.OGIS 487, first brought to light in Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, 1890, pp. 621–623 Tacitus was born in 56 or 57 to an equestrian family;Since he was appointed to the quaestorship during Titus's short rule (see note below) and twenty-five was the minimum age for the position, the date of his birth can be fixed with some accuracy but the exact place and date of his birth are not known, and his praenomen (first name) is also unknown; in the letters of Sidonius Apollinaris his name is Gaius, but in the major surviving manuscript of his work his name is given as Publius.
Laguatan was a Berber nation that inhabited the Cyrenaica area during the Roman period.Wickham, Chris (2007) Framing the Early Middle Ages Oxford University Press, London, p. 333, , citing Synesios, Correspondance, nn. 107-8, 125, 132 (aa. 405-12) They have been described as primarily raiders and nomadic,Sjöström, Isabella (1993) Tripolitania in Transition Avebury, Aldershot, England, p. 27, , citing Brogan, O. (1975) "Inscriptions in the Libyan alphabet from Tripolitania and some notes on the tribes of the region" p. 282 ff. In Bynon, J. and Bynon, T. (eds.) (1975) Hamito-Semitica: Proceedings of a colloquium held by the Historical Section of the Linguistics Association (Great Britain) at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, on the 18th, 19th and 20th March 1970 Mouton, The Hague, pp. 267-289, but others consider them a settled group who also raided.
Rousset, son of an exiled Huguenot and a former combatant at the Battle of Malplaquet (1709), is also known for his activities as a journalist (Mercure historique et politique),Eugène Hatin, Les Gazettes de Hollande et la presse clandestine aux XVlle et XVIlle siècle, Paris, René Pincebourde, 1865 some of his correspondence has been published.Christiane Berckvens-Steverlynck et Jeroom Vercruysse (ed.), Le métier de journaliste au dix-huitième siècle: correspondance entre Prosper Marchand, Jean Rousset de Missy et Lambert Ignace Douxfils, Oxford, Voltaire Foundation, 1993 In 1748 he became involved in the Orangist revolution in the Netherlands. He was suspected of publishing anonymous pamphlets against the Stadtholderless regime and of leaking diplomatic information, which landed him in prison for a while. He was freed on the order of the newly appointed stadtholder William IV, Prince of Orange, who appointed him his personal historian and councillor.
"Château Colmiche" "Château des Comtes de Guernon-Ranville"Le Tennis, huile sur toile d'Édouard Vuillard, 1907 In the beginning of the 20th century appear the very first postcards representing the « Château des Comtes de Guernon-Ranville ». These cards are the work of small local publishers Les cartes postales sont signées des photographes Jules François Bréchet à Caen et A. Delaunay à Saint Aubin- sur-Mer ainsi que de l’éditeur Lacour qui tenait une épicerie-tabacs à Ranville. Le dos des cartes est divisé en deux parties, ce qui permet de les dater d’après 1903, année à partir de laquelle l’arrêté du 18 novembre autorise l’adresse sur la partie droite et la correspondance à gauche. and are taken from photographs showing the principal façade of the château with its flight of steps and a promontory above a part of the barn, no longer in existence, which must have served as an observatory.
Fétis wrote about his unfortunate operatic debut in Naples in 1766, after which, during his return to Livorno by the sea, Cambini was kidnapped by pirates, who treated him terribly until his liberation by a Venetian aristocrat. The narration by the Belgian holds much resemblance to a story in the poetic periodical Correspondance littéraire, philosophique et critique,A magazine about poetry, published from 1747 to 1793, under the direction of Friedrich Melchior Grimm. a fact that reduces its reliability. In the article found in Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung in 1804, Cambini claims to have played the viola in a string quartet with Luigi Boccherini, Pietro Nardini and his teacher Manfredi for six months in 1767.In the article, Cambini affirmed only to have played «for six fortunate month during my youth», without providing any other chronological references: 1767 is the date given as the likely date by some documentation.
Correspondance échangée entre Léonce Rosenberg et Jean Metzinger, 25 May 1916, Bibliothèque Kandinsky, Centre de documentation et de recherche du MNAM/Cci, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (Metzinger mentions the paintings as titled Joueur d'échecs) However, very few of his works represent scenes associated with war. And rather than delving into the actual carnage of war, this painting evokes an idealized theory of war. Instead, his interest is captured by mathematical rationality, order, his faith in humanity and modernity. The war, however, is very present in this work, by the presence of the soldier and his engagement with chess, simultaneously an intellectual game and a battle. Fernand Léger, 1916, Soldier with a pipe (Le Soldat à la Pipe), oil on canvas, 130 x 97 cm, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dùsseldorf This period of profound reflection contributed to the constitution of a new mindset; a prerequisite for fundamental change.
Bergdoll, p. 18 He had three brothers: Pierre (1717–1785) another clockmaker, Jean-Baptiste (1720-1800), a physicist and Encyclopédiste, and Charles (1726–1779), a physician as well as an Encyclopédiste. Le Roy's ideas were materialized in the Church of Saint Genevieve, a project led by his friend Jacques-Germain Soufflot.Bergdoll, p. 29 Le Roy directly advised Soufflot on the philosophy and history of architecture and provided a classic single-sheet scheme of principal Christian church types, solving the problem of marrying the dome with cross-shaped floorplan. He was protected by Marc-René Voyer d'Argenson, marquis de Voyer (1722-1782), for who he worked in his hôtel de Voyer in Paris, near the Palais-Royal in the 1760's. An important correspondance with him is conserved in Poitiers (France), published in 2020 in Le Journal des Savants, the oldest scientist review in Europe (17th century).
Retrieved 27 August 2020 For the non-musical theatre, Najac was known for his comedies. For the Théâtre du Gymnase he collaborated with Alfred Hennequin on Bébé (1877) and Petite Correspondance (1878), both comédies in three acts, followed by Nounou (comédie, five acts, 1879). He wrote, or co-wrote four plays for the Théâtre du Palais-Royal: Les Provinciales à Paris (comédie, four acts, with Pol Moreau, 1878); Divorçons (comédie, three acts, with Sardou, 1880); Elle et lui (comédie, three acts, 1885); Bijou et Bouvreuil (vaudeville, three acts, with Albert Millaud) and On le dit (comédie, three acts, with Charles Raymond, 1888). For the Théâtre des Variétés Najac wrote Le Chant du coq (comédie, one act, 1879, and collaborared with Millaud on Le Fiacre 117 (comédie, three acts,1886); La Noce à Nini (vaudeville, three acts, 1887); and La Japonaise, (comédie-vaudeville, four acts, 1888).
The three given circles of this Apollonius problem form a Steiner chain tangent to the two Soddy's circles. Figure 12: The two solutions (red) to Apollonius' problem with mutually tangent given circles (black), labeled by their curvatures. Either Soddy circle, when taken together with the three given circles, produces a set of four circles that are mutually tangent at six points. The radii of these four circles are related by an equation known as Descartes' theorem. In a 1643 letter to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia,Descartes R, Œuvres de Descartes, Correspondance IV, (C. Adam and P. Tannery, Eds.), Paris: Leopold Cert 1901. René Descartes showed that : (k_1+k_2+k_3+k_s)^2 = 2( k_1^2 + k_2^2 + k_3^2 + k_s^2) where ks = 1/rs and rs are the curvature and radius of the solution circle, respectively, and similarly for the curvatures k1, k2 and k3 and radii r1, r2 and r3 of the three given circles. For every set of four mutually tangent circles, there is a second set of four mutually tangent circles that are tangent at the same six points.
Secondary sources on General Thomas-Alexandre Dumas, dating back to 1822, almost always describe his mother as a black African ("femme africaine,"Antoine-Vincent Arnault, Antoine Jay, Etienne de Jouy, and Jacques Marquet de Norvins, "Dumas (Alexandre Davy-de-la- Pailleterie)," in Biographie nouvelle des contemporains, v. 6 (Paris, 1822), 160; Marie Nicolas Bouillet, Dictionnaire universel d'histoire et de géographie, 9th ed., pt. 1 (Paris: Librairie de L. Hachette, 1852), 525. "négresse,"Alphonse Rabbe, Claude-Augustin-Charles Vieilh de Boisjoslin, and Francois-Georges Binet de Boisgiroult, baron de Sainte-Preuve, "Dumas (Alexandre-Davy)," in Biographie universelle et portative des contemporains, v. 2. (Paris, 1834), 1469; Eugène de Mirecourt, Les contemporains: Alexandre Dumas (Paris: Gustave Havard, 1856), 10; Edmond Chevrier, Le général Joubert d'après sa correspondance: Étude historique (Paris: Fischbacher, 1884), 98; André Maurel, Les Trois Dumas (Paris: Librairie illustrée, 1896), 3. "négresse africaine,"Philippe Le Bas, "Dumas (Alexandre Davy de la Pailleterie)," in Dictionnaire encyclopédique de la France, v. 6 (Paris, 1842), 773; Charles Mullié, Biographie des célébrités militaires des armées de terre et de mer de 1789 à 1850, v.
In short live with me. Such a One I should be glad to find, & make a companion of.” May 27th 1776 from Welbeck St, Charles Knowles to The Reverend Mr C W Tonyn at Radnage Bucks added to Knowles Family Papers 2015 His family found that he had left no personal papers at his death, although a reason suggests itself in an intriguing letter from Jeremy Bentham to his son “ Blanket a 2d Lieutt on board the Victory …was intimate with Ad Knowles and was over with him one summer in Russia. He was with him when he died got a great many of his papers and regrets that he did not get more.“ Ian R Christie (ed) The Correspondance of Jeremy Bentham pp. 193 to Samual Bentham 21 November 1778 His posthumous reputation is suggested in “Plain suggestions of a British seaman” 1794, 4: “We had not in England a man more thoroughly conversant in nautical affairs, or who better considered the interest of our navy” Publications of the Navy Records Society Vol 119.
Obituary, 31 March 2008. London. The invasion of France by Nazi Germany forced the Milhauds to leave France in 1940The Online New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, V.3, ed. by Jeremy Drake, Oxford University Press, entry on Darius Milhaud and emigrate to the United States (his Jewish background made it impossible for Milhaud to return to his native country until after its liberation).Madeleine and Darius Milhaud, Hélène and Henri Hoppenot, Conversation: Correspondance 1918–1974, complétée par des pages du Journal d’Hélène Hoppenot, ed. Marie France Mousli (Paris: Gallimard, 2006), 182–84. He secured a teaching post at Mills College in Oakland, California, where he composed the opera Bolivar (1943) and collaborated with Henri Temianka and the Paganini Quartet. In an extraordinary concert there in 1949, the Budapest Quartet performed the composer's 14th String Quartet, followed by the Paganini Quartet's performance of his 15th; and then both ensembles played the two pieces together as an octet.Mills College program of August 10, 1949, in Archives of Henri Temianka Estate.
The story made the rounds in Paris, and a breach with the family ensued, which culminated in a lettre de cachet that disinherited him and confined him to an abbey close to Nancy, where at the table of the father abbot he began to learn the art of good eating. He was a correspondent to the scandal chronicle, Correspondence secrète, politique et littéraire (1790)This is not Grimm's Correspondance littéraire, philosophique et critique. relating to Paris during the reign of Louis XVI, and formed a liaison with the actress Adèle Feuchère, who bore their love child in 1790. Supported with a little money from his family, he had the idea of buying food directly from the producer, and selling it in a store at a set price; to make a living, he opened a shop in Lyon selling groceries, tools and other exotic commodities. When he regained his liberty upon the death of his father in 1792, he returned to Paris and spread the activities of his "société Grimod et Cie", opening stores in other French cities.
A long-time FreemasonThe presence of Lays, Rousseau and Chéron at a funeral ceremony held in 1785 by the Paris lodge of Les Neuf Sœurs, where they performed a Masonic hymn by Piccinni, is attested by Guillaume Imbert de Boudeaux in Correspondance secrète, politique, & littéraire (London, Adamson, 1789, XVII, p. 402; accessible for free online at Google Books). According to the website Musée virtuel de la musique maçonnique (accessed on 6 May 2015), Lays and Rousseau were members of both Les Neuf Sœurs and the lodge of , whereas Chéron was only a member of the former (sources cited: Louis Amiable, Une loge maçonnique d'avant 1789, la loge des Neuf Sœurs, Paris, Alcan, 1897, pp. 339 and 350, accessible for free online at Internet Archive; Alain Le Bihan, Francs-maçons parisiens du Grand Orient de France (fin du XVIIIe siècle), Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, 1966). and an avid reader of Rousseau, after the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 Lays joined the Jacobin Club under the patronage of his old friend Barère.
Rodgers presided over the January 1865 convention that reorganized Tennessee's state government."The Late State Convention," Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator, 25 January 1865, p. 1. This convention nominated radical Knoxville newspaperman William "Parson" Brownlow for governor, suggested a slate of candidates (including Rodgers) for the state legislature,"Making Out the Ticket," Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator, 25 January 1865, p. 1. and proposed an amendment to the state constitution outlawing slavery."Amendments to the Constitution," Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator, 25 January 1865, p. 1. In the March 1865 elections scheduled by the convention, Rodgers was elected to the Tennessee Senate seat for the new fifth district, which consisted of Knox and Roane counties (his previous constituency). When the state senate convened on April 5, Rodgers was elevated to speaker. In his acceptance speech, he stated the new senate's immediate purpose was to "restore this once proud, prosperous and happy state to its original place among the loyal States of the Union.""Editor's Correspondance," Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator, 12 April 1865, p. 2.
Niniche, 1878 The following years saw the appearance of La Petite correspondance, at the Gymnasium, Le Renard bleu, at the Palais-Royal, and then the series of plays written for Anna Judic, in collaboration with Albert Millaud – Niniche, La Femme à Papa and Lili, which, Le Figaro commented, raised the fortunes of the Variétés to a point they had not reached before. Although Hennequin is credited with creating what became the familiar genre of French farce, he also worked within the older tradition of vaudeville – a genre that originated in the middle ages as a satirical song, evolved into a play in verse with music, and by the late 19th century was splitting into two branches: opérettes, such as those by Offenbach, and, in the words of the writer Peter Meyer, "the vaudeville itself ... akin to what we would call slapstick farce, where movement was more important than character".Meyer, p. 10 Some of Hennequin's works, such as Niniche (1878), La Femme à papa (1879) and Lili (1882), with music by composers such as Raoul Pugno and Hervé were among the last of the old genre of musical vaudeville.
Nearby was the ancient town of Isinda, whose site is now thought to be at the village of Kişla, though formerly identified with Yazır.G.E. Bean, "Isinda (Kişla) Turkey" in The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites (Princeton University Press 1976) In the 1840s, T.A.B. Spratt and E. Forbes visited Kişla, an hour's ride from Korkuteli (referred to as Stenez), with extensive walls of soft stone and burnt brick, and identified it as the city of Isinda, which the Roman consul Gnaeus Manlius Vulso, on his victorious march through Asia Minor in 189 BC, found besieged by Termessus. At the city's request he raised the siege and fined the Termessians 50 talents.T.A.B. Spratt and E. Forbes, Travels in Lycia, Milyas, and the Cibyratis (van Voorst, 1847), pp. 246–247 Isinda stood in a strategic position at the western end of the pass leading from Pamphylia by Termessus to Pisidia.Mittheilungen des Deutschen Archaeologischen Institutes in Athen (1885), reprinted by London: Forgotten Books, 2013, p. 339–340 Together with Aperlae, Apollonia and Simena, Isinda was a member of a tetrapolis, a federation of four cities.Louis Robert, "Documents d'Asie Mineure" in Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, Year 1983, Volume 107, Issue 107-1, p.
Cuvellier and Lefevre eds., Correspondance de la Cour d'Espagne (1927) King Charles never found out and Gerbier was knighted in 1638 and appointed Master of Ceremonies, in charges of the royal "shows and entertainments" but was disappointed not to receive Inigo Jones's post of Surveyor of the King's Works. His court appointment put him in contact with the Lord Treasurer, Richard Weston, 1st Earl of Portland, for whom Gerbier advised on the construction of a house and garden at Putney Park, Roehampton, Surrey, which was demolished in the eighteenth century (Colvin). For the same patron he supervised the equestrian statue of Charles the First, now at Charing Cross. Deborah Kip, wife of Balthasar Gerbier, and her children (Peter Paul Rubens, 1629-1630) A political feud soon led to Gerbier's replacement in 1641, followed by a couple of decades during the Civil War and the Commonwealth in which he improvised a living, ventured a banking scheme in France, made a gold-hunting venture to Guiana, kept a painting academy in Bethnal Green, and allied himself to Cromwell and his republican government, with a profession of loyalty to the Parliamentarians in 1642-43British Library, Add.
He married in 1750 for the second time, Maria Magdalena Therese de Bouget (1733–1796), the daughter of Henri Francois, Compte de Bouget. The couple produced one son, Charles Knowles, and two daughters, one of whom, Anna Charlotte Christiana Knowles (1752–1839) m 1781 Captain John Winder of the Kings Dragoon Guards. She accompanied her father to Russia where she became “perfectly well acquainted with the Names, Persons and Characters of everybody at. the Court at Petersburg” She was a great favourite of the Empress who made her a maid of honour and presented her with her diamond monogrammed brooch and other jewels.Ian R Christie (ed) The Correspondance of Jeremy Bentham Vol 3: January 1781 to October 1788 pp. 203 UCL Press 2017 He translated M. de la Croix's Abstract of the Mechanisms of the Motions of Floating Bodies in 1775, noting in his preface that he had carried out experiments that validated de la Croix's findings and adding “…but what proved most satisfactory to me was their answering perfectly well when put into practice, in several line of battle ships and frigates, that I built whilst in Russia.”.
Queen Ndate was crowned Lingeer of Waalo on 1 October 1846Barry, Boubacar, Le royaume du Waalo: le Sénégal avant la conquête, KARTHALA Editions, (1985), p. 275, (Retrieved 20 July 2019) in Ndar (also known as Saint-Louis) the capital of Waalo. She succeeded her elder sister Ndjeumbeut Mbodj as Lingeer, reigning as Lingeer from 1846 to 1855 (the year Waalo fell to the French). In early 1847, she opposed the French authorities over free passage for the Sarakoles (Soninkes) who supplied the Island of Saint-Louis (a French colony) with cattle. In a letter deposited at the Senegalese National Archives (Archives nationales du Sénégal - 13 G 91, Lettre N°. 61Archives nationales du Sénégal 13 G 91 Correspondance des chefs du Waalo Lettre N°61 adressée à la Linguére Ndaté Yalla par le Gouverneur de Saint -Louis ), the French claim that, the Queen and/or her people, going in contravention of the treaty that had existed between Waalo and Saint-Louis (Senegal), stopped a herd of 160 oxen that a resident of Saint-Louise (a French man) had bought from some Sarakole merchants and kept 16 of the best livestock for themselves, allowing only 100 to pass.
In 1894, Guy-Blaché was hired by Felix-Max Richard to work for a camera manufacturing and photography supply company as a secretary. The company changed hands in 1895 due to a court decision against Felix-Max Richard who sold the company to four men: Gustave Eiffel, Joseph Vallot, Alfred Besnier, and Léon Gaumont. Gustave Eiffel was president of the company, and Léon Gaumont, thirty years Eiffel's junior, was the manager. The company was named after Gaumont because Eiffel was the subject of a national scandal regarding the Panama Canal.Les premieres annees de la societe L. Gaumont et Cie, Correspondance commercialed de Leon Gaumont 1895–1899. Corcy, Malthete, Mannoni, Laurent, Meusy, 1998 L. Gaumont et Cie became a major force in the fledgling motion-picture industry in France. Alice continued to work at Gaumont et Cie, a decision that led to a pioneering career in filmmaking that spanned more than 25 years and involved her directing, producing, writing and/or overseeing more than 700 films. Although she initially began working for Léon Gaumont as his secretary, she began to become familiar with myriad clients, relevant marketing strategies, and the company's stock of cameras.
After Napoleon's return from exile on the island of Elba to Paris on20 March 1815, his brother - although surprised - joined him from Switzerland by way of Fort l'Ecluse.Albert du Casse: Mémoires et correspondance politique et militaire du Roi Joseph, Tome 9, Paris 1854, p.227 Joseph sent for Strolz who had been caught on the other side of France by the changed circumstances in Alsace. Unable to join Joseph immediately, he nonetheless declared his allegiance with the Bonapartes and was appointed governor of Strasbourg on 26 March 1815. On 21 April 1815, Strolz was re- confirmed by Napoleon as lieutenant general in the Imperial French Army.Arthur Chuquet: Ordres et Apostilles de Napoleon 1799-1815, Tome IV, Paris 1912, p.547Desormeaux, Baguenier H.: Kléber en Vendee, Documents, publies pour la Société d' Histoire Contemporaire, Picard, Paris 1907, p.24 After lobbying for a more active role for himself, on 7 June 1815 Strolz was appointed officer commanding the 9th Cavalry Division. His division, together with the 10th Cavalry Division under General of Division Louis Pierre Aimé Chastel, and two horse artillery batteries, was part of General Rémi Joseph Isidore Exelmans II Cavalry Corps (2e Corps de cavalerie) of Napoleon's Armée du Nord.
He served on a papal mission to Portugal in 1598–1605, after which Pope Paul V appointed him to the titular see of Damascus on 17 May 1606 and papal nuncio to Flanders on 12 June. He left Rome on 9 July, reached Brussels on 1 September, and was received in audience by the ruling Archdukes Albert and Isabella on 6 September 1606.Carafa's correspondence as nuncio in Brussels has been calendared in the Analecta Vaticano-Belgica, as Correspondance du nonce Decio Carafa, archevêque de Damas, 1606-1607, edited by L. Van Meerbeeck (Brussels and Rome, 1979). Carafa served in Flanders for only eight months, his main concern being to encourage the negotiations that led to the Twelve Years' Truce (1609–1621) temporarily ending the Eighty Years' War. In May 1607 he was transferred to Spain, arriving in Madrid on 25 July. He was received in audience by Philip III of Spain on 3 August 1607. In 1609 he convinced Francisco Suarez to write against the claims of James VI and I regarding the 1606 Oath of Allegiance. In 1610 he played a role in dissuading Philip III from making war on France over French claims in the Rhineland and Italy, and encouraging the negotiations that led to the marriage of Louis XIII to Anne of Austria.

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