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Rue du Commerce is a French retail company, a key player in the French e-commerce sector. The site was founded in 1999 by Patrick Jacquemin and Gauthier Picquart. Initially specializing in computer and electronic products, the company expanded its offerings in 2007 and now offers over 3 million products for sale in the categories of home and personal equipment (home, garden, DIY, and fashion).
« Tableau des représentants d'intérêts » [archive, sur www.assemblee-nationale.fr (consulté le 15 octobre 2016)] « Insee – Document recherche – La situation du commerce en 2015 – Rapport établi pour la Commission des Comptes Commerciaux de la Nation » [archive, sur www.insee.fr (consulté le 16 mars 2016)]
OLFA Corporation (オルファ株式会社, Orufa Kabushiki-gaisha) is a Japanese manufacturer of utility knives, founded in 1956 in Osaka, Japan. The name is derived from the Japanese words oru (折る, bend and break) and ha (刃, blade). The company is known for inventing the snap-off blade and the rotary cutter.
[3] [4] E.Leclerc currently has more than 720 locations in France and 85 stores outside of the country, as of 2019. [3] The chain enables semi-independent stores to operate under the Leclerc brand. Own brand ranges come under the Marque Repère and Eco+ banners, as well as a MVNO called Réglo Mobile which uses the mobile network of SFR .
In France, the tribunal de commerce (plural tribunaux de commerce, literally "commercial courts") are the oldest courts in the French judicial organization. They were created at the end of the Middle Ages.
The Paris Chamber of Commerce (Chambre de commerce de Paris) was created on 25 February 1803 by the Consulate.It succeeded the Council of Commerce, Arts and Manufactures of the Seine (Conseil de Commerce, Arts et Manufactures de la Seine), created in 1801 as a successor to the six Corps des Marchands de Paris which provided some of the functions of the Chamber of Commerce under the Ancien ...
An ordinance of 17 March 1831 created the Ministry of Commerce and Public works (Ministère du Commerce et des Travaux publics), to which the minister had been named on 13 March 1831. This ministry included agriculture, subsistence, stud farms, interior and exterior commerce and statistics, detached from the department of the Interior. [2]
The Banque Française pour le Commerce et l'Industrie (French pronunciation: [bɑ̃k fʁɑ̃sɛːz puʁ lə kɔmɛʁs e lɛ̃dystʁi]; "French Bank for Trade and Industry"; abbr. BFCI) was a significant bank in France, formed in 1901 from two predecessor entities, the Banque Franco-Égyptienne ([bɑ̃k fʁɑ̃ko eʒipsjɛn], est. 1870 ...