Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The name of Bertier's girlfriend, [6] and Bertier and Campbell's relationship, were misrepresented. [7] Bertier's on-the-field portrayal in the film, however, is almost entirely correct. As the team's defensive captain, Bertier was a dominating force on the linebacking corps and received All-American honors following the team's championship season.
Louis-Alexandre Berthier, prince de Neuchâtel et Valangin, prince de Wagram (French: [lwi alɛksɑ̃dʁ bɛʁtje]; 20 November 1753 – 1 June 1815) was a French military commander who served during the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.
Napoleon ordered that an Austrian attack before 15 April should be met by a general French concentration around Donauwörth and Augsburg in the west, but his orders arrived fragmented and out of sequence and were poorly interpreted by Berthier who was more accustomed to staff duties than field command. Berthier focussed on an ambiguous sentence ...
August 5 – James Dixon, United States Senator from Connecticut from 1857 till 1869. (died 1873) October 2 – John Elliott Ward, politician and diplomat (died 1902) November 13 – Joseph Hooker, general in the Union Army during American Civil War (died 1879) December 19 – Edwin Stanton, 27th United States Secretary of War (died 1869)
Antoine Bertier (1761–1854), French landowner and politician; Charles Bertier (1860–1924), French landscape painter. Charles Bertier (journalist) (1821–1882), Governor of Martinique from 1867 to 1869; Georges Bertier (1877–1962), French educator; Gerry Bertier (1953–1981), Virginia high school American football player
The Valley of Vénéon, Oisans (1894) His family owned a glove making business. He entered the "Petit Séminaire du Rondeau", where he studied design with Laurent Guétal, [1] who introduced him to painting mountains and other impressive scenery in a style that would mark what later became known as the "École Dauphinoise", a group that also included Ernest Victor Hareux and Jean Achard.
Foullon's son-in-law Bertier de Sauvigny, the intendant of Paris was confronted by the severed head before being lynched himself. The nature of the killing of both Foullon and Bertier was endorsed by Antoine Barnave, a member of the new National Legislative Assembly, with the comment: "What, then, is their blood so pure?". [3]
Charles Pierre Bertier (25 July 1821 – 29 January 1882) was a French lawyer, magistrate, director of the Courrier des Alpes, Master of Requests to the Council of State and Governor of Martinique from 1867 to 1869. He is known for the role he played in defining the terms under which Savoy was annexed to France in 1860.