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Marie-Aimée de Kermorvan or Marie-Aimée Vigoureux de Kermorvan (1904 – 1985) was a Mauritian writer and poet. She spent her childhood in Mauritius and later published several books of writing and poetry in French. She was identified as a leading writer at her country's independence in 1968.
It is marked by six lighthouses including the Saint-Mathieu Lighthouse and the Kermorvan Lighthouse. [2] The passage maintains a depth of at least 25 feet (7.6 m) at low tide, and is the usual path taken by yachts sailing between the English Channel with the western coast of France. [3] [4]
The sémaphore, the ruins of the abbey, and the lighthouse. The promontory of Saint-Mathieu hosts the ruins of an abbey, a sémaphore, and a lighthouse.This bizarre juxtaposition (some suggestions were made to restore the abbey, while deconstructing the lighthouse and rebuilding it elsewhere) is explained by the connections these structures shared throughout Saint-Mathieu's history.
The lighthouse: the lighthouse of the Kermorvan peninsula, at Le Conquet. Site de Guénoc (English: Guénoc place—the bleeding menhirs): built with concrete on a metallic structure on the Kermorvan peninsula, near the lighthouse at Le Conquet. Château des Kersaint (the castle of the Kersaint family): Château de Kerouartz, in Lannilis.
Kermorvant gained popularity for his work on films such as "36 quai des Orfèvres," directed by Olivier Marchal in 2004, and "Les Lyonnais", released in 2011.Kermorvant also composed for the television series "Astrid et Raphaëlle".
The Cahiers Charles Maurras were a quarterly journal founded by Georges Calzant and his wife Marguerite Calzant, published from 1960 to 1978. Its purpose was to extend the influence of the ideas of French journalist and politician Charles Maurras, the director of L'Action française. [1]
Tjatsi.fo – Färöische Sagen, Mythen und Legenden at the Wayback Machine (archived April 17, 2012) (very extensive, most of it in English, much also in German, for example, a summary of the Faroese saga, etc.)
Gouzillon was the first son of his parents. He was brother to Chef de Division Andrée-Marie de Gouzillon de Bélizal, and cousin to Lieutenant Jean-Michel-Guillaume de Gouzillon. [3]