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Charles wrote most of his military biography of king Louis XIV of France after his military career had ended. According to his elder brother, Joseph Sevin de Quincy, the author of Mémoires du chevalier de Quincy, who also had a military career, Charles borrowed freely from the latter's diaries, without attribution, for the military history in that work.
Réédition : Vrin, Paris, 2006. De la Liberté : son tableau et sa définition ; ce qu'elle est dans la société ; moyens de l'y conserver (1791) Lettres Westphaliennes (1797) Notice littéraire sur M. Kant et sur l'état de la métaphysique en Allemagne au moment où ce philosophe a commencé d'y faire sensation (1798)
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First page of the Saint-Gervais church baptismal register for 1865.. The parish and civil registers in Paris are documents containing records that officially establish the lineage of individuals born, baptized, married, divorced, deceased, or buried in Paris, within its administratively variable boundaries over time.
The Entry of Charles X into Paris Following His Coronation (French: Entrée de Charles X à Paris, par la barrière de la Villette, après son sacre. 6 juin 1825) is an 1825 history painting by the French artist Louis-François Lejeune. [1] [2] It depicts the entry of Charles X of France into his capital Paris following his coronation at Reims.
Entrée de Charles X à Paris, par la barrière de la Villette, après son sacre. 6 juin 1825 (French for 'Entry of Charles X into Paris, through the Barrière de la Villette, after his coronation. 6 June 1825') is an 1825 history painting by the French artist Louis-François Lejeune.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 26 January 2025. French university located at the heart of the Latin Quarter, in Paris This article is about the university established in 1971. For other universities, see Sorbonne (disambiguation). Panthéon-Sorbonne University Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne Other name Paris 1 Motto Omnibus ...
The siege of Metz during the Italian War of 1551–59 lasted from 19 October 1552 [4] to 2 January 1553. [5]The so-called Augsburg Interim came to an end when Protestant princes of the Schmalkaldic League approached Henry II of France and concluded the Treaty of Chambord, giving the free cities of Toul, Verdun, and Metz (the 'Three Bishoprics') to the Kingdom of France.