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Louis-Marie Lanté
Louis-Marie may refer to: *Louis Marie Baptiste Atthalin (1784–1856), French Army officer, politician, painter, watercolorist, and lithographer *Louis-Marie-Augustin d'Aumont, 4th Duke of Aumont of the Aumont family, a French noble house *Louis-Marie Autissier (1772–1830), French-born Belgian portrait miniature painter *Louis-Marie Baader (1828–1920), French painter of German descent *Louis-Marie-Edmond Blanquart de Bailleul (1795–1868), French Roman Catholic bishop * Louis-Marie-Raphaël Barbier (1792–1852), physician and surgeon from Berthier-en-Haut in Lower Canada *Louis-Marie Baudouin (1765–1835), French Roman Catholic priest, founder of the Sons of Mary Immaculate and the Ursulines of Jesus * Louis-Marie-Joseph Beaumont (1753–1828), farmer and political figure in Lower Canada *Louis-Marie Billé (1938–2002), French clergyman, archbishop of Lyon, cardinal until his death in office *Louis-Marie de Blignières (born 1949), French traditionalist Catholic priest, fou ...
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Louis Marie Baptiste Atthalin
Louis Marie Baptiste Atthalin, Baron Atthalin (born 22 June 1784 at Colmar, Haut-Rhin - 3 September 1856) was a French Army officer, politician, painter, watercolorist, and lithographer. He died in Colmar on 3 September 1856. Louis-Philippe I sent Atthalin to Nicholas I of Russia to inform him of the former's accession. He was also present at the reburial of Napoleon's remains in 1840. Military career Baron Atthalin became a student of the École Polytechnique on 1 November 1802. He acquired the officer candidate rank of second lieutenant (engineering) on 23 September 1804, appointed lieutenant 17 November 1806, and captain 16 September 1808. Campaigning with Napoleon's Grande Armée in 1806 and 1807, Atthalin distinguished himself in military actions at Gardadeu, Molérès-M-Rey, and Wals. Atthalin also campaigned at Texel in 1810, again with the Grande Armée in 1812-1814, and was present at the Blockade of Landau in 1815. During his time as a captain Atthalin came to ...
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Louis Marie De La Haye, Vicomte De Cormenin
Louis Marie de la Haye, Vicomte de Cormenin (January 6, 1788 in Paris – May 6, 1868 in Paris) was a French jurist and political pamphleteer. Biography Early life and career His father and his grandfather both held the rank of lieutenant-general of the admiralty. At the age of twenty he was received advocate, and about the same time he gained some reputation as a writer of piquant and delicate poems. In 1810 he received from Napoleon I the appointment of auditor to the council of state; and after the restoration of the Bourbons he became master of requests. During the period of his connection with the council he devoted himself zealously to the study of administrative law. He was selected to prepare some of the most important reports of the council. Among his separate publications at this time are noted, ''Du conseil d'état envisagé comme conseil et comme juridiction dans notre monarchie constitutionnelle'' (1818), and ''De la responsabilité des agents du gouvernement''. In ...
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Louis-Marie Michon
Louis-Marie Michon (2 November 1802 in Blanzy, Saône-et-Loire – 6 May 1866 in Paris) was a French surgeon. He studied medicine in Paris, where in 1826 he became an interne (''interne provisoire'' the preceding year). From 1830 he served as ''aide d’anatomie'' to the medical faculty, attaining his agrégation in surgery in 1832 with the thesis ''De la carie et de la nécrose''. During the same year he was appointed as surgeon to the "Bureau central", followed by ''chirurgien des hôpitaux'' in 1835. As a physician, he distinguished himself during the Revolution of 1848. In 1843 he was a founding member of the ''Société nationale de chirurgie'' (today known as ''Académie nationale de chirurgie''), and in 1863 was admitted to the Académie de Médecine. Posthumously (1873), he was praised at the annual meeting of the ''Société nationale de chirurgie'' by Felix Guyon (1831–1920). He was the author of an early treatise on tumors of synovial tissue titled ''D ...
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Louis-Marie Ling Mangkhanekhoun
Louis-Marie Ling Mangkhanekhoun I.V.D. (born 8 April 1944) is a Laotian prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. A bishop since 2001, he has been a cardinal since 28 June 2017 and the Apostolic Vicar of the Apostolic Vicariate of Vientiane, in Laos, since 16 December 2017. He is also the first cardinal from Laos. Biography He speaks Khmu, Laotian, French, and English. He is sometimes referred to as Bishop or Cardinal Ling. He is an ethnic Khmu. He was baptized a Catholic in 1952 after missionaries converted his mother. In the 1960s he studied philosophy and theology at the Voluntas Dei seminary in the Diocese of Edmundston, New Brunswick, Canada. He was ordained a priest in a hurried ceremony in a refugee camp on 5 November 1972 for the Apostolic Vicariate of Vientiane, Laos. He spent the years 1984 to 1987 in prison. On 30 October 2000 Pope John Paul II appointed him Apostolic Vicar of Paksé and titular bishop of Aquae Novae in Proconsulari. He was consecrated a bishop on ...
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Louis Marie De Lescure
Louis Marie de Salgues, marquis de Lescure (13 October 1766 – 4 November 1793) was a French soldier and opponent of the French Revolution, the cousin of Henri de la Rochejaquelein. Biography Early life He was born in Versailles and educated at the ''École Militaire'', which he left at the age of sixteen. Lescure was in command of a company of cavalry in the ''Regiment de Royal-Piémont''. In 1791, he married his cousin Victoire de Donnissan de La Rochejaquelein, who was also the cousin of Henri de La Rochejacquelein, another royalist rebel of Vendée. Being opposed to the ideas of the Revolution, he emigrated in 1791, but soon returned, and, on the Insurrection of 10 August 1792, took part in the defence of the Tuileries Palace against the mob of Paris. The day after, he was forced to leave the capital, and took refuge in the ''château'' of Clisson near Bressuire. War in the Vendée On the outbreak of the Revolt in the Vendée against the Republic, he was arrested and ...
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Louis-Marie Stanislas Fréron
Louis-Marie Stanislas Fréron (17 August 1754 – 15 July 1802) was a French politician, journalist, representative to the National Assembly, and a representative on mission during the French Revolution. Background The son of Elie-Catherine Fréron, he was born in Paris to a wealthy family. His father was a prominent journalist and popular opponent of the philosophes and encyclopédistes, his most notable opponent being Voltaire (who openly considered Elie his enemy), and it is surmised that his father's history of conflict with the state over freedom of the press heavily influenced Louis Fréron's political views. He attended the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, where his father held a faculty position, together with the likes of Maximilien Robespierre and Camille Desmoulins. On the death of his father, he inherited ''L'Année littéraire'', which was continued until 1795 and edited successively by the abbé Royou and Julien Louis Geoffroy. Early Revolutionary activities Though due ...
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Louis Marie Fontan
Louis Marie Fontan (November 4, 1801 – October 10, 1839), a French man of letters, was born in Lorient and died in Thiais. He began his career as a clerk in a government office, but was dismissed for taking part in a political banquet. At the age of nineteen he went to Paris and began to contribute to the ''Tablettes'' and the ''Album''. He was brought to trial for political articles written for the latter paper, but defended himself so energetically that he secured indefinite postponement of his trial. The offending paper was suppressed for a time, and Fontan produced a collection of political poems, ''Odes et epîtres'', and a number of plays, of which ''Perkins Warbec'' (1828), written in collaboration with MM. Halévy and Drouineau, was the most successful. In 1828 the Album was revived, and in it Fontan published a virulent but witty attack on Charles X, entitled ''Le Mouton enrage'' (June 10, 1829). To escape the inevitable prosecution Fontan fled over the frontier, but, ...
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Louis-Marie-Joseph Maximilian Caffarelli Du Falga
Louis-Marie-Joseph Maximilian Caffarelli du Falga (February 13, 1756 – 27 April 1799) was a French commander and scholar. His younger brothers Marie-François Auguste de Caffarelli du Falga (1766–1849) and Louis-Marie Joseph Caffarelli (1760–1845) were also generals. Life The oldest of ten children, he refused to exercise the right of the first-born son to the majority of his parents' wealth. He served under Jean Baptiste Kléber in the army of Sambre-et-Meuse, losing his left leg to a cannonball on December 17, 1795, but continuing in the army with a wooden leg, and joined Kléber on the Egyptian campaign. Accompanying Napoleon on the French invasion of Egypt, he was present when Napoleon landed at Valletta to occupy Malta on 12 June 1798. Like the other French generals, he was impressed by its defences, saying to Napoleon, "Upon my word, General, it is lucky there is someone in the town to open the gates for usA saying arose about him among the expeditionary troops in ...
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Louis Marie Raymond Durand
Louis Marie Raymond Durand (1786–1837) was a French diplomat who served as a consul in Warsaw during the November Uprising. Biography He was born in Montpellier on 4 November 1786 to a family of Jean-Jacques Durand, a local noble and civil servant, and Marie Pauline de Barbeyrac, daughter of Marquess of Saint-Maurice. His ancestors in 17th century started a prosperous grain trading company. By mid-18th century Raymond Durand, the diplomat's grandfather, was among the richest grain traders in the area and owned a sizeable fleet of merchant vessels. In 1733, during a serious famine, he brought 20 thousand sacks of grain and distributed it among starving inhabitants of the city. For this act in 1788 king Louis XVI of France granted him and his descendants with a noble status and a coat of arms depicting a merchant vessel. During the early stages of the French revolution, Durand's father was a prominent representative of local Bourgeoisie and was proclaimed the first maire of Mon ...
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