Cazenave (other)
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Cazenave (other)
Cazenave may refer to: * Cazenave-Serres-et-Allens, Ariège, France * Cazenave, a common vine training system People with the surname * Pierre Louis Alphée Cazenave (1795–1877), French dermatologist * Louis de Cazenave (1897–2008), French veteran of World War I * Hector Cazenave (1914–1958), Uruguayan-French footballer * Fernand Cazenave (1924–2005), French rugby union player and coach * Anny Cazenave Anny Cazenave () is a French space geodesist and one of the pioneers in satellite altimetry. She works for the French space agency CNES and has been deputy director of the (LEGOS) at Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées in Toulouse since 1996. Since 2 ..., French geodesist * Laurent Cazenave (born 1978), French auto racing driver * Guillermo Carlos Cazenave (born 1955), Argentinian composer, writer and journalist * Noel Cazenave (born 1948), American sociologist * Thomas Cazenave (born 1978), French civil servant and politician See also * Cazeneuve (other) ...
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Cazenave-Serres-et-Allens
Cazenave-Serres-et-Allens () is a Communes of France, commune in the Ariège (department), Ariège Departments of France, department in southwestern France. Population See also *Communes of the Ariège department References

Communes of Ariège (department) Ariège communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia {{Ariège-geo-stub ...
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Vine Training
The use of vine training systems in viticulture is aimed primarily to assist in canopy management with finding the balance in enough foliage to facilitate photosynthesis without excessive shading that could impede grape ripening or promote grape diseases. Additional benefits of utilizing particular training systems could be to control potential yields and to facilitate mechanization of certain vineyard tasks such as pruning, irrigation, applying pesticide or fertilizing sprays as well as harvesting the grapes.J. Robinson (ed) ''"The Oxford Companion to Wine"'' Third Edition pg 134-230, 300-341, 399-413, 551-553, 617-634, 661-692, 706-733 Oxford University Press 2006 In deciding on what type of vine training system to use, growers also consider the climate conditions of the vineyard where the amount of sunlight, humidity and wind could have a large impact on the exact benefits the training system offers. For instance, while having a large spread out canopy (such as what th ...
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Pierre Louis Alphée Cazenave
Pierre Louis Alphée Cazenave (5 May 1795 – 9 April 1877) was a French dermatologist who practiced medicine at the Hôpital Saint-Louis in Paris. In 1823 he was appointed interne to the hospitals of Paris, and in 1835 became ''professor agrégé'' to the medical faculty. At Hôpital Saint-Louis, Cazenave was a student of Laurent-Théodore Biett, a physician credited for introducing into French medicine an anatomical approach for analysis of skin disorders. This analytical method was first developed by two English physicians; Robert Willan and Thomas Bateman. In 1828, with Henri Édouard Schedel, he published a book based on Biett's lectures and observations, titled ''Abregé pratique des maladies de la peau''. The compilation was to become a highly influential dermatological work, being translated into a number of different languages. Includes bibliography. From 1843 until 1852, Cazenave was editor of '' Annales des Maladies de la Peau et de la Syphilis'', a journal ded ...
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Louis De Cazenave
Louis de Cazenave (October 16, 1897 – January 20, 2008) was, at the time of his death, the oldest surviving French veteran of World War I. De Cazenave became the oldest living poilu following the death of 111-year-old Maurice Floquet on November 10, 2006, and later following the death of 110-year-old Aimé Avignon on August 23, 2007 also the oldest living Frenchman as well as the fourth-oldest living European man. After the death of Japaneseman Giichi Okumura on October 13, 2007, he was also the 12th-oldest living man in the world. After his death, de Cazenave was succeeded as the oldest living Frenchman as well as French veteran of World War I by Italian-born Lazare Ponticelli, who was two months younger and died only two months later, on March 12, 2008. Two further French veterans, 108-year-old Fernand Goux and 109-year-old Pierre Picault who were the oldest living Frenchmen after Ponticelli's death as well as the last living Frenchmen born before 1900, died later in Novem ...
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Hector Cazenave
Héctor Cazenave (13 April 1914 in Montevideo – 27 September 1958) was a French footballer. He played for Peñarol, Defensor Sporting Club and FC Sochaux-Montbéliard. Born in Uruguay, Cazenave represented the France national football team. International career Born in Uruguay to French parents, Cazenave earned 8 caps for the France national football team, and played in the 1938 FIFA World Cup The 1938 FIFA World Cup was the 3rd edition of the FIFA World Cup, World Cup, the quadrennial international Association football, football championship for senior men's national teams. It was held in France from 4 to 19 June 1938. Italy national .... References External links * * * 1914 births 1958 deaths Footballers from Montevideo French men's footballers France men's international footballers Uruguayan men's footballers Uruguayan people of French descent Uruguayan emigrants to France Defensor Sporting players FC Sochaux-Montbéliard players Uruguayan Primera Di ...
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Fernand Cazenave
Fernand Cazenave (26 November 1924 – 10 January 2005) was a French former rugby union international and national coach. Cazenave played six times for France as a winger in the 1950s. He debuted against England in 1950 and scored his only Test try as France won 6-3. His last match, was also against England, in 1954 which France again won 11-3, in Paris. He took up coaching and coached Mont-de-Marsan to victory in the French Championship in 1963, the only time the club has won the championship. Mont-de-Marsan also won the Yves Du-Manoir three times, 1961-62. He took over as French coach from Jean Prat in 1968. France toured South Africa (1971) and Australia (1972) during this time. He was coach until 1973 when Jean Desclaux Jean Desclaux (25 June 1922 – 23 March 2006) was a French rugby union player and coach who played for US Dax as flanker. Born in 1922 in Dax, he played and coached club rugby for US Dax only; as a player he served the club from 1947 to 1959 ... t ...
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Anny Cazenave
Anny Cazenave () is a French space geodesist and one of the pioneers in satellite altimetry. She works for the French space agency CNES and has been deputy director of the (LEGOS) at Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées in Toulouse since 1996. Since 2013, she is director of Earth sciences at the International Space Science Institute (ISSI), in Bern (Switzerland). As one of the leading scientists in the joint French/American satellite altimetry missions TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason-1, and the Ocean Surface Topography Mission, she has contributed to a greater understanding of sea level rise caused by global warming. Cazenave is a member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and was the lead author of the sea level sections for their fourth and fifth Assessment Reports. Early life and education Not from an academic background, Cazenave was not destined to work in the sciences. However, she achieved a postgraduate doctorate in fundamental astronomy (Paris, 1969) as well as receivin ...
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Laurent Cazenave
Laurent Cazenave (born 25 April 1978, in Pau) is a French auto racing driver. In 1997 he finished third in Class B of the French Formula Ford Championship. From there he switched to saloon car racing in 1999, with two years in the French Super Production Championship. He finished third in his second year with two race wins, driving a Peugeot 306. Since then he has competed regularly in the French GT Championship, driving cars such as a Porsche 996, a Chrysler Viper, and most recently a Corvette C5 in 2008. In 2001 he drove in six rounds of the FIA GT Championship in a Porsche 911 for Haberthur Racing. The team got just three points in the N-GT Class. He made a brief return to touring cars in 2008, entering two rounds of the FIA World Touring Car Championship at his home town of Pau. He drove for the Wiechers-Sport Wiechers-Sport is a German auto racing team which is based in Nienburg, Lower Saxony, Nienburg. The team was first established in 1999, competing in German Touring c ...
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Guillermo Carlos Cazenave
Guillermo Carlos Cazenave (born September 18, 1955) is an Argentine musician who has been living in Europe for more than four decades, in London, Sitges (Barcelona) and near Collioure (Southern France). He is also known as Guill Cazenave. He is also an author and journalist, specialized in many different musical styles. Early years Guill started making music from a very young age; when he was 7, his grandmother from the Isle of Skye gave him a bagpipe. In 1963, his older siblings travelled to New York. A while later they returned to Argentina with the first albums by the Beatles, and Guillermo, after seeing the band The Dave Clark Five on television, started playing the drums in 1965, later to study with the drummer and percussionist Sam Lerman. In 1969, Guillermo started his first pop band with two classmates from the Colegio Cardenal Newman in Buenos Aires, making his debut with a performance at a party, in September of the same year. At the same time, he continued his dru ...
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