François Lamy (photographer)
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François Lamy (photographer)
François Lamy may refer to: * Amédée-François Lamy (1858–1900), French colonial soldier * François Lamy (theologian) (1636–1711), French Benedictine ascetical and apologetic writer * François Lamy (politician) François Lamy (; born 31 October 1959) is a French politician who, until his appointment as Junior Minister for City, Urban Affairs at the newly created Ministry of Territorial Equality and Housing by President of the French Republic, Presiden ...
(born 1959), French politician {{hndis, Lamy, Francois ...
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Amédée-François Lamy
Amédée-François Lamy () was a French military officer. He was born at Mougins, in the French ''département'' of Alpes-Maritimes on 7 February 1858 and died in the battle of Kousséri on 22 April 1900 as a French explorer officer. Biography Family origins He was the son of lieutenant Joseph Sosthène Lamy (1818–1891), originally from Nancy, and of Elisabeth Giraud, from an old and notable Provençal family, whose father Louis Giraud, notary, had married Honorine Courmes, from Grasse, the latter was the daughter of Claude-Marie Courmes, mayor of Grasse from 1830 to 1835.Robert Maestri, Commandant Lamy, un officier français aux colonies, Maisonneuve et Larose, 2000, lire en ligne)/ref> Early years Lamy's ambition to become an officer developed very early; at ten-years-old, he entered the Prytanée national militaire, where he won the first prize in Geography in the general concourse of all the department's school, a possible sign of his future colonial career. In 187 ...
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François Lamy (theologian)
François Lamy (; 1636 – 11 April 1711) was a French Benedictine ascetical and apologetic writer, of the Congregation of St-Maur. Life Lamy was born at Montireau in the Department of Eure-et-Loir in 1636. While fighting a duel, he was saved from a fatal sword-thrust by a book of the Rule of St. Benedict which he carried in his pocket. Seeing the finger of God in this, he took the Benedictine habit at the monastery of St-Remi at Reims in 1658. Shortly after his elevation to the priesthood he was appointed subprior of St-Faron at Meaux, but a year later resigned this position. During 1672-75, he taught philosophy at the monasteries of Mont St-Quentin and St-Médard in Soissons. He was the first of the Maurists to teach the Cartesian system of philosophy. In 1676, he came to St-Germain-des-Prés near Paris where he taught theology until 1679. The general chapter of 1687 appointed him prior of Rebais in the Diocese of Meaux, but he was ordered by the king to resign his ...
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