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Laugier
Laugier is a French surname, and may refer to: * Laugier of Nice (c. 950–1032), co-lord of Nice. * Léonce Laugier, Governor General for Inde française in the Second French Colonial Empire under Third Republic * ''M. Laugier'' may refer to one of two French astronomers ** Paul Auguste Ernest Laugier (1812–1872), active in Paris ** Marguerite Laugier (1896–1976), active in Nice * Marc-Antoine Laugier (1713–1769), Jesuit priest and architectural theorist * Pascal Laugier (born 1971), French director and writer * Sandra Laugier Sandra Laugier is a French philosopher, working on moral philosophy, political philosophy, philosophy of language, gender studies, and popular culture. She is currently a full professor of philosophy at the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne ... (born 1961), French philosopher {{surname Surnames ...
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Pascal Laugier
Pascal Laugier (; born 16 October 1971) is a French screenwriter and film director. Career Laugier is a former assistant to director Christophe Gans, having directed the "making-of" documentary about Gans' 2001 film, '' Brotherhood of the Wolf'' (Laugier also starred in the film). He has written and directed the fantasy-horror feature films '' Saint Ange'', ''Martyrs'', and '' The Tall Man''. Laugier has been associated with the New French Extremity movement. Laugier was set to direct the remake of ''Hellraiser'' but was later taken off the project due to creative differences with the producers; Laugier wanted his film to be very serious and explore gay S&M culture, whereas the producers wanted the film to be more commercial and appeal to a teen audience. Potential future directing projects include a supernatural thriller entitled ''Details''. Laugier is also the director of Mylène Farmer's music video " City of Love", the teaser of which was released online in December 2015 ...
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Laugier Of Nice
Laugier of Nice, known as the Roux (–1032), is also known as Laugier of Orange-Mévouillon or Laugier of Vence. He was co-lord of Nice, Gréolières, Cagnes and Vence. He held these titles in part through his wife Odile of Provence and his father-in-law, William I of Provence. Laugier seems to be related to the Mévouillon-Orange lineage. Some historians give him the title of viscount. He was a member of the first house of the counts of Orange-Nice. From 1023 Laugier was a monk of the order of Cluny. Family Laugier was a member of the first house of the counts of Orange-Nice, as were his brothers Féraud de Nice, Pierre de Mirabel, both bishops and Pons III de Mevouillon, ancestor of the Mevouillon family. Their father was Pons II de Mevouillon, precarist of the church of Arles in Nyons. He was confirmed as owner of the villa Jocondis ( Mornas), which had been granted ''in precarium'' to his parents by Archbishop Manassès of Arles in 954. We can therefore assume he was ...
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Paul Auguste Ernest Laugier
Paul-Auguste-Ernest Laugier (22 December 1812, in Paris – 5 April 1872) was a French astronomer, one of two French astronomers referred to as M. Laugier. Early life and education The son of André Laugier, a chemist (1 August 1770 – 9 April 1832), studied astronomy under François Arago. Career He then obtained a post in the observatory at Paris, made important discoveries in regard to magnetism, comets, eclipses, meteors, and sunspots, and made improvements in astronomical clocks. Laugier determined the exact latitude of the Paris observatory (1853), correcting previous errors. He published a catalogue of fifty-three nebulae, and another (1857) of the declination of 140 stars, and contributed astronomical papers to the ''Connaissance du Temps''. He was long associated with Arago in researches on terrestrial physics, and was for some years president of the Academy of Sciences.
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Sandra Laugier
Sandra Laugier is a French philosopher, working on moral philosophy, political philosophy, philosophy of language, gender studies, and popular culture. She is currently a full professor of philosophy at the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and a Senior member of the Institut Universitaire de France, after being a professor at the University of Picardy Jules Verne in Amiens until 2010. She has studied at Ecole Normale Supérieure and at Harvard University. She is deputy director of the Institut des sciences juridique et philosophique de la Sorbonne (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne/CNRS). She has extensively published on ordinary language philosophy (Ludwig Wittgenstein, John L. Austin), moral philosophy (moral perfectionism, ethics of care), American philosophy (Stanley Cavell, Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson), gender studies, popular culture (TV series), and more recently about democracy and civil disobedience. She is the French translator of most of Stanl ...
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Marguerite Laugier
Marguerite Laugier (née Lhomme) (12 September 1896 – 10 June 1976) was a French astronomer active at the Nice Observatory from the 1930s to the 1950s. Contemporary astronomical articles refer to her as "Madame Laugier". The Minor Planet Center credits her with the discovery of 21 numbered asteroids, made between 1932 and 1955. In 1939, she was awarded the Lalande Prize for her work. The outer main-belt asteroid 1597 Laugier 1597 Laugier, provisional designation , is an asteroid from the outer region of the asteroid belt, approximately 20 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 7 March 1949, by French astronomer Louis Boyer at the north African Algiers Observ ..., discovered by Louis Boyer at Algiers in 1949, is named in her honor (). ''Note:'' She is not to be confused with a male "M. Laugier" in 19th century literature, where the M. stands for "Monsieur". This refers to Paul Auguste Ernest Laugier (1812–1872). References * Brüggenthies, Wilhelm; Dick, ...
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Marc-Antoine Laugier
Marc-Antoine Laugier (Manosque, Provence, January 22, 1713 – Paris, April 5, 1769) was a Jesuit priest until 1755 than a Benedictine monk. He was one of the first architectural theorist. Laugier is best known for his ''Essay on Architecture'' published in 1753. In 1755 he published the second edition with a famous, often reproduced illustration of a primitive hut. His approach is to discuss some familiar aspects of Renaissance and post-Renaissance architectural practice, which he describes as 'faults'. These 'faults' induce his commentary on columns, the entablature, and on pediments. Among faults he lists for columns are that of "being engaged in the wall", the use of pilasters, incorrect entasis (swelling of the column), and setting columns on pedestals. Being embedded in the wall detracts from the overall beauty and aesthetic nature of columns; Laugier states that columns should be free. He goes on to assert that the use of pilasters should strictly be frowned upo ...
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Léonce Laugier
Jean Joseph Marie Léonce Laugier was Governor General for Inde française in the Second French Colonial Empire under Third Republic. Biography Laugier was born on March 26, 1829, in Draguignan, France, to Joseph Honoré Isidore Laugier, a lawyer, and Marguerite Françoise Gattier. In 1868, he became Secretary General of the Interior in Cochinchina. During his time in Cochinchina, he received the Royal Order of Cambodia. On March 9, 1871, he was appointed Director of Interior Services in Réunion. He then received the Legion of Honour on August 7, 1877. He became Governor of French India French India, formally the ( en, French Settlements in India), was a French colony comprising five geographically separated enclaves on the Indian Subcontinent that had initially been factories of the French East India Company. They were '' ... in February 1879, a post he held until April of 1881. After retiring, Laugier died on June 22, 1900, in his hometown of Draguignan. Titles held ...
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