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Reading History

Chapter 8 No.8

Word Count: 1586    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

e of Comte from Napoleon. He supported the Second Restoration, and Charles X. made him a peer of France. In 1837 he gained his Marshal's bat

ampes, Marquis de la Ferté-Imbault, Marsh

lleyrand and de Valen?ay, Duc de Sagan after the death of his mother, elde

sse de* (1810-1858)

hter of the Duc and Duchesse de Valen?

Council of State in 1806 and then deputy for the Aube;

amp to Prince Jér?me Bonaparte. He left the army under the Restoration, beca

as the daughter of M. Hainguerlot, and mar

ied of burns received in an accident at her villa at Auteuil and left three children: (1) a daughter who married Prince Massimo of Arsoli; (2) another daugh

Princes and then returned to France; he was exiled by Napoleon to Belgium eight years later

ainter who followed the Algerian campaign and

e Verquignieulle, married in 1836 M. Ancillon whose third wife she was.

Zacharie, a Premonstratensian and a member of the Order of Cluny. Then, being tired of the cloister life, he joined the secular clergy and became priest of

he Legion of Honour after building the railway station at Tours in 1849. He was the grandson of a painter, several of whose works are in the Lou

upon a diplomatic career, which he abandoned in 1837. Under the July monarchy he was a deput

uis XVI. the command of an Infantry Regiment which took the name of Savoie Carignan. He incurred the royal disfavour on accou

ent under the Empire, which was continued under the Restoration, and in 1823 he followed the Duc d'Angoulême into S

ct of Ille-et-Vilaine and Peer of France in 1819; he took the oath to the Government o

elf to preaching. Louis XVIII. appointed him Bishop of Soissons; in 1824 he became Archbishop of Bourges and entered the Chamber of Peers at the same time. After 1830 he remained adverse to the new Government, and refused t

(1790-1870). French profes

e, and became lady-of-honour to Queen Louise of Prussia, who was very fond of her. Aft

nister of Justice in the Thiers Ministry, and lent his name to th

osopher who exerted a vast influence upon the h

. Son of the famous Marshal Berthier. He was

r Napoleon III. He was the natural son of the Emperor Napoleon I., and of

r, born in Bohemia, and one of the great

dy at the court of the Grand Duchess Stephanie of Baden and did not retire

1771-1832). A

ughter of the Grand Duke Charles of Baden and of

the family of Entraigues and of the Baron

ous English General, the opponent of Napole

lomatist, Ambassador at Paris, and afterw

8-1853). By birth the C

Ambassador at Paris, and through his instrumentality a breach in relations took place, which led to the ou

803-1874). Belgian state

ld Minister to King Frederick William III. of Prussia, and

to the Prussian Ministry of

r of the Councillor of J

France after the Polish revolution of 1830, and devoted himself to

828, and at Turin till 1832. He then became Councillor of the Empire at St. Petersburg

Berlin. He resigned to marry Fr?ulein von G?cking, and beca

na of G?cking, daughter of the Counci

strian Military Service, but after contracting a morganatic

King of* (1781-1

816-1863). Daughter of King Willi

he married William III., King of the Low Countries. She was a very dist

825, Princess Charlotte of Saxe-Altenburg, by whom he had several children. He afte

in 1808, and son of the foregoing. He

in 1813, and brother of the foregoi

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