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Charles-Édouard and
Charles-Édouard Jeanneret, better known as Le Corbusier (; October 6, 1887 August 27, 1965 ), was an architect, designer, urbanist, and writer, famous for being one of the pioneers of what is now called modern architecture.
Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard FRS ( 8 April 1817 2 April 1894 ), also known as Charles Edward, was a Mauritian physiologist and neurologist who, in 1850, became the first to describe what is now called Brown-Séquard syndrome.

Charles-Édouard and ),
Great neurologists of the time worked at The National, including John Hughlings Jackson, David Ferrier, MacDonald Critchley, Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard, William Allen Sturge ( discoverer of the Sturge-Weber syndrome ), Sir Roger Bannister and many others.

Charles-Édouard and French
Along with the French neurologist Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard, his work

Lefebvre and 1843
* September 8 Charles Edouard Lefebvre, French composer ( b. 1843 )

Lefebvre and
" Everyday Life and the Challenge to History in Postwar France: Braudel, Lefebvre, Certeau ," Diacritics, Volume 33, Number 1, Spring 2003, pp. 23 40 in Project Muse
* 1879 René Lefebvre, martyr of the French Resistance ( d. 1944 )
* 1942 Jim Lefebvre, American baseball player and manager
* 1944 René Lefebvre, martyr of the French Resistance ( b. 1879 )
* 1967 Sylvain Lefebvre, Canadian ice hockey player
* 1909 Eugene Lefebvre crashes a new French-built Wright biplane during a test flight at Juvisy, south of Paris, becoming the first ' pilot ' in the world to lose his life in a powered heavier-than-air craft.
For example, the term " traditionalist Catholic " refers to those, such as Archbishop Lefebvre, who want the worship and practices of the church to be as they were before the Second Vatican Council of 1962 65.
* June 30 Roman Catholic Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre consecrates four bishops at Écône, Switzerland for his apostolate, along with Bishop Antonio de Castro Mayer, without a papal mandate.
* March 25 Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, Roman Catholic bishop who fought for Catholic Tradition ( b. 1905 )
* June 29 Henri Lefebvre, French sociologist and philosopher ( b. 1901 )
* September 12 Tanneguy Lefebvre, French classical scholar ( b. 1615 )
* Jules Lefebvre ( 11 March 1934 19 May 1935 )
The longstanding success of the Academie was secured by the famous and respected artists whom Rodolfo Julian employed as instructors: Adolphe William Bouguereau ( 1825 1905 ), Henri Royer, Jean-Paul Laurens, Edgar Chahine, Gabriel Ferrier, Tony Robert-Fleury, Jules Lefebvre and other leading artists of that time, mainly exponents of the academic style.
* Charles Edouard Lefebvre Lucrèce
At the Second Vatican Council ( 1962 1965 ), he sat on its Board of Presidency and, alongside Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre and Cardinals Alfredo Ottaviani and Thomas Cooray, he was part of the association of traditionalist Council fathers named Coetus Internationalis Patrum.
* September 22 Louise-Rosalie Lefebvre, " Madame Dugazon ", entertainer ( born 1755 )
* Edmond Lefebvre du Prey Minister of Justice
* François Joseph Lefebvre, Duke of Danzig ( 1755 1820 ), Marshal of the Empire in 1804 ( Honorary )
* Lefebvre, H. Henri Lefebvre ( 2004 ) Rhythmanalysis Space, Time and Everyday Life.
On August 13 14, his Tyroleans defeated the French troops of Marshal François Joseph Lefebvre, in the third of the Battles of Bergisel, in a 12-hour battle after a downhill charge.
* Marshal Lefebvre, duc de Dantzig 28 May 1807 ( extinct 1820 ) Dantzig was then still a city republic, which became part of Prussia after Napoleon's defeat, and is now Gdańsk in Poland
During his last year at the Académie in 1878 1879 he neglected his classes in Brussels and lived for a while in Passy, were he visited the Cours Libres of Jules Joseph Lefebvre at the Académie Julian.

Lefebvre and 1917
Sophie Lefebvre Doucet ( mon arriere grand-mere ) en herite au deces de son neveu en 1917.

Lefebvre and ),
After Cochereau's sudden death in 1984, four new titular organists were appointed at Notre Dame in 1985: Jean-Pierre Leguay Olivier Latry, Yves Devernay ( who died in 1990 ), and Philippe Lefebvre This was reminiscent of the 18th-century practice of the cathedral having four titular organists, each one playing for three months of the year.
Fléchier subsequently became tutor to Louis Urbain Lefebvre de Caumartin, afterwards intendant of finances and counsellor of state, whom he accompanied to Clermont-Ferrand, where the king had ordered the Grands Jours to be held ( 1665 ), and where Caumartin was sent as representative of the sovereign.
The largest priestly society to fit this description is the Society of St Pius X ( SSPX ), which was established in 1970 by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, a founding figure of Catholic traditionalism.
Many design elements of the basilica symbolise nationalist themes: the portico, with its three arches, is adorned by two equestrian statues of French national saints Joan of Arc ( 1927 ) and King Saint Louis IX, both executed in bronze by Hippolyte Lefebvre ; and the nineteen-ton Savoyarde bell ( one of the world's heaviest ), cast in 1895 in Annecy, alludes to the annexation of Savoy in 1860.
The Communist Party attracted various intellectuals and artists in the 1920s, including André Breton, the leader of the Surrealist movement, Henri Lefebvre ( who would be expelled in 1958 ), Paul Éluard, Louis Aragon, etc.
File: La sortie de l Ambassadeur Turc du Jardin des Tuileries Gobelins 1734 1737. jpg | La sortie de l ' Ambassadeur Turc du Jardin des Tuileries ( Ottoman Empire embassy of Mehemet Effendi ), Atelier Lefebvre et Mommerqué, Gobelins, 1734-1737.
In addition to the Mémoires pour ... la vie de Tanneguy Lefebvre, by F. Graverol ( 1686 ), see the article in the Nouvelle biographie générale, based partly on the manuscript registers of the Saumur Académie.
* In The End of Eternity by Isaac Asimov ( 1955 ), it is in the late 27th century that the researches of Jan Verdeer and the mathematician Antoine Lefebvre realize the exploitation of " temporal field " technology some three centuries after its mysterious empirical discovery by an eccentric inventor in the 24th.
Some observers, including Soja ( building on the theories of the French philosopher of urbanism Henri Lefebvre ), suggest that although industry may be based outside of a ' post-industrial ' nation, that nation cannot ignore its necessary sociological importance.
In 1807, as chief of staff for Lefebvre at the siege of the Polish city of Danzig ( Gdańsk ), he negotiated the terms of surrender.
Notable people from the Onaping falls area include National Hockey League players Dave Taylor ( Los Angeles Kings ), Dave Hannan ( Pittsburgh Penguins ) and Troy Mallette ( Ottawa Senators ), Olympic cyclist Eric Wohlberg, Paralympian ( rowing ) Steven Daniel and author Mark ( Lefebvre ) Leslie.
Many northern French surnames ( especially in Normandy ) are used with the definite masculine article as a prefix ( Lefebvre, Lefèvre ; archaic spellings are Le Febvre LeFebvre ), with the partitive article as a prefix ( Dufaure ) in the south of France, or without article / prefix ( Favre, Faure ) in the south of France, but the meaning is the same.
* Alain Lefebvre ( born 1947 ), French Journalist
* Arlette Lefebvre ( born 1947 ), Canadian child psychologist
* Arthur H. Lefebvre ( 1923 2003 ), research engineer and scientist
* Claude Lefebvre ( artist ) ( 1633 1675 ), French painter and engraver
* Claude Lefebvre ( handballer ) ( born 1952 ), former Canadian handball player who competed in the 1976 Summer Olympics
* Claude Lefebvre ( ice hockey ) ( born 1964 ), Canadian ice hockey player and coach
* Edmond Lefebvre du Prey ( 1866 1955 ), French politician
* Elsie Lefebvre ( born 1979 ), Quebec politician

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