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Gabriel and Naudé
* 1600 – Gabriel Naudé, French librarian and scholar ( d. 1653 )
* February 2 – Gabriel Naudé, French librarian and scholar ( d. 1653 )
* July 10 – Gabriel Naudé, French librarian and scholar ( b. 1600 )
The legend inspired a variety of works, among them the works of Michael Maier ( 1568 – 1622 ) of Germany ; Robert Fludd ( 1574 – 1637 ) and Elias Ashmole ( 1617 – 1692 ) of England ; Teophilus Schweighardt Constantiens, Gotthardus Arthusius, Julius Sperber, Henricus Madathanus, Gabriel Naudé, Thomas Vaughan, and others.
The Exercitationes are renowned for their display of encyclopaedic wealth of knowledge, the vigour of the author's style, and the accuracy of his observations ; at the same time, as Gabriel Naudé noted, they contain more faults than those Scaliger has discovered in Cardan.
In 1651 he went to Paris, where he formed a friendship with Gabriel Naudé, conservator of the Mazarin Library.
Gabriel Naudé
Gabriel Naudé ( 2 February 1600 – 10 July 1653 ) was a French librarian and scholar.
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There remains some controversy as to the extent to which Gassendi subscribed to the so-called libertinage érudit, the learned free-thinking that characterised the Tétrade, the Parisian circle to which he belonged, along with Gabriel Naudé and two others ( Élie Diodati and François de La Mothe Le Vayer ).
* February 2 – Gabriel Naudé, librarian and scholar ( died 1653 )
During the 17th century in France the idea of Bibliotheca Universalis came about from well established academics and librarians-Conrad Gessner, Gabriel Naudé, John Dury, and Gottfried Leibniz.
Scipion Dupleix in his Liberté de la langue française dans sa pureté ( 1651 ) pleaded for the richer and freer language of the 16th century, and François de La Mothe-Le-Vayer took a similar standpoint in his Lettres à Gabriel Naudé tombant les Remarques sur la langue française.
Boccaccio represents him in the same character, and Giovanni Pico della Mirandola arraigns him severely in his work against astrology, while Gabriel Naudé finds it necessary to defend his good name in his Apologie pour tous les grands personages faussement soupçonnez de magie.
As a Catholic, she was hostile to the Protestant movement but remained close to libertines such as Théophile de Viau, Gabriel Naudé and François La Mothe Le Vayer, to whom she would leave her library, which she herself had received from Montaigne ( who in turn had inherited it from La Boétie ).
# redirect Gabriel Naudé

Gabriel and symbols
Among symbols and concepts used by Suhrawardi are: minu ( incorporeal world ), Giti ( Corporeal World ), Surush ( messenger, Gabriel ), Farvardin ( the lower world ), Gawhar ( Pure sessense ), Bahram, Hurakhsh ( the Sun ), Shahriyar ( archetype of species ), Isfahbad ( Light in the body ), Amordad ( Zoroastrian Angel ), Shahrivar ( Zoroastrian Angel ), and the Kiyyani Khwarnah.
The east window of the church is credited to H Wilkinson and dates from 1925. the window depicts Christ in Majesty flanked by St Michael and St Gabriel, with the symbols of the four Evangelists surrounding them.

Gabriel and representations
In these two representations of the Virgin Annunciate and of the Archangel Gabriel, we find a further development of the artist's decoratively graceful and classical style as well as a recognition of the sculptural styles of Donatello, Ghiberti, and Michelozzo.

Gabriel and Coup
Foucault notices that entire treatise were devoted to the very notion of coup d ' état, for example a text written in 1639 by Gabriel Naude, entitled Considerations sur les coups d ' etat and writing in 1631 Foucault sites Jean Sirmond Le Coup d ’ Estat de Louis XIII.
He was President of Poland twice: first in December 1922 after the assassination of president Gabriel Narutowicz as Acting President of the Republic of Poland for one week, and again in May 1926, after Józef Piłsudski's May Coup and the resignation of president Stanisław Wojciechowski.

Gabriel and d
* 1845 – Gabriel Lippmann, French physicist, Nobel Prize laureate ( d. 1921 )
* 1752 – Gabriel Duvall, American jurist, and Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court ( d. 1844 )
* 1869 – Eligiusz Niewiadomski, Polish assassin of Gabriel Narutowicz ( d. 1923 )
* 1880 – Gabriel Voisin, French aviation pioneer ( d. 1973 )
* 1887 – Gabriel Gabrio, French actor ( d. 1946 )
* 1828 – Dante Gabriel Rossetti, English painter ( d. 1882 )
* 1845 – Gabriel Fauré, French composer ( d. 1924 )
* 1770 – Louis Gabriel Suchet, French Marshal ( d. 1826 )
* 1698 – Ange-Jacques Gabriel, French architect ( d. 1782 )
* 1722 – Gabriel Christie, Scottish-English general ( d. 1799 )
* May 12 – Dante Gabriel Rossetti, English poet and painter ( d. 1882 )
* December 7 – Gabriel Marcel, French philosopher and playwright ( d. 1973 )
* February 5 – Gabriel Voisin, French aviation pioneer ( d. 1973 )
* June 4 – Gabriel Pascal, Hungarian film producer ( d. 1954 )
* August 25 – Gabriel Guérin, French World War I fighter ace ( d. 1918 )
* June 25 – Eloy Alfaro Delgado Gabriel, former President of Ecuador ( d. 1912 )
* September 1 – Giuseppe Gabriel Balsamo-Crivelli, Italian naturalist ( d. 1874 )
* August 13 – Sir George Gabriel Stokes, Irish mathematician and physicist ( d. 1903 )
* May 12 – Gabriel Fauré, French composer ( d. 1924 )
* September 16 – Gabriel Christie, British general ( d. 1799 )
* February 8 – Gabriel Daniel, French Jesuit historian ( d. 1728 )
* June 15 – Gabriel Oxenstierna, Swedish statesman ( d. 1640 )
* July 31 – Gabriel Cramer, Swiss mathematician ( d. 1752 )

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