Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "French nobility" ¶ 20
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Noblesse and de
His father, Étienne Pascal ( 1588 – 1651 ), who also had an interest in science and mathematics, was a local judge and member of the " Noblesse de Robe ".
Louis-Joseph was the son of Marie-Thérèse de Pierre and Louis-Daniel de Montcalm, of the House of Montcalm, a family of the ' Noblesse de Robe ' of Nîmes, at the family residence, the Chateau de Candiac, near Nîmes in southern France.
* Henri Grégoire, De la Noblesse de la peau ou Du préjugé des blancs contre la couleur des Africains et celle de leurs descendants noirs et sang-mêlés ( 1826 ), Grenoble: Millon, 2002.
* Dictionnaire de la Noblesse, 1865
* " Noblesse de l ' espace Plantagenêt ( 1154-1224 )", editions Civilisations Medievales ; it's a collection of essays by various French and English historians on the Angevin ruling class.
* Simon Konarski, Armorial de la Noblesse Polonaise titrée, Paris 1958
fr: Catégorie: Noblesse du royaume de Bohême
In this book, de Oliveira seeks to balance the notion of " preferential option for the poor " idea in some modern liberal Catholic social thinking, with support for the natural elite that exists in all societies, according to the teaching of Pius XII, that they may become the obligated class working for the good of society ( Noblesse Oblige ).
fr: Académie du Corps des Cadets de la Noblesse
* of Norman origin ; the French Dictionnaire de la Noblesse refers to a 13th century Knight named Guy de Brothie, who married a daughter of the Knight Aimery de Gain from Limousin.
* Noblesse d ' épée ( nobility of the sword ) or noblesse de race or noblesse ancienne: the traditional or old nobility.
* Noblesse de chancellerie ( nobility of the chancery ): person made noble by holding certain high offices for the king.
* Noblesse de lettres: person made noble by letters patent.
* Noblesse de cloche ( nobility of the " bell ") or Noblesse échevinale / Noblesse scabinale: person or family made noble by being a mayor or alderman ( échevin ) or dean of guilds ( municipal leader ) in certain towns ( such as Abbeville and Angers, Angoulême, Bourges, Lyon, Toulouse, Paris, Perpignan, and Poitiers ).

Noblesse and nobility
Noblesse oblige is a French phrase literally meaning " nobility obliges ".
King Louis XIV of France instituted a similar practice upon the completion of his Palace at Versailles, requiring the French nobility, particularly the ancient Noblesse d ' épée ( nobility of the sword ) to spend six months of each year at the palace, for reasons similar to those of the Japanese shoguns.
The minor nobility is in Scotland often referred to by the French word " Noblesse ".
* Noblesse militaire ( military nobility ): person or family made noble by holding military offices, generally after two or three generations.
* Noblesse chevaleresque ( knightly nobility ): nobility from before the year 1400.
* Noblesse d ' extraction: nobility for at least four generations.
* Noblesse au premier degré ( nobility in the first generation ): nobility awarded in the first generation, generally after 20 years of service or by death in one's post.
* Noblesse graduelle: nobility awarded in the second generation, generally after 20 years of service by both father and son.

Noblesse and noble
" Heinlein also discusses the concept in Glory Road where Her Wisdom Star, Empress of Twenty Universes observes to her champion that " Noblesse oblige is an emotion felt only by the truly noble.

Noblesse and by
In response to Noblesse Oblige, the book her sister Nancy co-wrote and edited on the class distinctions in British English, popularizing the phrases " U and non-U English " ( upper class and non-upper class ), Jessica described L and non-L ( Left and non-Left ) English, mocking the clichés used by her comrades in the all-out class struggle.
All of the bands lyrics are in German and Latin ( except Noblesse Oblige LP, lyrics of which are mainly in Russian by famous Russian poets of the 19th century, like Alexander Pushkin ), to suit the group's highly Wagnerian style.

Noblesse and .
The little Force we have in the Province was immediately set in Motion, and ordered to assemble at or near St. John's ; The Noblesse of this Neighbourhood were called upon to collect their Inhabitants, in order to defend themselves, the Savages of those Parts likewise had the same orders ; but tho ' the Gentlemen testified great Zeal, neither their Entreaties or their Example could prevail upon the People ; a few of the Gentry, consisting principally of the Youth, residing in this Place, and its Neighbourhood, formed a small Corps of Volunteers under the Command of Mr. Samuel Mackay, and took Post at St. John's ; the Indians shewed as much Backwardness as the Canadian Peasantry.
“ Virtus, Honor, Noblesse Oblige: La verdad sospechosa and Las paredes oyen as Companion Pieces ,” After Its Kind.
" Noblesse oblige " is generally used to imply that with wealth, power, and prestige come responsibilities.
In the Disney movie Mary Poppins, Mr. Banks sings a song titled " The Life I Lead " with the lyrics: " I treat my subjects / servants, children, wife / With a firm but gentle hand / Noblesse oblige!
Noblesse Oblige was their belief that it was the elite's duty to take care of society.
Cygnus Knight characters begin as Noblesse class and begin their journey on Ereve.
Heroes are Noblesse characters who have accumulated the most points for their class during competition in the Grand Olympiad while having a minimum of fifteen matches with at least one win.
La Noblesse du Midi Carolingien, Occasional Publiucations of the Unit for Prosopographical Research, Vol.
The school motto is Noblesse Oblige (" Unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required ," St. Luke XII, 48 ).
They are a mostly peaceful people, though with a strong sense of tradition and a Noblesse Oblige attitude toward " lesser " species.
His return on the 14th of November, 1606, is a date to remember in the annals of the New World, as the establishment of the first North American Order of Chivalry and the birth of the Nouveau Noblesse of New France.

de and robe
Diderot's miscellaneous pieces range from a graceful trifle like the Regrets sur ma vieille robe de chambre ( Regrets for my Old Dressing Gown ) up to Le rêve de D ' Alembert, where he plunges into the depths of the controversy as to the ultimate constitution of matter and the meaning of life.
fr: Bicolore ( robe de chat )
Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa noted that Viracocha was described as " a man of medium height, white and dressed in a white robe like an alb secured round the waist, and that he carried a staff and a book in his hands.
Nicolas Fouquet was born in Paris to an influential family of the noblesse de robe and, after some preliminary schooling with the Jesuits at the age of 13, was admitted as avocat at the Parlement of Paris.
* RCT 55 – La robe de dissension or Le faux prodige ( in 2 acts, 1726 )
* Any of several women's fashions, as robe d ' anglaise ( 18th century ), " robe de style " ( 1920s ).
** and " noblesse de robe " (" nobility of the gown "), the magisterial class that administered royal justice and civil government, often referring to those who bought a title of nobility ( rich merchants ).
Her Franciscan confessor, William de St. Pathus, related that on cold nights Margaret would place a robe around Louis ' shoulders, when her deeply religious husband rose to pray.
In the 17th and 18th centuries, the intendants were chosen from the noblesse de robe (" administrative nobility ") or the upper-bourgeoisie.
Born in Paris in a family of the noblesse de robe, with ancestors such as Étienne Pasquier, he was destined for the legal profession and was educated at the Collège de Juilly near Paris.
In pre-revolutionary France, the president of a Parlement evolved into a powerful magistrate, a member of the so-called noblesse de robe (" nobility of the gown "), with considerable judicial as well as administrative authority.
He was an early member of the noblesse de robe in the service of the French state.
He was born in Montpellier to a family ennobled in the sixteenth century as noblesse de robe, the eldest son of René Charles de Maupeou ( 1688 – 1775 ), who was president of the parlement of Paris from 1743 to 1757.
Voltaire praised this revolution, applauding the suppression of the old hereditary magistrature, but by the aristocrats and the noblesse de robe Maupeou's policy was regarded as the triumph of tyranny.
He was loosely but neatly dressed in a large ample robe de chambre.
Assembled in the parlements, the largely hereditary members, the provincial noblesse de robe, were the strongest decentralising force in a France that was more multifarious in its legal systems, taxation, and custom than it might have seemed under the apparent unifying rule of its kings.
Having studied directing at the French film school La Femis, Ozon made several short movies like Une robe d ' été ( 1996 ) and Scènes de lit ( 1998 ) that already display his defining style.
* Lucia Sanchez plays in three movies: Une robe d ' été, Scènes de lit, Sitcom.
fr: Noir ( robe de chat )
Matthew Paris records that Henry III of England wore a robe " de preciosissimo baldekino " at a ceremony at Westminster Abbey in 1247.
* La Sorbonne en robe de fête ( Pseudonym Daniel Douglas ), La Gerbe, No. 5, February 1919

0.581 seconds.