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Jean and Vallière
de: Jean Vallière
it: Jean Vallière
pl: Jean Vallière

Jean and died
Django, who was born Jean Baptiste Reinhardt in Belgium and who died in 1953 in France, was an extraordinary man.
Amalric died of dysentery ( allegedly brought on by " a surfeit of white mullet ") or even poisoned at Saint Jean d ' Acre on 1 April 1205, just after his son Amalric and four days before his wife, and was buried at Saint Sophia, Nicosia.
The architect, Jean Chalgrin, died in 1811 and the work was taken over by Jean-Nicolas Huyot.
Jean Navarre was the pilot who was tasked to make the flight, but he died on 10 July 1919 when he crashed near Villacoublay while training for the flight.
Others who were either killed or captured at the actual Battle were as follows: King Jean II ; Prince Philip ( youngest son and progenitor of the House of Valois-Burgundy ), Geoffroi de Charny, carrier of the Oriflamme, Peter I, Duke of Bourbon, Walter VI, Count of Brienne and Constable of France, Jean de Clermont, Marshal of France, Arnoul d ' Audrehem, the Count of Eu, the Count of Marche and Ponthieu Jacques de Bourbon taken prisoner at the Battle and died 1361, the Count of Étampes, the Count of Tancarville, the Count of Dammartin, the Count of Joinville, Guillaume de Melun, Archbishop of Sens.
His second wife, Alice, died in 1911 and his oldest son Jean, who had married Alice's daughter Blanche, Monet's particular favourite, died in 1914.
She had three children, a daughter ( who went to live at the Dominican Abbey in Poissy in 1397 as a companion to the king's daughter, Marie ), a son Jean, and another child who died in childhood.
Not long after, he died of yellow fever, and his assistant Jean Pierre Boyer replaced him.
In 1963, he died from stomach cancer at the age of 58, leaving his last work – an extended symphonic Gesangsszene for voice and orchestra on words from Jean Giraudoux ’ s apocalyptic drama Sodom and Gomorrah – unfinished.
* Cesaria II, abbess of St Jean of Arles ( died ca 550 )
Richard ’ s chief biographer, Jean de Toulouse, writes that when Richard died in 1173 he was still young and so it therefore must be assumed that he entered the Order well into its second period of development, near the end of Hugh ’ s life.
His mother, Jean Bono, also survived him, and died on January 15, 2005 at the age of 90.
* Raymond Radiguet, French literary prodigy, died of typhoid at age 20 while on a trip with his mentor, Jean Cocteau.
Greece Included in total are 11, 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated total military dead of 26, 000 including 15, 000 deaths due to disease Jean Bujac in a campaign history of the Greek Army in World War I listed 8, 365 combat related deaths and 3, 255 missing Other estimates of Greek casualties are as follows: By UK War Office in 1922: Killed / died wounds 5, 000 ; prisoners and missing 1, 000.
** Jean Joseph Rabearivelo, Malagasy-French poet ( died 1937 )
* July 31 – Jean Dubuffet, French painter ( died 1985 )
* August 18 – Jean Guitton, French writer and philosopher ( died 1999 )
" However, Diarmuid, played by Colin Dunne, died by the hands of the Fianna after Grania, ( or Grainne ) played by Jean Butler, and he ran away together into the forests of Ireland, immediately after Fionn and Grania's wedding.
Jean Eugene's mother, the former Marie-Catherine Guillon, died when Jean was just a young child.
In the first serial, “ The Wrong End of Time ”, Simon, whose mother has died recently, has been taken on holiday by the Skinner family – father Frank ( Derek Benfield ), mother Jean ( Iris Russell ) and daughter Liz – to the village of St Oswald.
Several resistants were detained and tortured in the Fort of Queuleu in Metz and Jean Moulin died in Metz's railway station while on a train in transit towards Germany.

Jean and 8
The last of his direct descendants to inhabit Abbotsford was his great-great-great-granddaughter Dame Jean Maxwell-Scott ( 8 June 1923-5 May 2004 ).
The traffic lights, again from Siemens, were mounted on a five-sided 8. 5 m high tower designed by Jean Kramer, shipped over from the United States, and actually modelled on a similar one erected on Fifth Avenue in New York in 1922, although towers like this had been a feature of the city since 1918.
* May 8Jean Henri Dunant, Swiss founder of the Red Cross, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize ( d. 1910 )
* December 8Jean Sibelius, Finnish composer ( d. 1957 )
* November 8Jean Marais, French actor ( b. 1913 )
* July 8Jean Rouverol, American actress, screenwriter, and author
* August 8Jean Navarre, French World War I fighter ace ( d. 1919 )
* September 8Jean Seberg, American actress ( b. 1938 )
* June 8Jean Bertaut, French poet ( b. 1552 )
* October 8Jean Joseph de Mondonville, French violinist and composer ( b. 1711 )
* December 8Jean Denis Attiret, French Jesuit missionary and painter ( b. 1702 )
* July 8 – Dominique Jean Larrey, French surgeon ( d. 1842 )
Bernadotte was born in Pau, France, as the son of Jean Henri Bernadotte ( Pau, Béarn, 14 October 1711 – Pau, 31 March 1780 ), procurator at Pau, and wife ( married at Boëil-Bezing, 20 February 1754 ) Jeanne de Saint-Vincent ( Pau, 1 April 1728 – Pau, 8 January 1809 ).
His brother Jean Bernadotte ( Pau, 1754 – Pau, 8 August 1813 ) was eventually made 1st Baron Bernadotte and married Marie Anne Charlotte de Saint-Paul.
* October 8Jean de Quen, French Jesuit missionary and historian ( b. c. 1603 )
While living in New York, Richter directed two feature films, Dreams That Money Can Buy ( 1947 ) and 8 x 8: A Chess Sonata in 8 Movements ( 1957 ) in collaboration with Max Ernst, Jean Cocteau, Paul Bowles, Fernand Léger, Alexander Calder, Marcel Duchamp, and others, which was partially filmed on the lawn of his summer house in Southbury, Connecticut.
Jean Moulin ( 20 June 1899 – 8 July 1943 ) was a high-profile member of the French Resistance during World War II.
Hold Back the Dawn was adapted as a radio play on the November 10, 1941 episode of Lux Radio Theater with Charles Boyer, Paulette Goddard and Susan Hayward, again on the February 8, 1943 episode of The Screen Guild Theater with Charles Boyer and Susan Hayward, the July 31, 1946 episode of Academy Award Theater starring Olivia de Havilland and Jean Pierre Aumont, the May 31, 1948 episode of Screen Guild Theater with Charles Boyer and Ida Lupino, the May 14, 1949 episode of Screen Director's Playhouse with Boyer and Vanessa Brown, the May 4, 1950 episode of Screen Guild Theater with de Havilland and Boyer and the June 15, 1952 Screen Guild Theater with Barbara Stanwyck and Jean Pierre Aumont.
* The Pastoral Amusements, also known as " Les Amusements Champêtres ", a series of 8 Beauvais Tapestries designed by Jean Baptiste Oudry between 1720 and 1730.
It was fought during operations surrounding the Siege of Dunkirk between 6 and 8 September 1793 at Hondschoote, Nord, France, and resulted in a French victory under General Jean Nicolas Houchard and General Jean-Baptiste Jourdan against the command of Marshal Freytag, part of the Anglo-Hanoverian corps of the Duke of York.
These were General of Division Dominique Vandamme's 9, 632 infantry and 540 cavalry, General of Division Joseph Hélie Désiré Perruquet de Montrichard's 6, 998 infantry, General of Division Jean Thomas Guillaume Lorge's 8, 238 infantry and 464 cavalry, and General of Division Étienne Marie Antoine Champion de Nansouty's 1, 500 grenadiers and 1, 280 cavalry.

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