Jean Jullien
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Jean Jullien
Jean Jullien may refer to * Jean Jullien (designer) (born 1983), French graphic designer * Adolphe Jullien (Jean Lucien Adolphe Jullien; 1845–1932), French journalist and musicologist * Jean Julien Angot des Rotours (1778–1844), French colonial governor See also * Jean-Julien {{disambiguation, given name, hn=Jullien, Jean ...
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Jean Jullien (designer)
Jean Jullien (born 14 March 1983) is a French graphic designer and illustrator. Biography Early life Jullien was born in Cholet. He lived in Nantes and then moved to London in his twenties; he studied at the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design and the Royal College of Art. His work has appeared in publications including ''Télérama'', ''Le Nouvel Observateur'', ''The New York Times'' and ''The Guardian'', and his clients have included the Pompidou Centre, Yale University and Nike. Peace for Paris In the wake of the November 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris, Jullien created a variation of a classic peace symbol invoking the Eiffel Tower. The image swiftly went viral through social media and news coverage of worldwide sympathies and affirmations of solidarity against terrorism. He also published a drawing in solidarity after the Charlie Hebdo shootings in January 2015. The French embassy in Berlin used his symbol in an exterior lighting installation, accompani ...
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Adolphe Jullien
Jean Lucien Adolphe Jullien (1 June 1845 – 30 August 1932) known as Adolphe Jullien was a French journalist, author, and musicologist. He was born into a family of letters. His grandfather Bernard Jullien (1752–1826), was a prominent professor, while his father Bernard Jullien, Marcel Bernard Jullien (1798–1881), was a distinguished teacher and linguist and a major contributor to the Dictionnaire de la langue française, Dictionary of Émile Littré. Jullien published numerous books and articles on a wide variety of topics, primarily music, and was actively involved in the controversy over the role and influence of Wagner's music in late nineteenth century France. Life Adolphe Jullien was educated at the Lycée Charlemagne in Paris, where he received a degree in law. He studied music with the composer Émile Bienaimé, at the time a retired professor at the Conservatoire de Paris. As a music critic, his work appeared in various journals, including the Revue et gazette m ...
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Jean Julien Angot Des Rotours
Jean Julien Angot, baron des Rotours (2 June 1778 Les Rotours, Orne - 28 March 1844 Paris) was a French colonial governor. Biography He was born in the castle of Rotours, and entered the French Navy, 11 June 1791, with which he took part in the expedition of 1793 to Santo Domingo, and assisted in the engagement at Cape Français, 21 June, where, although bearing a flag of truce, he was taken prisoner, but afterward released. He went on a United States merchant vessel to Philadelphia, where he was furnished the means of returning to France. He was promoted commander in 1808, and captain in 1814, and 1816-1819 made a successful campaign in the West Indian waters, for which he was created Baron, 25 May 1819. Afterward, he was despatched with a corvette to protect the French fisheries on the coast of Newfoundland, when a difficulty with England threatened to end in war, and was promoted to rear admiral in 1821. Rotours was appointed governor-general of Guadeloupe in 1826, arrived at B ...
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