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Lebret Colombie
Lebret may refer to: * Lebret, Saskatchewan, a village in Canada * Évelyne Lebret (born 1938), French sprinter * Jacques Lebret (d. 1645), French clergyman * Louis-Joseph Lebret (1897–1966), French scientist See also * Cardin Le Bret (1558–1655), French jurist * Jean Le Bret (1872–1947), French sailor at the 1900 Summer Olympics * Labret A labret is a form of body piercing. Taken literally, it is any type of adornment that is attached to the lip (labrum). However, the term usually refers to a piercing that is below the bottom lip, above the chin. It is sometimes referred to as a ...
, a body piercing {{Disambig, surname ...
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Lebret, Saskatchewan
Lebret ( 2016 population: ) is a village in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan within the Rural Municipality of North Qu'Appelle No. 187 and Census Division No. 6. The village is situated on Mission Lake of the Fishing Lakes in the Qu'Appelle Valley. Lebret is located along Highway 56, about northeast of the City of Regina. The village was named after "the parish priest, Father Louis Lebret, who became the first postmaster of the community and, although he only held the position for a little more than six months, the office was named Lebret and the name became that of the community."http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/lebret.html David McLennan, "Lebret" in ''The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan''. Viewed 14 October 2012. History The site of Lebret first came to non-First Nations attention in 1814 when Abbé Provencher visited. A further such visit occurred when Abbé Picard from Pembina arrived in 1841 and wintered with John McDonald, previously of the North-West Company. " ...
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Évelyne Lebret
Evelyne Lebret (born 20 February 1938 at Nîmes) is a former French athlete, who specialised in the 400 and 800 meters. Biography She won three titles French championships The French Open (french: Internationaux de France de tennis), also known as Roland-Garros (), is a major tennis tournament held over two weeks at the Stade Roland Garros in Paris, France, beginning in late May each year. The tournament and ven ... : the 400m in 1961 and 1962, and the 800m in 1965. She improved six times the French record in the 400 meters, bringing it to 54 s 5 in 1964 when she ran 8th in the final of the Tokyo Olympics. Prize list Records Notes and references External links * Olympic profileEvelyne Lebreton ''sports-reference.com'' Living people 1938 births Athletes (track and field) at the 1964 Summer Olympics French female sprinters Olympic athletes for France Sportspeople from Nîmes 20th-century French women {{France-middledistance-at ...
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Jacques Lebret
Jacques Lebret (died 1645) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Toul (1645). ''(in Latin)''"Diocese of Toul"
''''. David M. Cheney. Retrieved January 4, 2017
"Diocese of Toul"
''GCatholic.org''. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016


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Jacques Lebret was born in ,

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Louis-Joseph Lebret
Louis-Joseph Lebret (1897–1966) was a French Dominican social scientist and philosopher and pioneer of development ethics, who sought to "put the economy at the service of man" and advanced the notion of the "human economy". Life Louis-Joseph Lebret was born on 26 June 1897 in Minihic, Brittany, in a family of sailors, closely connected to the peasant farmers of the area. His father was a marine carpenter. He entered the Brest Naval School (“l’Ecole Navale de Brest”), became a marine officer, fought in World War I with the Lebanese squadron. and was briefly director of the port of Beirut. In 1922 he became an instructor at the Naval Academy.
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Cardin Le Bret
Cardin Le Bret (1558–1655) was a French jurist, known as the major supporter of the legal basis for the rule of Cardinal Richelieu in France. On the key issue for absolutist conceptions of government, sovereignty, he stated that “sovereignty is no more divisible than the point in geometry”. His 1632 book on sovereignty has been called “the juridical handbook of the Richelieu regime”.J. H. Elliott Sir John Huxtable Elliott (23 June 1930 – 10 March 2022) was a British historian and Hispanist who was Regius Professor Emeritus at the University of Oxford and honorary fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, and Trinity College, Cambridge. He p ..., Richelieu and Olivares (1991), p. 124. Notes {{DEFAULTSORT:Le Bret, Cardin 1558 births 1655 deaths 17th-century French lawyers 17th-century writers in Latin Latin-language writers from France Ancien Régime office-holders ...
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Jean Le Bret
Gabriel Charles Jean Le Bret (26 October 1872 – 23 December 1947) was a French sailor who represented his country at the 1900 Summer Olympics in Meulan, France. With Jacques Baudrier as helmsman and fellow crewmember William Martin, Jules Valton and Félix Marcotte Félix Émile Marcotte (12 June 1865 – 26 July 1953) was an American-born French sailor who represented his country at the 1900 Summer Olympics in Meulan, France. With Jacques Baudrier as helmsman and fellow crewmember William Martin, Jules ... Le Bret took the 2nd place in first race of the .5 to 1 ton and finished 3rd in the second race. Further reading * References External links * 1872 births 1947 deaths French male sailors (sport) Olympic sailors for France Sailors at the 1900 Summer Olympics – .5 to 1 ton Medalists at the 1900 Summer Olympics Sportspeople from Paris Olympic silver medalists for France Olympic bronze medalists for France Olympic medalists in sailing {{France ...
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