Philibert Rakotosamimanana
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Philibert Rakotosamimanana
Philibert may refer to the following people: Forename * Saint Philibert, also known as Philibert of Jumièges (c. 608 – 685), French saint and abbot * Philibert de Naillac (died 1421), Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller * Philibert I, Duke of Savoy (1465–1482), husband of Bianca Maria Sforza * Philibert II, Duke of Savoy (1480–1504), Knight of the Golden Fleece * Philibert of Châlon (1502–1530), last prince of Orange from the house of Châlon * Philibert, Margrave of Baden-Baden (1536–1569), son-in-law of Duke William IV of Bavaria * Philibert, comte de Gramont (1621–1707), subject of the famous ''Mémoirs'' * Philibert Berthelier (other), multiple people * Philibert de l'Orme (c. 1510 – 1570), French architect * Philibert Jambe de Fer (16th century), French Renaissance composer of religious music * Philibert Orry (1689–1747), count of Vignory * Philibert Delavigne (c. 1700 – 1750), French composer * Philibert Commerçon (1727–1773), French natu ...
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Philibert Of Jumièges
Saint Philibert of Jumièges (c. 608–684) was an abbot and Monastery, monastic founder, particularly associated with Jumièges Abbey. Life Philibert was born in Gascony, the only son of Filibaud, a magistrate of Vicus Julius (now Aire-sur-l'Adour). When he came of age he was given a place at the court of Dagobert I at Metz, where he met Saints Ouen and Wandregisel. He received permission of the king to become a monk and entered the monastery of Rebais, which had been founded by Ouen and his brothers on land donated by the king. In 650, he succeeded his friend Agilus as abbot, but internal disagreements arose as to the more or less rigorous practice of the rule of Columbanus. He left and spent some time traveling round monasteries studying their Rules and constitutions. Jumièges In 654, through the influence of Queen Balthild of Chelles, Philibert received a gift of land from Clovis II on which he founded Jumièges Abbey, Notre Dame de Jumièges. He drew up a Rule based ...
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Philibert-Louis Debucourt
Philibert-Louis Debucourt, (13 February 1755 – 22 September 1832) was a French painter and engraver. Life Debucourt, was born in Paris in 1755, and became a pupil of Vien. He executed a few plates in mezzotint, such as the ''Heureuse famille'', the ''Benediction de la mariée'', and the ''Cruche cassée'', after his own designs. Most of his work was, however, in aquatint. He became the leading maker of multi-plate colour prints, combining washes of aquatint with line-engraving. He used a number of different techniques, but most involved three colour plates, and a fourth key plate, outlining the design in black. Debucourt's father-in-law was the sculptor Louis-Philippe Mouchy. In the marriage contract Mouchy generously offered to provide a three-room apartment at the Louvre, where Debucourt lived for twelve and a half years. The address of this apartment is often given on his prints. Some of his work was satirical, such as ''La promenade publique'', an aquatint of 1792 show ...
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Claude-Philibert
Claude-Philibert Barthelot, comte de Rambuteau () (Mâcon, 9 November 1781 – Château de Rambuteau, 11 April 1869) was a French senior official of the first half of the 19th century. He was Préfet of the former Départment of the Seine, which included Paris, from 1833 to 1848. He established the groundwork for the fundamental transformation of Paris that Haussmann carried out under the Second Empire. Career His administration was marked by the implementation of the theories of the hygienists. One year before his nomination, an epidemic of cholera devastated Paris. Rambuteau thought that the narrow, tortuous streets and small disease-prone districts in the centre of Paris encouraged the development of the disease. He commenced the cutting of 13 metre-wide roads through Paris with the widening of the Rue Rambuteau in 1839, which was later named after him. This was the first time wide roads had been built in central Paris. Under his administration, the Arc de Triomphe in ...
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Philippe Rebille Philbert
Philibert Rebillé ''dit'' Philbert (also ''Philibert'', 1639 – after March 1717) was a French flautist. He is credited with the introduction of the one-keyed flute to France in around 1667.Ardal Powell, ''The Flute'' (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2002). , p. 61 He was made a court musician by Louis XIV of France under the title of ''Musette de Poitou''. His wife was involved in the ''Affair of the Poisons An affair is a sexual relationship, romantic friendship, or passionate attachment in which at least one of its participants has a formal or informal commitment to a third person who may neither agree to such relationship nor even be aware of ...'' and was executed in 1679 for having poisoned her first husband, M. Brunet, in order to marry Philbert. References * Jonathan Wainwright, Peter Holman - ''From Renaissance to Baroque: change in instruments and instrumental music in the seventeenth century'' (Ashgate Publishing, Ltd (2005) ) * Anne Somerset - ...
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