Brugère
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Brugère
Brugère is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Fabienne Brugère (born in 1964), French philosopher, academic * Joseph Brugère (1841–1918), French general * Louis-Frédéric Brugère (1823–1888), Roman Catholic professor of apologetics and church history * Raymond Brugère (1885–1966), French diplomat See also * Bruyère (other) Bruyère is a French name (the word ''bruyère'' means heather in French or a place where heather grows, ''brugière'' derives from it). The family name Bruyère may refer to: * Bernard Bruyère (1879–1971), French Egyptologist * Élisabeth Bru ... French-language surnames {{DEFAULTSORT:Brugère ...
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Raymond Brugère
Charles Henri Raymond Brugère (25 January 1885 – 30 August 1966) was a French diplomat. Diplomat Brugère was born in Orléans, the son of General Joseph Brugère and Louise Thieclin. He graduated with a degree in the law. Brugère joined the Quai d'Orsay on 17 May 1911, and first went overseas to start serving as the third secretary at the French legation in Beijing on 1 August 1912. On 5 June 1912, Brugère married Denise Témoin, the daughter of a famous doctor, Daniel Témoin. By his wife, he had one child, a daughter named Nicole. As a reservist lieutenant in the ''chasseurs à cheval'', Brugère was called up to duty in August 1914 to resist the German invasion of France. He was mentioned in a report for bravery under fire on 23 September 1914. Subsequently, he transferred over to the ''Chasseurs d'Afrique'', and took part in the Dardanelles campaign of 1915. Later in 1915, Brugère went to Serbia, where he was wounded in action. Owing to his wounds, he returned to th ...
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Fabienne Brugère
Fabienne Brugère (born in 1964, Nevers) is a French philosopher specializing in aesthetics and philosophy of art, history of modern philosophy (18th century), moral and political philosophy, Anglo-American philosophy studies and feminist theory. She was a professor at the Bordeaux Montaigne University and vice-president for international relations at this university. She joined the Paris 8 University Vincennes-Saint-Denis since September 2014, as chair of "philosophy of modern and contemporary arts". She has been president of the Paris Lumières University Group since November 2019, after having chaired the academic council of this institution. Education Brugère was admitted to the École normale supérieure de Fontenay-Saint-Cloud in 1987. She obtained the agrégation in philosophy in 1991 after a year spent at the Imperial College London (Department of Humanities). In 1996, she defended her thesis entitled (Theory of Art and Philosophy of Sociability according to Shaftesbur ...
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Louis-Frédéric Brugère
Louis-Frédéric Brugère (8 October 1823, in Orléans – 11 April 1888, in Issy) was a Roman Catholic professor of apologetics and church history. Biography He studied with the Christian Brothers at St. Euverte, and at the Petit Séminaire of Orléans. His poem of 300 lines describing an inundation of the Rhône and composed in 1841 was printed and sold for the benefit of the flood victims at Lyon. He entered the Grand Séminaire of Orléans in 1841 and the Paris Séminaire in 1845, where he received the degrees of Bachelor of Licentiate and Doctor. From 1846 to 1861, with the exception of two years spent as assistant in the parish of St. Aignan, Brugère taught the classics and philosophy in the Orléans diocesan college of La Chapelle-saint-Mesmin. In 1862 he entered the Society of Saint-Sulpice The Society of Priests of Saint-Sulpice (; PSS), also known as the Sulpicians, is a society of apostolic life of Pontifical Right for men, named after the Church of Saint-Sulpi ...
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Joseph Brugère
Henri Joseph Brugère (Uzerche, 27 June 1841 – Lautaret, 31 August 1918) was a French divisional general. Career On 4 October 1914, German attacks by the II Cavalry Corps (General Georg von der Marwitz) and the XIV Reserve Corps drove the group of the 81st, 82nd, 84th and 88th Territorial divisions (General Joseph Brugère) back from Hébuterne, Gommecourt and Monchy au Bois to the north. The village was captured by the 1st Guard Division on the night of and held against French counter-attacks, which were stopped short of Gommecourt, where the front settled until March 1917. The French XI Corps attacked at Beaumont Hamel on 19 November but failed to capture the village, after being held up by uncut wire. A diversion was conducted by XI Corps from 1915 at Toutvent Farm, to the north, during the Second Battle of Artois The Second Battle of Artois (, ) from 9 May to 18 June 1915, took place on the Western Front (World War I), Western Front during the First World War. ...
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Bruyère (other)
Bruyère is a French name (the word ''bruyère'' means heather in French or a place where heather grows, ''brugière'' derives from it). The family name Bruyère may refer to: * Bernard Bruyère (1879–1971), French Egyptologist * Élisabeth Bruyère or Bruguier (1818–1876), the Canadian founder of the Sisters of Charity of Bytown * Francesco Bruyere (1980), an Italian judoka * Jean de La Bruyère (1645–1696), French essayist and moralist, also known for his writing skills shown in his "The Characters, or the Manners of the Age, with The Characters of Theophrastus" * Jean Pierre Joseph Bruyère or Bruguière (1772–1813), French cavalry general of the Napoleonic Wars * Joseph Bruyère (1948), a former Belgian cyclist * Marie-Louise Bruyère, aka Madame Bruyère, a French fashion designer who worked from 1928 until the 1950s * Robin Bruyère (born 1992), Belgian politician * Véronique Bruyère, Belgian computer scientist See also * Bruyères * La Bruyère (other) ...
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