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Henriette Of Mömpelgard
Henriette may refer to: People Nobles :''Ordered chronologically'' * Henriette of Cleves (1542–1601), Duchess of Nevers, Countess of Rethel and Princess of Mantua * Henriette Marie of the Palatinate (1626–1651), daughter of Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia * Princess Henriette Adelaide of Savoy (1636–1676), Electress of Bavaria * Henriette Louise de Bourbon (1703–1772), French princess and abbess * Henriette of France (1727–1752), French princess, daughter of King Louis XV Other :''Ordered alphabetically'' * Henriette Chandet (1901-1989), French feminist, columnist, and historian * Henriette Willemina Crommelin (1870-1957), Dutch labor leader and temperance reformer * Henriette Delamarre de Monchaux (1854–1911), French naturalist, geologist and paleontologist * Henriette Dibon (1902–1989), French poet and short story writer * Henriette Hansen (other) * Henriette Homann (1819–1892), Norwegian photographer and painter * Henriette Löfman (1784� ...
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Henriette Of Cleves
Henriette de La Marck (31 October 1542 – 24 June 1601), also known as Henriette of Cleves, was a French noblewoman and courtier. She was the 4th Duchess of Nevers, ''suo jure'' Countess of Rethel, and Princess of Mantua by her marriage with Louis I of Gonzaga-Nevers. A very talented landowner, she was one of France's chief creditors until her death. Early life Henriette was born in La Chapelle-d'Angillon, in the department of Cher, France, on 31 October 1542. She was the eldest daughter and second child of Francis I of Cleves, 1st Duke of Nevers, Count of Rethel, and his wife, Marguerite of Bourbon-La Marche. Dauphin Henry (future King Henry II of France) acted as her godfather at her baptism. She had many siblings, including her brothers Francis and James, her father's heirs as rulers of Nevers and Rethel, Henri (who died young), Catherine, and Marie. Henriette soon obtained an office at court as the lady-in-waiting of Queen Catherine de' Medici. She became the ...
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Henriette Petit
Henriette Petit (pseudonym of Ana Enriqueta Petit Marfan; March 3, 1894 - December 9, 1983), was a Chilean painter, member of the Grupo Montparnasse, of which she was a co-founder. Biography Ana Enriqueta Petit Marfan was born in Santiago, March 3, 1894. She began her career in the early 1910s, when she became a disciple of Juan Francisco González -considered one of the four "great masters of Chilean painting"- whom she met through her friend, the also painter, Marta Villanueva. Petit entered the School of Fine Arts in 1914, and two years later, she painted her first painting. She traveled to Europe with her family between 1920 and 1921, a period in which she had classes in Paris, France, with the sculptor Antoine Bourdelle, who would portray her in a bust entitled ''Le Chilienne'' and whose works are in the artist's museum."Enriqueta Petit (1894-1983)". ''El Mercurio''. 14 September 2010. In 1923, back in Chile, Petit joined the Montparnasse group, an avant-garde movemen ...
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La Fête à Henriette
''Holiday for Henrietta'' () is a 1952 French comedy film directed by Julien Duvivier and starring Dany Robin, Michel Auclair, and Hildegard Knef. It was shot at the Billancourt Studios and on location around Paris including at the Gaumont-Palace cinema. The film's sets were designed by the art director Jean d'Eaubonne. ''Holiday for Henrietta'' was remade in English as the 1964 film '' Paris When It Sizzles'', starring William Holden and Audrey Hepburn,Crisp p.243 which also featured d'Eaubonne as art director. Synopsis While urgently trying to develop a screenplay for a new film, two screenwriters, the downbeat Crémieux and the optimist Seignier, create contradictory storylines as they argue, and as each takes turns in taking the narrative forward, they force the lead characters Henriette and Maurice into weird situations. The film switches back and forth between the writers at home and the film as it develops according to their ideas. Cast * Dany Robin as Henriette * Miche ...
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Hurricane Henriette (other)
The name Henriette has been used for eight tropical cyclones worldwide: seven in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, and one in the South-West Indian Ocean The Indian Ocean is the third-largest of the world's five oceanic divisions, covering or approximately 20% of the water area of Earth#Surface, Earth's surface. It is bounded by Asia to the north, Africa to the west and Australia (continent), .... In the Eastern Pacific: * Hurricane Henriette (1983) – Category 4 hurricane that remained offshore Mexico * Tropical Storm Henriette (1989) – weak tropical storm that remained at sea * Hurricane Henriette (1995) – Category 2 hurricane that briefly moved over the Baja California Peninsula, causing strong winds * Tropical Storm Henriette (2001) – strong tropical storm that did not affect land * Hurricane Henriette (2007) – Category 1 hurricane that caused heavy rainfall as it moved ashore western Mexico * Hurricane Henriette (2013) – Category 2 hurricane, moved into the Cen ...
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Henriette, Minnesota
Henriette, is a city in Pine County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 59 in 2023. Henriette was founded as Cornell. Geography According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of , all land. Minnesota State Highway 107 and Pine County 11 are two of the main routes in the community. Demographics 2010 census As of the census of 2010, there were 71 people, 32 households, and 19 families living in the city. The population density was . There were 38 housing units at an average density of . The racial makeup of the city was 90.1% White, 1.4% Asian, 4.2% from other races, and 4.2% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 4.2% of the population. There were 32 households, of which 28.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 31.3% were married couples living together, 15.6% had a female householder with no husband present, 12.5% had a male householder with no wife present, and 40.6% were non-families. 40.6% of al ...
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Henriette Wulfsberg
Henriette Wulfsberg (6 June 1843 – 9 October 1906) was a Norwegian school owner, writer and translator. Early and personal life Henriette Wulfsberg was born on 6 June 1843 in Drammen to Mantzine Margrethe Seeberg (1812–1883) and printer and newspaper publisher Jacob Wulfsberg (1809–1882), son of ''Morgenbladets founder Niels Wulfsberg. She never married. Career At the age of 12 or 14, she had already started to write small notices in her father's newspaper, Jacob Wulfsberg's newspaper '' Drammens Tidende'' and later wrote several articles for the paper. After completing her education at Ms. Houbens school in Drammen, she spent a year as a governess to a Dr. Wolf in Hadeland. With savings from this job, she travelled to London, where she acted as a London correspondent for '' Aftenbladet'', writing about everyday life in the city. When she returned to Norway in 1866, she took the governess exam at Hartvig Nissen School. She made 16 trips abroad in total to England, Fra ...
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Henriette Wienecke
Sigrid Ingeborg Henriette Wienecke née ''Stadfeldt'' ( March 13, 1819 – April 18, 1907) was a Norwegian-Danish composer. She produced over 140 psalms and musical pieces. Biography Wienecke was born in Frederikshald, Norway to Asgeir Johnson Stadfeldt (1786-1831) and Anna Bruun Tordenskjold (1781-1848). Wienecke moved to Oslo with her mother after the death of her father, and in 1834 married her singing teacher, Friedrich Ferdinand Wienecke (1809-1877), who was employed by the Christiania Theater; the couple had one daughter, who died as an infant. Wienecke wanted to become an actress, but her husband did not consider it suitable for a person of her social class. She did, however, take piano lessons. The couple moved, with her mother, to Copenhagen in 1839, where both Friedrich and Henriette unsuccessfully tried to get jobs at the Royal Theater. In 1840, she moved permanently to Copenhagen with her mother and husband. In 1848, after having lost her mother, she retired fro ...
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Henriette Widerberg
Henriette Sophie Widerberg (3 September 1796 – 3 April 1872) was a Swedish opera singer Opera is a form of Western theatre in which music is a fundamental component and dramatic roles are taken by singers. Such a "work" (the literal translation of the Italian word "opera") is typically a collaboration between a composer and a lib ... (soprano) and memoirist. She was an elite member of the Royal Swedish Opera and its prima donna for over twenty years. She was appointed ''Hovsångare'' in 1837. She was the first woman in Sweden to publish her own memoirs during her own lifetime. Her book ''En Skådespelerskas Minnen: Sjelfbiografi'' (Memories of an Actress: an Autobiography) was published in two parts in 1850–51, and republished in 1924. Life Early life Henriette Widerberg was the daughter of the actor Andreas Widerberg and the actress Anna Catharina Widebäck. Her father was originally the star actor and later director of ''Comediehuset'' in Gothenburg, where her ...
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Henriette Yvonne Stahl
Henriette Yvonne Stahl (January 9, 1900 – May 25/26, 1984) was a Romanian novelist, short story writer and translator. Biography Born in Sankt Avold, Alsace-Lorraine, in the German Empire (now Saint-Avold in the Moselle department of France), she was illegitimate until her parents' marriage in February 1901. Her mother was Blanche Boueve; her father Henri Stahl, a professor and minor writer, was the son of a Bavarian naturalized citizen of Romania. Her brother was the sociologist and ethnographer Henri H. Stahl. She took private lessons in lieu of attending high school, following which Stahl studied at the Dramatic Arts Conservatory in Bucharest from 1921 to 1925. Her first published work was the short novel ''Voica'', which appeared in ''Viața Românească'' in 1924 and was received with enthusiasm by Garabet Ibrăileanu (the magazine's own editor), who proposed it for the Romanian Writers' Society prize. Her first book was also ''Voica'' (1929), followed by the 1931 ...
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Henriette Strobel
Dschinghis Khan (; "Genghis Khan") is a German Eurodisco pop band. It was originally formed in Munich in 1979 to compete in the Eurovision Song Contest with their song "Dschinghis Khan". The original group consisted of six members: Louis Hendrik Potgieter, Edina Pop, Henriette Strobel, Wolfgang Heichel, Leslie Mándoki, and Steve Bender, performed from 1979 to their first disbandment in 1985. In 2005, the surviving Dschinghis Khan members reunited to recreate the music group that had been broken up, but years later they separately organized different bands all under the brand name "Dschinghis Khan". History Beginning: 1979–1985 Dschinghis Khan was managed by German producer Ralph Siegel and choreographed by Hannes Winkler, one of the most famous German choreographers during that time. Their original eponymous song was written and produced by Siegel with lyrics by Bernd Meinunger and came in fourth place at the Eurovision Song Contest 1979 in Jerusalem. Their name is one of ...
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Henriette Sauret
Henriette Sauret (after marriage, Sauret-Arnyvelde; 1890-1976) was a French feminist author, and feminist pacifist journalist. As a feminist literary critic, her comments were less favorable about other feminist pacifist books than other experienced reviewers. Biography Henriette Sauret was born in 1890. Her father was Général . Henriette married the journalist André Arnyvelde. Sauret was a contributor to ', and '' La Fronde'', as well as a regular political contributor to '' La Voix des femmes'', Her poetry was published in ''L'œil de veau''. In 1918 and again in the following year, Sauret published two volumes of war-related poetry, (Diverted Strengths) and (Love in Gehenna), whose theme was the deleterious impact that war has on women. Along with Jeanne Bouvier and Andre Mariani ( Marie-Louise Bouglé's husband), Sauret was associated with the . She was also a member of the French Union for Women's Suffrage. She was referred to as a radical feminist when in 1919, she ...
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Henriette Reker
Henriette Reker (born 9 December 1956) is a German lawyer and independent politician. She is known for her pro-immigration stance and for being the victim of an . A day after the attack, Reker was elected List of mayors of Cologne, mayor of Cologne after gaining 52.66% of the votes. She is the first female mayor elected in Cologne's history. Reker was re-elected in 2020. Early life Reker was born to Josef Reker and Gretel Martini and raised in the Cologne district of Ehrenfeld, Cologne, Bickendorf. Reker's mother was a life-long member of the Social Democratic Party of Germany, SPD and moved to Cologne from Lower Silesia after World War II, while her father was a pastry chef who lived in Vogelsang, Cologne, Vogelsang district his whole life. Reker attended , where she finished her ''Abitur'' in 1976. She studied law at the University of Cologne, Universities of Cologne, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, and University of Göttingen, Göttingen, completing her second state ...
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