"Welcome to The Huguenot Society of Australia". The Huguenot Society of Australia. Retrieved 30 April 2016. "The Huguenot Refuge". Musée protestant. Retrieved...
123 KB (15,416 words) - 14:24, 24 August 2024
Some notable French Huguenots or people with French Huguenot ancestry include: Salomon de Brosse (1571–1626), French architect. Isaac de Caus (1590–1648)...
324 KB (25,748 words) - 17:39, 26 August 2024
Lausanne (category Articles with German-language sources (de))
Arts (Musée cantonal des beaux-arts) Cantonal Museum of Zoology (Musée cantonal de zoologie) Cantonal Museum of Geology [fr] (Musée cantonal de Géologie)...
101 KB (9,249 words) - 07:06, 20 August 2024
Philippe Mercier (category Huguenots)
Berlin, the son of Pierre Mercier (died 1729, Dresden), a Huguenot tapestry-worker. He studied painting at the Akademie der Wissenschaften of Berlin and...
17 KB (1,663 words) - 15:37, 17 January 2024
France (category Member states of the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie)
world (7.7 million visitors in 2022), the Musée d'Orsay (3.3 million), mostly devoted to Impressionism, the Musée de l'Orangerie (1.02 million), which is home...
274 KB (24,660 words) - 16:38, 1 September 2024
Louis George (category People from Berlin)
the late baroque era. Louis George was a descendant of French Huguenots living in Berlin in the third generation. Louis George produced mainly daedal[clarification...
9 KB (881 words) - 18:17, 21 September 2023
structures in the Paris region Musée de Notre Dame de Paris Notre-Dame du Calvaire, Paris Roman Catholic Marian churches Notre Dame de Roscudon Church The name...
136 KB (14,552 words) - 19:48, 28 August 2024
Bayeux Tapestry (redirect from Tapisserie de Bayeux)
annually in Bayeux Cathedral. The tapestry is now exhibited at the Musée de la Tapisserie de Bayeux in Bayeux, Normandy, France (49°16′28″N 0°42′01″W / 49...
69 KB (8,482 words) - 22:21, 29 August 2024
Voltaire (redirect from Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire)
written in Berlin. From 1762, as an unmatched intellectual celebrity, he began to champion unjustly persecuted individuals, most famously the Huguenot merchant...
139 KB (17,348 words) - 20:42, 1 September 2024
revocation of the Edict of Nantes in France in 1685, many Huguenot lacemakers moved to Hamburg and Berlin. The earliest known lace pattern book was printed in...
28 KB (3,296 words) - 17:37, 24 July 2024
Geneva (category Articles with German-language sources (de))
Hôtel de Ville and the Tour Baudet Institut et Musée Voltaire Mallet House and Museum international de la Réforme Tavel House Brunswick Monument Musée d'Art...
155 KB (15,115 words) - 05:57, 24 August 2024
(2002). "La diaspora des huguenots". Diasporas. Histoire et sociétés. 1 (1): 115–121. "Louis de Jaucourt (1704-1779)". Musée protestant. Retrieved 2022-11-06...
61 KB (7,928 words) - 05:38, 27 August 2024
Kunsthalle Bremen, Bremen Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris (Palais Tokyo), Paris...
14 KB (1,458 words) - 05:16, 1 September 2024
100-gun Hercule on display at the Musée national de la Marine. Scale model of Tage on display at the Musée National de la Marine in Paris Loss of Henri...
174 KB (21,702 words) - 20:27, 3 July 2024
German, and Spanish forces intervened on the side of rival Protestant ("Huguenot") and Catholic forces. King Henry II died in 1559 in a jousting tournament;...
160 KB (19,900 words) - 15:40, 24 August 2024
List of burial places of classical musicians (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
Retrieved 2023-08-27. "Der russisch-orthodoxe Friedhof in Reinickendorf". berlin.de (in German). 2014-04-29. Archived from the original on 2023-07-07. Retrieved...
244 KB (4,564 words) - 16:59, 26 August 2024
Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois (redirect from Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois de Paris)
Thousands of Huguenots, who were visiting Paris for a royal wedding, were killed by the city's mob. The church hosted the funeral of François de Malherbe...
23 KB (3,065 words) - 03:17, 21 August 2024
François Mitterrand (category Members of the Bureau Central de Renseignements et d'Action)
their honour. The stamp states that France is the home of the Huguenots ("Accueil des Huguenots"). Hence their rights were finally recognised. On 2 February...
154 KB (16,496 words) - 12:10, 30 August 2024
Confederacy (now a canton of Switzerland). Since 1536, Geneva had been a Huguenot republic and the seat of Calvinism. Five generations before Rousseau, his...
151 KB (19,239 words) - 20:30, 1 September 2024
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (category Articles with Musée d'Orsay identifiers)
parents were of Prussian descent and his mother was a descendant of the Huguenots, a fact to which Kirchner often referred. As Kirchner's father searched...
35 KB (4,083 words) - 19:16, 9 August 2024
Kathinka Heinefetter (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
Bellini, Rachel in La Juive by Jacques Fromental Halévy, Valentine in Les Huguenots by Giacomo Meyerbeer and Agathe in Carl Maria von Weber's Der Freischütz...
4 KB (376 words) - 06:35, 16 December 2023
blamed it for the extinction of the Valois dynasty. Even the French Huguenot Francois de La Noue denounced the alliance in a 1587 work, claiming that "this...
108 KB (11,988 words) - 13:29, 18 August 2024
René Descartes (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
Saint-Germain-des-Prés in 1819, missing a finger and the skull. His skull is in the Musée de l'Homme in Paris. In his Discourse on the Method, he attempts to arrive...
141 KB (15,062 words) - 21:37, 31 August 2024
revoked the Edit de Nantes in 1685, Protestants who did not leave the country were generally suppressed. Thousands of Protestant Huguenots emigrated from...
115 KB (13,857 words) - 16:27, 6 June 2024
Cagot (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
rather than religious reasons, did not change even between Catholic and Huguenot areas, as shown by historian Raymond A. Mentzer, who records how even when...
107 KB (12,135 words) - 07:57, 21 August 2024
Protestantism (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
the Edict of Potsdam, giving free passage to Huguenot refugees. In the late 17th century, many Huguenots fled to England, the Netherlands, Prussia, Switzerland...
242 KB (26,293 words) - 17:13, 1 September 2024
Karl Ledderhose (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
the Hanau Leihbank. Ledderhose's mother, Susanna, was descended from a Huguenot family that settled in Hesse fleeing persecution in France during the previous...
41 KB (4,210 words) - 03:09, 18 August 2024
Louis Douzette (category Articles with Musée d'Orsay identifiers)
February 1924, Barth) was a German landscape painter. He was descended from Huguenots that fled France in the 17th century. When he was seven, his family moved...
3 KB (420 words) - 02:05, 20 April 2024
with leading collections reposited at the Egyptian Museum of Berlin (100,000), Musée du Louvre (60,000), Petrie Museum (80,000), The Metropolitan Museum...
228 KB (24,836 words) - 07:38, 31 August 2024
Mallet family (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
mid—late 16th century, religious civil war in France drove many Calvinist Huguenots, such as the Mallets, to seek refuge in Geneva, which had declared itself...
71 KB (6,365 words) - 20:23, 25 August 2024