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| | Louis-Philippe of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | As Louis Philippe Joseph (now duc d'Orléans after the death of his father in 1785), continued his support for the liberal factions of the revolution, the Royal family and members of the royal court became increasingly hostile towards the Orléans family. |  | | Louis-Philippe was willing to stay in France to fulfill his duties in the Army, however he had been already implicated in Dumouriez's plot and he decided to leave France to save his life, with the French government slowly falling into the Terror. |  | | In Paris on the 1st of November 1793, Philippe was brought to the Palais de Justice where he appeared in front of the Revolutionary Tribunal later on the 5th. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-Philippe_of_France
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| | Personalities |
 | | Louis Philippe was by this time the favorite of those Republican leaders who feared to arouse the opposition of all Europe by establishing a republic, and hoped that Louis Philippe would govern according to popular will. |  | | After the accession (1814) of Louis XVIII to the French throne, Charles returned to France, where he headed the ultraroyalist party of raction. |  | | In 1814, after the abdication of Napoleon, he returned to France and was welcomed by Louis XVIII, who restored to him the Orleans estates. |
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http://www.pvchico.org/~bsilva/projects/france/1815-48/franpers.html
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| | Louis Philippe Joseph, duc d'Orléans |
 | | Having borne the title of duke of Montpensier until his grandfather's death in 1752, he became duke of Chartres, and in 1769 married Louise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon-Penthièvre, daughter and heiress of the duke of Penthièvre, grand admiral of France, and the richest heiress of the time. |  | | The Marquis de Lafayette, jealous of his popularity, persuaded the king to send the duke to England on a mission, and thus get him out of France, and he accordingly remained in England from October 1789 to July 1790. |  | | In that body he sat as quietly as he had done in the National Assembly, but on the occasion of the king's trial he had to speak, and then only to give his vote for the death of Louis. |
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http://www.nndb.com/people/092/000102783
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| | 14 to 42 - 25th Street |
 | | The company was founded in 1911 by Louis Onesime Philippe (born France 1 March 1884, immigrated to the US 1910, naturalized 11 May 1920, died New Jersey 5 July 1959). |  | | Stephen's father, Andrus Black, age 53 in 1880, was born in Ohio, as was his mother, Anne Black, age 54 in 1880. |  | | Another of Louis Bauer's sons associated with Bauer & Black was Perry Sidney Bauer, born 30 April 1876 in Minnesota. |
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http://www.14to42.net/25street0.5.html
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| | Guardian Isabelle, Comtesse de Paris |
 | | She said that his death was in the Orléanist tradition of serving France. |  | | She thus had a rich background, linked to the royal families of France, Portugal and Brazil, and to the old Bohemian aristocracy. |  | | Henri was busy publishing news bulletins and negotiating with a wide range of politicians; at one point, he hoped to succeed General de Gaulle as president of France. |
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,4710885-103684,00.html
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| | Treaty Utrecht Guizot Palmerston Louis-Philippe Orléans Roi des Français Antoine Duc de Montpensier Isabel II |
 | | That renunciation was embodied in the Treaty of Utrecht, and thereby was made binding on France, and became part of the public law of Europe and it was moreover incorporated in the law both of France and of Spain. |  | | Lord Aberdeen subsequently reported to his government that Louis-Philippe had stated France's wish that the Queen should marry a Spanish descendant of Philip V, and that provided she did this he would not try and advance a marriage to his own son. |  | | The French, anxious to maintain their influence in Spain and resist that of Britain, professed to be advocates of marriage to a descendant of Philip V, even though hoping that a marriage with the Louis-Philippe's son, the Duke of Montpensier. |
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http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/bourbon/france/success/sucprt5.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | Despite the opposition of Lamartine and Ledru-Rollin, after a debate in the assembly Louis Napoleon was admitted as a member on June 13, with the support of Louis Blanc, Victor Hugo, and Jules Favre. |  | | The November 4, 1848 constitution (inaugurated November 12) was politically democratic and based on universal suffrage. |  | | Louis Napoleon left London, returned to Paris September 24 and took his seat on the left benches September 26. |
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http://www.ohiou.edu/~Chastain/ip/louisnap.htm
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| | The Twickenham Museum : Louis Philippe Duc d’Orleans |
 | | Louis Philippe’s father, to the distress of his sons, had voted in favour of the King’s execution (which did not save Égalité for the guillotine). |  | | Louis and his family retired to ”Old Twick”, which he fondly described at times as “dear quiet Twick”. |  | | Leases Orleans House and becomes King of France |
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http://www.twickenham-museum.org.uk/detail.asp?ContentID=20
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| | Louis-Philippe |
 | | His father, called Philippe-Egalité, even voted for the death sentence during the trial of Louis XVI (Philippe-Egalité would himself be guillotined several months later). |  | | In 1830, France was torn between various rival factions: royalists (who supported the old monarchy), Orléanists (who backed the new monarchy), republicans, and Bonapartists. |  | | In July 1830, another pro-republican revolution broke out, but the legislature preferred a constitutional monarchy - Louis-Philippe, as duke of Orléans, was offered the crown in exchange for honouring a charter that limited his powers. |
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http://www.chateauversailles.fr/en/270_Louis-Philippe.php
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| | NINETEENTH GENERATION |
 | | She was married to King Louis Philippe III of FRANCE Citizen King (son of Louis Philippe Joseph II duc d' ORLEANS) in 1809. |  | | Henri Eugene duc D'AUMALE was born in 1822 in France - son of Louis Philippe. |  | | She died after 1850 in England - at court of Victoria. |
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http://home.att.net/~hamiltonclan/hamilton/gilbert/d7162.htm
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| | louis philippe - Books, journals, articles @ The Questia Online Library |
 | | LOUIS PHILIPPE lwe felep, 1773 1850, king of the...1830 48), known before his accession as Louis Philippe, duc dOrleans. |  | | It was named in compliment to Louis XIVs minister of marine and colonies, Louis Phelypeaux de Ponchartrain, while Detroit was...July 10th, 1851 Death of Louis Daguerre, French... |  | | When his eldest son...with General Dumouriez, Philippe Egalite was arrested (Apr...His son became King Louis Philippe. |
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http://www.questia.com/search/louis-philippe
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| | Louis Philippe on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | In the July Revolution of 1830, Louis Philippe was made lieutenant general of the realm and, with the support of the marquis de Lafayette, was chosen "king of the French." His reign, known as the July Monarchy, marked the triumph of the wealthy bourgeoisie and a return to influence of many former Napoleonic officials. |  | | Starck Mixes It Up.(Louis Vuitton chief Yves Carcell and wife Rebecca party with Philippe and Nori Starck)(Brief Article) |  | | Louis Philippe abdicated in favor of his grandson (see Orléans, family), but a republic was set up. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/L/LouisP1hi.asp
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| | Historical Markers of Louisiana: White Hall Plantation |
 | | Famous guests said to have visited La Maison Blanche include the Duc dOrleans, later King Louis Philippe of France, and General Andrew Old Hickory Jackson. |
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http://www.enlou.com/markers/whitehallplantation.htm
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| | EIGHTEENTH GENERATION |
 | | Louis Philippe I of FRANCE was born about 1720 in France - son of Louis of Orleans. |  | | Louis Philippe I of FRANCE had the following children: |  | | He was christened in Bourbon - house of France. |
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http://home.att.net/~hamiltonclan/hamilton/gilbert/d7144.htm
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| | LouisPhilippeTxt |
 | | In 1814, after the abdication of Napoleon, Louis Philippe returned to France and was welcomed by King Louis XVIII, who restored to him the Orleans estates. |  | | Louis Philippe was born in Paris in 1773 and died in 1850. |  | | Louis Philippe was in sympathy with the French Revolution, and in 1790 he joined the Jacobins, members of a French radical political club. |
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http://gallery.sjsu.edu/paris/politics/Louisphilippe00.htm
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| | King Louis-Philippe Royal Sèvres Tea Service |
 | | Despite the many advances made during his tenure, the people and the politicians tired of the policies and rule of King Louis Philippe as they had with Charles X. The Revolution of 1848 led to the formation of the Second French Republic and the rise of Napoleon III. |  | | Known as the "Citizen King," Louis Philippe was born in 1773, the son of the duc d'Orleans, and belonged to the house of Bourbon-Orleans, a branch of the French Royal Family descending from the brother of King Louis XIV. |  | | Unfortunately, his father was among those guillotined by the French Revolutionary Tribunal; an event that turned the attention of his father's supporters to the son who became the central figure of the party. |
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http://www.rauantiques.com/moreinfo.asp?InventoryID=5516
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| | 19th Century Louis Philippe Dining Chairs, Set of 4 |
 | | After the Second Restoration of Louis XVIII (July 1815), Louis-Philippe was a consistent adherent of the liberal opposition. |  | | He became a member of the Jacobin Club in 1790, and, when France went to war with Austria in April 1792, he joined the Army of the North, receiving a commission as lieutenant general in September. |  | | He returned to France on the First Restoration of King Louis XVIII (1814) and regained possession of that portion of the Orléans estates that had not been sold after his emigration. |
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http://www.trocadero.com/stores/lifestyleantiques/items/305171/item305171.html
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| | HarpWeek American Political Prints 1766-1876 Medium Image |
 | | On the left is a shore with King Louis Philippe, several of his ministers or officers, and an overturned chest from which issue statements of the country's debts and a picture of "Fieschi" dated July 28, 1835. |  | | A pointed comparison of French and American governments, prompted by events surrounding American efforts in 1836 to force France to honor spoliation claims for American shipping losses suffered during the Napoleonic Wars, as established by the Treaty of 1831. |  | | (Republican conspirator Giuseppe Maria Fieschi unsuccessfully tried to assassinate King Louis-Philippe of France on July 28, 1835.) Louis Philippe holds in his hand a card reading "Fortunate speculation 25 millions." One of his officers forcibly impresses a seaman, and points toward the ship "Dido" which is moored off shore. |
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http://loc.harpweek.com/LCPoliticalCartoons/DisplayCartoonMedium.asp?MaxID=79&UniqueID=24&Year=1836&YearMark=1836
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| | 1848 Questions |
 | | T/F - Napolean III became the president of France at the end of 1848. |  | | Name the two things which were established in France after success. |  | | The successful revolution in France was under the leadership of... |
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http://www.pvhs.chico.k12.ca.us/~bsilva/projects/revs/1848ques.html
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| | Find in a Library: The history of ten years, 1830-1840; or, France under Louis Philippe. |
 | | To find this item in a library, enter a postal code, state, province, or country in the field above. |  | | The history of ten years, 1830-1840; or, France under Louis Philippe. |  | | Find in a Library: The history of ten years, 1830-1840; or, France under Louis Philippe. |
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http://www.worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/a4bd36e670f5367a.html
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| | Prince Ferdinand-Philippe of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | His marriage was arranged to the Duchess Helene Louise Elizabeth of Mecklenburg-Schwerin who was born on January 24, 1814 at Ludwigslust, Mecklenburg-West Pomerania, Germany. |  | | Nearly 16 years later, the still grieving Princess Helen Louise died, on May 18, 1858 in Richmond, Surrey, England where members of the French royal family had been forced to flee after the revolt against King Louis-Philippe and the election of Louis Napoleon Bonaparte as President of France. |  | | On their death, the government of France allowed these ex-royals to be returned to France for interment. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Ferdinand-Philippe_of_France
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| | Louis Philippe Duc d’Orleans : The Twickenham Museum |
 | | Louis Philippe with his wife and family, returned to Twickenham where he felt safe. |  | | And so, in 1800, Louis Philippe the Duc d'Orleans came with his two younger brothers to live in Twickenham. |  | | Louis Philipe became the last King of France in 1830. |
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http://www.twickenham-museum.org.uk/kids_detail.asp?ContentID=20
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| | Telegraph Opinion Riots in France could spread through Europe |
 | | France is marked by fin de régime rivalry between Mr Sarkozy and Dominique de Villepin, the prime minister. |  | | Jacques Chirac may yet make a scapegoat of Mr Sarkozy, but there is no sign as yet that the president will be forced out of office before his term expires in 2007. |  | | The rioting in France this autumn has no clear political aim beyond an expression of disgust with the government and, in particular, the interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy. |
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http://news.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2005/11/08/dl0801.xml
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| | Panetiere |
 | | This Panetiere or “breadbox” is from Provence, France. |  | | Shipping outside United States: Quoted at time of purchase |  | | Panetieres were used for storing bread and were generally wall-mounted above the dough table where the bread was made. |
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http://www.antiqnet.com/detail,panetiere,830453.html
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| | Fontainebleau Operas for the Court of Louis XV of France by Jean-Philippe Rameau (1683-1764) |
 | | Fontainebleau Operas for the Court of Louis XV of France by Jean-Philippe Rameau (1683-1764) |  | | During the eighteenth century, the French court made yearly trips to the chateau of Fontainebleau during the autumn months, partaking of the abundant hunting in the surrounding area, and enjoying evenings of operas and plays presented by the leading performers from Paris. |  | | In the future when the historian sifts through the debris of our era, oversaturated with information, once the dross has been cast aside, more than a few of the things that remain will be bound in the covers of The Edwin Mellen Press. |
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http://www.mellenpress.com/mellenpress.cfm?bookid=5851&pc=9
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| | :::► Dictionary of Meaning www.mauspfeil.net ◄::: |
 | | The eldest daughter Maria Josepha Sophia became head of the Imperial House of Mexico following the death of her uncle Augustin in 1925. |  | | Count Emil Jamison-Walworth died at Nice in 1910 and his wife remained in France until 1918 whereupon she returned to Austria and died in a nursing home in Graz in 1921. |  | | A small minority refused to accept this designation, and chose instead a descendant of Louis XIV through the Spanish line, regarding Philip V of Spain's renunciation invalid. |
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http://www.mauspfeil.net/pretender.html
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| | Duke of Orléans |
 | | Philippe II of Orleans (1674-1723), duke from 1701 to 1723 - Regent of France from 1715 to 1723 |  | | In France, several people have held the title of Duke of Orléans, including: |  | | Prince Ferdinand-Philippe of France (1810-1842), duke from 1830 |
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http://www.gamesinathens.com/olympics/d/du/duke_of_orleans_1.shtml
(98 words)
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| | MSN Encarta - Multimedia - Louis Philippe |
 | | This 1839 portrait of Louis Philippe, king of France, was painted by Franz Winterhalter. |  | | It is in the Palace of Versailles near Paris, France. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/media_461528945/Louis_Philippe.html
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| | Char-a-bancs presented to Queen Victoria |
 | | King Louis-Philippe made an outing in the new vehicle during his visit to Windsor in October 1844. |  | | On the right is the Scottish State Coach. |  | | Queen Victoria had enjoyed travelling in a similar vehicle in the course of her visit to France in 1843 and this char-à-bancs was sent to her soon afterwards. |
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http://www.royalinsight.gov.uk/output/Page3534.asp
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| | Louis Philippe Furniture |
 | | Another notable fashion in the Louis Philippe furniture period was the "style a la cathedrale" which came to prominence around 1825. |  | | Wood was painted in black, decorated with gilt with painted decoration, and sometimes veneered. |  | | During the reign of Louis Philippe, the color, grain, and quality of the wood became more a focus of design. |
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http://www.furniturestyles.net/european/french/louis-philippe.html
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| | George Catlin and His Indian Gallery |
 | | Catlin received a commission from King Louis Philippe, who had spent two years in the late 1790s in the United States, to paint fifteen large canvases. |  | | Inspired, perhaps, by the art he saw in French museums, Catlin produced the most carefully detailed and highly finished works of his career. |  | | To bolster his income Catlin copied works in the Indian Gallery in oil, watercolor, and pencil to sell to wealthy collectors, such as Sir Thomas Phillipps and King Louis Philippe of France. |
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http://www.autry-museum.org/explore/exhibits/catlin/XII.html
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| | The New York Review of Books: A Radical Field Marshal |
 | | The king of the French was driven from his throne; other kings and princes were attacked, abused, or, the supreme humiliation, were forced--like Louis XVI of France half a century before--to embrace the revolution. |  | | As a matter of fact, Louis Philippe, himself an ex-revolutionary, was one, of the more able monarchs in Europe. |  | | That most of these monarchs, except for Louis Philippe of France, managed to get through the crisis was not owing to any special skill on their part nor was the French king particularly inept. |
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http://www.nybooks.com/articles/article-preview?article_id=7125
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| | Saint Jerome with Saint Paula and Saint Eustochium - Provenance |
 | | Frank Hall Standish [1799-1840], Seville;[1] bequeathed to King Louis Philippe of France [1773-1850]; by descent to his heirs; (sale, Catalogue des tableaux formant la célèbre collection Standish léguée à S.M. feu le roi Louis Philippe par Mr. |  | | From the Tour: 18th-Century France — The Rococo and Watteau |
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http://www.nga.gov/collection/gallery/gg54/gg54-41430.0-prov.html
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| | 2005 Finalists: Dr. Louis-Philippe Vézina: Concours de la personnalité d'affaires Canada-France -- ... |
 | | In his opinion, Medicago would not exist without the co-operation of its French partners and its partnership with Viridis. |  | | Medicago and Viridis have even founded a subsidiary that they own in equal shares that will produce nutraceuticals in France starting in 2006. |  | | As proof of Medicago's great potential for discoveries, it received $24M in financing in 2003, an exceptional amount for the biotechnology industry in Canada. |
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http://www.pwc.com/extweb/aboutus.nsf/docid/82D263092478FAE0852570CA001753A6
(193 words)
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| | Fordham University Church |
 | | The six windows lining the nave were originally gifts of King Louis Philippe of France to Archbishop Hughes for Old St. Patrick's Cathedral. |  | | They depict the four evangelists and St. Peter and St. Paul and they were created in Sevres, France by a workshop that has been tied to the earliest stages of the Gothic revival. |  | | They did not fit, however, and were given to the seminary chapel. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/medny/venturi4.html
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| | Archives: Story |
 | | For three nights in a row, Minnillo and Louis Philippe La France, the Hilton's chef, prepared Minnillo's veal osso bucco and risotto recipes for Continental guests and press representatives. |  | | Chef Paul Minnillo, right, visited Israel and worked with Hilton Tel Aviv's chef Louis Philippe La France. |  | | Although he was a bit disconcerted that "no one knew how to make risotto," Minillo was impressed with the hotel's kosher kitchens. |
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http://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/articles/2005/03/24/news/local/risotto0325.txt
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| | departures.com The French/Spanish Connection |
 | | Central to this story is Diego Velázquez, the greatest Spanish painter of the 17th century, and his decisive influence on the work of that French innovator Edouard Manet. |  | | It was this fruitful collision of cultures that gave rise to the Realist movement in France and, through it, the birth of the Modern. |  | | King Louis-Philippe of France opened the Louvre's Galerie Espagnole in 1838, placing 400 paintings by Spanish masters before a French public largely ignorant of the art of their neighbors. |
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http://www.departures.com/ad/ad_0303_frenchspanish.html
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| | TIME Magazine Archive Article -- From El Greco to Goya -- Feb. 22, 1963 |
 | | In Europe, Spanish work was almost unknown until after Napoleon& looting and the later purchases of Louis Philippe gave France and Austria a chance to assemble collections. |  | | Rounding up a collection of classic Spanish painting has never been an easy taskoutside Spain. |
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http://www.time.com/time/archive/printout/0,23657,828038,00.html
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