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Topic: Louis Philippe <b>of<



  
 <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
As <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> Joseph (now duc d'Orléans after the death of his father in 1785), continued his support for the liberal factions of the revolution, destain from the Royal family and members of the royal court became increasingly hostile towards the Orléans family.
Born in Paris, <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> was the son of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> Joseph, duc d'Orléans (known as "<b>Philippeb> Égalité"), and a descendant of King <b>Louisb> XIII.
Shortly there after, the Girondists moved to arrest <b>Philippeb> and the two younger brothers of <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb>, the Dukes of Beaujolais and Montpensier, the latter had been serving in Biron's Army of the North.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-Philippe_of_France   (3429 words)

  
 <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
After the abdication of Napoleon, and the restoration of the monarchy under his cousin King <b>Louisb> XVIII <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> returned to live in France, claiming sympathy with the liberated citizens of the country.
On 24 February 1848, to general surprise, King <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> abdicated in favour of his young grandson (his son and heir, Prince Ferdinand, having been killed in an accident some years earlier).
Born in Paris, <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> was the son of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> Joseph, duc d'Orléans (known as "<b>Philippeb> Égalité"), and a descendant of King <b>Louisb> XIII.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-Philippe   (1198 words)

  
 Movers: 19th Century - By Miles Hodges
<b>Louisb> Adolphe Thiers headed a delegation which invited him to become King of the French--<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> I, the "citizen king." In a dramatic appearance before the Chamber (<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was wearing the tricolor of French Republicanism) he accepted their invitation.
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was a distant cousin of the brothers <b>Louisb> XVI, <b>Louisb> XVIII and Charles X. Although he too was a Bourbon, he preferred the Orléans identity of his more immediate ancestors.
Realizing the seriousness of his own personal position, <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> decided to flee--to Switzerland where he took on an assumed name (as much to avoid the wrath of the exiled royalists, or emigrés, as much as to avoid detection by the Republican authorities) and became a professor at a college there.
http://www.newgenevacenter.org/movers/19th-cen2.htm   (1198 words)

  
 <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
After the abdication of Napoleon, and the restoration of the monarchy under his cousin King <b>Louisb> XVIII <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> returned to live in France, claiming sympathy with the liberated citizens of the country.
Chambord was offered the throne again in the 1870s but declined over a dispute over the French tricolour.) Due to <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb>'s Republican policies and his popularity with the masses, the Chamber of Deputies ignored the wishes of the Legitimists that Charles's grandson be accepted as king and instead proclaimed <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> as the new French king.
Born in Paris, <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> was the son of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> Joseph, duc d'Orléans (known as "<b>Philippeb> Égalité"), and a descendant of King <b>Louisb> XIII.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-Philippe_of_France   (1198 words)

  
 <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
After the abdication of Napoleon, and the restoration of the monarchy under his cousin King <b>Louisb> XVIII <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> returned to live in France, claiming sympathy with the liberated citizens of the country.
On 24 February 1848, to general surprise, King <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> abdicated in favour of his young grandson (his son and heir, Prince Ferdinand, having been killed in an accident some years earlier).
Born in Paris, <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb>, was the son of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> Joseph, duc d'Orléans (known as "<b>Philippeb> Égalité"), and a descendent from King <b>Louisb> XIII.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-Philippe_of_France   (1198 words)

  
 H-France Reviews
This biography is only the second book on <b>Philippeb> III, and the first in over a century (something which was also true of <b>Louisb> VIII when Sivéry’s biography of that king appeared in 1995).
Through Sivéry’s intimate acquaintance with <b>Louisb> IX we are first introduced to <b>Philippeb> III as his disappointed parents struggle to make the best of this flawed child who became heir following the death of an elder brother.
For Gérard Sivéry, the answer is compelling and simple: <b>Philippeb> was the last subject left to cover in a multi-volume meta-biographical oeuvre on the immediate ancestors and descendants of <b>Philippeb>’s father King <b>Louisb> IX, or Saint <b>Louisb>.
http://www.uakron.edu/hfrance/vol3reviews/taylor5.html   (1305 words)

  
 Search Tuna Report for Haiti Coup
<b>Louisb>-Jodel Chamblain, a former FRAPH leader, is centrally involved in Gonaives, as is Guy <b>Philippeb>, a former police chief in the city of Cap-Haitien who was accused of plotting a coup in 2000....
Guy <b>Philippeb>, who claims to be the rebels senior commander, says that the ferocity of the chimères is itself a myth....
Guy <b>Philippeb>, a former police chief who has emerged as public voice of the armed rebellion, told CNN he would welcome foreign troops....
http://www.searchtuna.com/ftlive2/989.html   (3361 words)

  
 Movers: 19th Century - By Miles Hodges
<b>Louisb> Adolphe Thiers headed a delegation which invited him to become King of the French--<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> I, the "citizen king." In a dramatic appearance before the Chamber (<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was wearing the tricolor of French Republicanism) he accepted their invitation.
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was a distant cousin of the brothers <b>Louisb> XVI, <b>Louisb> XVIII and Charles X. Although he too was a Bourbon, he preferred the Orléans identity of his more immediate ancestors.
Now securely in power (or so it seemed) <b>Louisb> reaffirmed to the French nation his intention of ruling as a constitutional monarch--with a free press and the preservation of key economic and social reforms brought about by the Revolution.
http://www.newgenevacenter.org/movers/19th-cen2.htm   (6409 words)

  
 <b>Louisb> Auguste Blanqui Biography / Biography of <b>Louisb> Auguste Blanqui Main Biography
Blanqui took part in the street fighting of July 1830 and was decorated by the July Monarchy of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> for his part in its birth.
By this time the aging and ill Blanqui had become a symbol of resistance to oppressive government, and a campaign was undertaken to secure a pardon for him.
Condemnations to death and, later, deportation were not carried out because of his ill health, and in 1877 he was transferred to the island prison of Château d'If in the Mediterranean.
http://www.bookrags.com/biography/louis-auguste-blanqui   (6409 words)

  
 <b>Louisb>-Auguste Blanqui. Who is <b>Louisb>-Auguste Blanqui? What is <b>Louisb>-Auguste Blanqui? Where is <b>Louisb>-Auguste Blanqui? Definition of <b>Louisb>-Auguste Blanqui. Meaning of <b>Louisb>-Auguste Blanqui.
He took an active part in the July Revolution of 1830, and for maintaining the doctrine of republicanism during the reign of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>, was condemned to repeated terms of imprisonment.
<b>Louisb> Auguste Blanqui (February 8, 1805 - 1881) was a French political activist.
He was one of the group that briefly seized the reins of power on October 31, and for his share in that outbreak he was again condemned to death on March 17 of the following year.
http://www.knowledgerush.com/kr/encyclopedia/Louis-Auguste_Blanqui   (6409 words)

  
 Battle of Bouvines (27 July 1214)
The assault was toward the position of <b>Philippeb> II, among the French infantry of commune militia, which had formed in front.
The pope immediately withdrew his support of the French invasion, and <b>Philippeb> II was forced to comply.
However, <b>Philippeb> II's son, prince <b>Louisb>, seized St-Omer and Aire, claiming them as his mother's dowry.
http://xenophongroup.com/montjoie/bouvines.htm   (6657 words)

  
 14194-8.txt
This amount had been acknowledged by the Government of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> to be due, but the Chambers were not willing to ratify the agreement.
The eldest daughter of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>, the Princess Louise, was married, soon after her father's elevation to the throne, to King Leopold of Belgium, widower of the English Princess Charlotte, and uncle to Prince Albert and to Queen Victoria.
One of the early troubles of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was the peremptory demand of President Jackson for five million dollars,--a claim for French spoliations in 1797.
http://www.gutenberg.net/1/4/1/9/14194/14194-8.txt   (6657 words)

  
 French royalty--Napoleon III
<b>Louisb>' eraliest education is entrusted to <b>Philippeb> Bottom, son of a friend of wire of the conventional friend of Robespierre.
When <b>Louisb> Napoleon as was born in 1808, his father <b>Louisb> Bonaparte was the King of Holland and he was a prince.
Charles <b>Louisb> Napoleon Bonaparte (1808-73): <b>Louisb> was born in 1808, good news for his mother who longed for the company of children as her mairrage coninued to deteriorate.
http://histclo.hispeed.com/royal/fra/royal-frn3.htm   (6657 words)

  
 <b>Louisb> XIV of France - free-definition
Shortly thereafter, the Peace of Westphalia was signed, and the French army under <b>Louisb> II de Bourbon, Prince de Condé were free to return to the aid of <b>Louisb> and his royal court.
<b>Louisb> XIV aided James II in his attempt to retake the English Crown, but was unsuccessful; James lost his last stronghold, Ireland, in 1690.
<b>Louisb> XIV sought to restrict the power of his nephew, Philip II, Duc d'Orléans, who by law would become Regent.
http://www.free-definition.com/Louis-XIV-of-France.html   (6657 words)

  
 Movers: 19th Century - By Miles Hodges
<b>Louisb> Adolphe Thiers headed a delegation which invited him to become King of the French--<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> I, the "citizen king." In a dramatic appearance before the Chamber (<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was wearing the tricolor of French Republicanism) he accepted their invitation.
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> fled France under disguise--arriving in England where he would spend the last two years of his life.
Realizing the seriousness of his own personal position, <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> decided to flee--to Switzerland where he took on an assumed name (as much to avoid the wrath of the exiled royalists, or emigrés, as much as to avoid detection by the Republican authorities) and became a professor at a college there.
http://www.newgenevacenter.org/movers/19th-cen2.htm   (6657 words)

  
 <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> on Encyclopedia.com
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was known as the “citizen king” because of his bourgeois manner and dress, and he and his regime were satirized by Honoré Daumier.
In the early years of his reign, <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>'s basically conservative outlook was strengthened by a number of workers' demonstrations and by several attempts on his life, notably that of Giuseppe Fieschi (1835).
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> abdicated in favor of his grandson (see Orléans, family), but a republic was set up.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/L/LouisP1hi.asp   (1168 words)

  
 <b>Louisb>, duc d' Orléans - Biography
<b>Philippeb> II's machinations to secure his secession turned out to be for naught; his Regency ended when <b>Louisb> XV came of age in 1723, and <b>Philippeb> II died the following year.
<b>Philippeb> II was the son of <b>Philippeb> I, duc d'Orléans [1640-1701, younger brother of <b>Louisb> XIV] and Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate.
The son of <b>Philippeb> II, duc d'Orléans [1674-1723] and Françoise-Marie de Bourbon, legitimatized daughter of <b>Louisb> XIV, <b>Louisb> was governor of Dauphiné, commander of infantry, and chief of the Conseil d'Etat.
http://www.bonus.com/contour/national_gallery/http@@/www.nga.gov/cgi-bin/pbio?554347   (226 words)

  
 <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
On 24 February 1848, to general surprise, King <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> abdicated in favour of his young grandson (his son and heir, Prince Ferdinand, having been killed in an accident some years earlier).
After the abdication of Napoleon, <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> returned to live in France, claiming sympathy with the liberated citizens of the country.
During the French Revolution and the ensuing regime of Napoleon Bonaparte, <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb> remained mostly outside France, travelling extensively, including in the United States where he stayed for four years in Philadelphia.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-Philippe_of_France   (226 words)

  
 The Protocols of Zion and the Revolutions in Europe
On February 24 <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was forced to abdicate, and in the Chamber of Deputies the poet Lamartine announced a list of liberal parliamentarians to form a new provisional government.
The boredom with the politics and style of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> would not have been so acute in a land that did not have a Napoleon to remember.
Seven others, including <b>Philippeb> Buonarroti, were also found guilty, and deported (p.
http://users.cyberone.com.au/myers/toolkit2.html   (19594 words)

  
 LouisPhilippeTxt
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was in sympathy with the French Revolution, and in 1790 he joined the Jacobins, members of a French radical political club.
France was moving towards a republic when Adolphe Thiers put forward a replacement king, <b>Louisb>-<b>Philippeb>.
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> belonged to a branch of the French royal family stemming from <b>Philippeb> I, duc d'Orleans, the brother of King <b>Louisb> XIV.
http://gallery.sjsu.edu/paris/politics/Louisphilippe00.htm   (363 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - <b>Louisb> XV
<b>Louisb> XV's reported prophecy, “After me, the deluge,” was fulfilled in the overthrow of the French monarchy less than two decades later.
<b>Louisb> XV (1710-74), king of France (1715-74), whose failure to provide strong leadership and badly needed reforms contributed to the crisis that brought on the French Revolution.
<b>Louisb> was born at Versailles on February 15, 1710, the great-grandson of <b>Louisb> XIV, whom he succeeded at the age of five.
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761567404/Louis_XV.html   (363 words)

  
 <b>Louisb> XVIII of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles X, <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>, and Napoleon III were ousted by revolution, while the French Second Republic ended with a presidential coup d'état.
<b>Louisb>-Stanislas-Xavier was born on November 18, 1755 in the Palace of Versailles, Versailles, France, the fourth son of <b>Louisb>, dauphin de France and Marie-Josèphe of Saxony, and grandson of <b>Louisb> XV of France and his Queen consort Maria Leszczyńska.
<b>Louisb> XVIII (November 17, 1755 - September 16, 1824) was King of France and Navarre from 1814 (although he declared that he considered his reign to have begun in 1795) until his death in 1824, with a brief break in 1815 due to Napoleon's return in the Hundred Days.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XVIII_of_France   (908 words)

  
 Movers: 19th Century - By Miles Hodges
<b>Louisb> Adolphe Thiers headed a delegation which invited him to become King of the French--<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> I, the "citizen king." In a dramatic appearance before the Chamber (<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was wearing the tricolor of French Republicanism) he accepted their invitation.
Now securely in power (or so it seemed) <b>Louisb> reaffirmed to the French nation his intention of ruling as a constitutional monarch--with a free press and the preservation of key economic and social reforms brought about by the Revolution.
In the meantime Napoleon had taken charge of the Revolution and some efforts at compromise with the royalist party were attempted--though <b>Louisb> refused to drop his claim to the French throne.
http://www.newgenevacenter.org/movers/19th-cen2.htm   (6409 words)

  
 <b>Louisb> Auguste Blanqui - free-definition
He took an active part in the July Revolution of 1830, and for maintaining the doctrine of republicanism during the reign of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>, was condemned to repeated terms of imprisonment.
<b>Louisb> Auguste Blanqui (February 8, 1805 - 1881) was a French political activist.
He was one of the group that briefly seized the reins of power on October 31, and for his share in that outbreak he was again condemned to death on March 17 of the following year.
http://www.free-definition.com/Louis-Blanqui.html   (6409 words)

  
 The Twickenham Museum : <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> Duc d’Orleans
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>’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).
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> fled from France but his two younger brothers were put in prison.
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>, Duke of Chartres, Duke of Orleans, and King of the French, was the son of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> Joseph, 5th Duke of Orleans (later called Égalité), of the younger branch of the Bourbon royal family.
http://www.twickenham-museum.org.uk/detail.asp?ContentID=20   (6409 words)

  
 <b>Louisb>
<b>Louisb> Philip I, Duke of Orléans <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>, Versailles, and was known as the duke of Chartres until his father's dea...
<b>Louisb> of Bourbon, Duke of Orléans <b>Louisb> of Bourbon regent Orléans.
<b>Louisb> Ginzberg 1953) was one of the outstanding Talmudists of the twentieth century.
http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/louis.html   (6409 words)

  
 LouisPhilippeTxt
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> was in sympathy with the French Revolution, and in 1790 he joined the Jacobins, members of a French radical political club.
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> belonged to a branch of the French royal family stemming from <b>Philippeb> I, duc d'Orleans, the brother of King <b>Louisb> XIV.
In 1814, after the abdication of Napoleon, <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> returned to France and was welcomed by King <b>Louisb> XVIII, who restored to him the Orleans estates.
http://gallery.sjsu.edu/paris/politics/Louisphilippe00.htm   (6409 words)

  
 French royalty--Napoleon III
<b>Louisb>' eraliest education is entrusted to <b>Philippeb> Bottom, son of a friend of wire of the conventional friend of Robespierre.
French Emperor <b>Louisb> Napoleon or Napoleon III was a nephew of Napoleon I. <b>Louisb> was the son of <b>Louisb> Bonaparte who his brother had installed as King of Holland for a brief time.
<b>Louisb>' mother was Hortense Eugénie Beauharnais, step daughter of Emperor Napolon I. When the Emperor mairred Josephine, she was a widow returned from Martinique with two children.
http://histclo.hispeed.com/royal/fra/royal-frn3.htm   (6409 words)

  
 JOHANNES  HILMER - Two views about socialism
In France, the economic crisis of 1847, the campaign of the democratic opposition for the universal suffrage and the activity of workers and craftsmen resulted in the overthrowing of King <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>'s regime in the February-Revolution of 1848.
In 1835, after an attempt on <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>'s life, the notorious September-laws were passed aimimg at oppressing the revolutionary and democratic movement by censorship, police and tribunals.
<b>Louisb>-Auguste Blanqui, who spent half of his life in prison, stood in the tradition of Frangois-Noel Babeuf which was revived by Babeuf’s comrade Filippo Buonarroti in his book Conspiration pour I'egalite dite de Babeuf.
http://www.democracynature.org/dn/vol6/hilmer_proudhon.htm   (3355 words)

  
 CHAPTER XVII. - SPANISH AND EASTERN AFFAIRS.
<b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb> had an avowed and obstinate enemy in the Czar of Russia, who had been his predecessor's friend: the Court of Vienna tolerated usurpers only where worse mischief would follow from attacking them; Prussia had no motive for abandoning the connexions which it had maintained since 1815.
Lord Palmerston, always jealous and suspicious of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>, refused to believe that the growth of Russian power could be checked by dividing the Ottoman Empire, or that any system of Eastern policy could be safely based on the personal qualities of a ruler now past his seventieth year.
Although down to the close of <b>Louisb> <b>Philippeb>'s reign the good understanding between England and France was still nominally in existence, all real confidence had then long vanished; and on more than one occasion the preservation of peace between the two nations had been seriously endangered.
http://www.globusz.com/ebooks/Europe/00000028.htm   (3355 words)

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