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Hauts-de-Seine
(Encyclopedia)Hauts-de-Seine ōt-də-sĕn [key], department, N central France, W of Paris. Nanterre is the capital. ...Montrouge
(Encyclopedia)Montrouge môNro͞ozhˈ [key], industrial suburb S of Paris (1990 pop. 38,333), Hauts-de-Seine dept., N central France. Papermaking, publishing, construction, aeronautics, and the manufacture of surgi...Yvelines
(Encyclopedia)Yvelines ēvlēnˈ [key], department (1990 pop. 1,320,000), N central France, W of Paris. Versailles is the capital. ...Sites of the Modern Olympic Games (table)
(Encyclopedia) Sites of the Modern Olympic Games Summer Games Winter Games ...Fronde
(Encyclopedia)Fronde frôNd [key], 1648–53, series of outbreaks during the minority of King Louis XIV, caused by the efforts of the Parlement of Paris (the chief judiciary body) to limit the growing authority of ...Notre-Dame de Paris
(Encyclopedia)Notre-Dame de Paris nôˈtrə-däm də pärēˈ [key] [Fr.,=Our Lady of Paris], cathedral church of Paris, a noble achievement of early Gothic architecture in France. It stands upon the Île de la Cit...Biddle, Francis Beverley
(Encyclopedia)Biddle, Francis Beverley, 1886–1968, U.S. Attorney General (1941–45), b. Paris, France, of American parents. Secretary to Associate Justice O. W. Holmes (1912), he became a successful corporation ...White, Henry
(Encyclopedia)White, Henry, 1850–1927, American diplomat, b. Baltimore. He studied abroad and traveled widely. White—often called the first career diplomat in the United States—entered the foreign service as ...Prévost d'Exiles, Antoine François
(Encyclopedia)Prévost d'Exiles, Antoine François äbāˈ prāvōˈ [key], 1697–1763, French novelist, journalist, and cleric. After a dissolute youth he entered (1720) the Benedictine abbey of Saint-Maur. He la...Val-d'Oise
(Encyclopedia)Val-d'Oise väl-dwäz [key], department (1990 est. pop. 1,064,900), N central France, N of Paris. Pontoise is the capital. ...Browse by Subject
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