marquise de maintenon การใช้
- Louis proved relatively more faithful to his second wife, Fran鏾ise d'Aubign? Marquise de Maintenon.
- Maria Theresa died in 1683 and the next year he secretly married the devoutly Catholic Fran鏾ise d'Aubign? marquise de Maintenon.
- She then said to Marquise de Maintenon, " the king has three pillars : my name, this girl and your heart ."
- It is the story of Fran鏾ise d'Aubign? marquise de Maintenon, who in the 17th century was almost the queen of France.
- In 1698, as comte d'Ayen, he married marquise de Maintenon, and by her had six children, 4 daughters and 2 sons.
- With the exception of the Mademoiselle, the King, and the Marquise de Maintenon, however, the characters of the novella appear to be Hoffmann's inventions.
- She gives him a letter and wants to meet at the Ballroom grove later to inform him about the secret she overheard visiting Fran鏾ise d'Aubign? Marquise de Maintenon.
- "' Fran鏾ise d'Aubign? Marquise de Maintenon "'( 27 November 1635 & ndash; 15 April 1719 ) was the second wife of King Louis XIV of France.
- He marries, despite opposition, Fran鏾ise d'Aubign? Marquise de Maintenon, a woman without noble birth who was the governess of his illegitimate children with Fran鏾ise-Ath閚a飐, marquise de Montespan.
- It is a biography of Fran鏾ise d'Aubign? Marquise de Maintenon, who rose from the humblest of beginnings to become the morganatic wife of the Sun King, and highly influential at his Court.
- Begun in June 1687, the new construction ( as we see it today ) was finished in January 1688 and inaugurated by Louis XIV and his secret wife, the marquise de Maintenon, during the summer of 1688.
- Beaujon was proved innocent of any wrongdoing in a court of law ( though to be fair he had made a tidy sum saving his city ) but finding the scope of the provinces too restrictive for someone of his talents and ambitions anyway, he removed to Paris where he was to remain until the end of his days . ( Some later writers would assert that he fled Bordeaux due to unpopularity following his " profiteering " in connection with the famine, but Masson shows that this was clearly not true, being more probably a case of the sort of calumny the extremely rich always seem to attract . ) The vast Beaujon townhouse in Bordeaux still exists, though Nicolas sold it off at the time of his marriage, in 1753, to Louise Elisabeth Bontemps, herself a granddaughter of Alexandre Bontemps, Louis XIV's First Valet and Intendant of Versailles ( and one of the only eyewitnesses to the King's secret marriage to Fran鏾ise d'Aubign? marquise de Maintenon ).