See also:DESCHANEL, See also:PAUL See also:EUGENE See also:- LOUIS
- LOUIS (804–876)
- LOUIS (893–911)
- LOUIS, JOSEPH DOMINIQUE, BARON (1755-1837)
- LOUIS, or LEWIS (from the Frankish Chlodowich, Chlodwig, Latinized as Chlodowius, Lodhuwicus, Lodhuvicus, whence-in the Strassburg oath of 842-0. Fr. Lodhuwigs, then Chlovis, Loys and later Louis, whence Span. Luiz and—through the Angevin kings—Hungarian
LOUIS (1856– ) , See also:French statesman, son of Emile Deschanel (1819–1904), See also:professor at the See also:College de See also:France and senator, was See also:born at See also:Brussels, where his See also:father was living in See also:- EXILE (Lat. exsilium or exilium, from exsul or exul, which is derived from ex, out of, and the root sal, to go, seen in salire, to leap, consul, &c.; the connexion with solum, soil, country is now generally considered wrong)
exile (1851–1859), owing to his opposition to See also:Napoleon III. Paul Deschanel studied See also:law, and began his career as secretary to See also:Deshayes de Marcere (1876), and to Jules See also:Simon (1876–1877). In See also:October 1885 he was elected See also:deputy for See also:Eure and See also:Loire. From the first he took an important See also:place in the chamber, as one of the most notable orators of the Progressist Republican See also:group. In See also:January 1896 he was elected See also:vice-See also:president of the chamber, and henceforth devoted himself to the struggle against the See also:Left, not only in See also:parliament, but also in public meetings throughout France. His addresses at See also:Marseilles on the 26th of October 1896, at Carmaux on the 27th of See also:December 1896, and at See also:Roubaix on the loth of See also:April 1897, were triumphs of clear and eloquent exposition of the See also:political and social aims of the Progressist party. In See also:June 1898 he was elected president of the chamber, and was re-elected in 1901, but rejected in 1902. Nevertheless he came forward brilliantly in 1904 and 1905 as a supporter of the law on the separation of See also:- CHURCH
- CHURCH (according to most authorities derived from the Gr. Kvpcaxov [&wµa], " the Lord's [house]," and common to many Teutonic, Slavonic and other languages under various forms—Scottish kirk, Ger. Kirche, Swed. kirka, Dan. kirke, Russ. tserkov, Buig. cerk
- CHURCH, FREDERICK EDWIN (1826-1900)
- CHURCH, GEORGE EARL (1835–1910)
- CHURCH, RICHARD WILLIAM (1815–189o)
- CHURCH, SIR RICHARD (1784–1873)
church and See also:state. He was elected a member of the French See also:Academy in 1899, his most notable See also:works being Orateurs et hommes d'etat (1888), Figures de femmes (1889), La Decentralization (1895), La Question sociale
(1898).
End of Article: DESCHANEL, PAUL EUGENE LOUIS (1856– )
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