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    • Image courtesy of art.rmngp.fr

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      Francis I

      • In 1527 La Marche was seized by Francis I and became part of the domains of the French crown.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › County_of_La_Marche
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  2. Olivier de La Marche (born c. 1425, Villegaudin, Burgundy—died Feb. 1, 1502, Brussels) was a Burgundian chronicler and poet who, as historian of the ducal court, was an eloquent spokesman of the chivalrous tradition.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Origins. Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry (1412/16), March: the Château de Lusignan. The Château de Lusignan, near Poitiers, was the principal seat of the Lusignans. It is shown at its height in the March illumination in the Trés Riches Heures of the Duc de Berry (circa 1412).

  4. Marguerite du Tertre de Lamarche (1638–1706) was a French midwife. Marguerite Dutertre was born in 1638 to a poor family in Paris, and was orphaned at an early age. She was brought up by a woman named LaTouche, who acted as a mother to her.

  5. The legend of the Nain Rouge weaves a tale from the early days when Detroit was founded by Antoine de La Mothe Cadillac in the 1700s. While attending a party in Quebec, a fortune teller warned Cadillac of a future encounter with the demon on his next adventure.

  6. Dedicated to Philippe le Beau, the child heir to Habsburg Burgundy and La Marche 's pupil, it sets out Philippe's inheritance, beginning with the supposed pre-Christian origins of the lands he rules over and progressing to a description of the careers of Philippe's immediate ancestors.

    • Catherine Emerson
    • 2005
  7. Almodis de la Marche ( c. 1020 – 16 October 1071) was a French noble. She was famed for her marriage career, in particularly for her third marriage to Ramon Berenguer I, Count of Barcelona, with whom she committed double bigamy in 1053, for which the Pope had them excommunicated.

  8. THE FAMILY OF MOULINS-LA-MARCHE IN THE ELEVENTH CENTURY. EMILY ZACK TABUTEAU. During William the Conqueror's reign as duke of Nor- mandy and king of England (1035-87), the important castle of Moulins-la-Marche, on the southern border of Normandy, was. held by a man named William who took his name from that. castle.

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