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  1. Bouchard de Bray, also Bouchard I of Montmorency (died after 960 and before 966) was a French knight from the Tenth Century. he was the ancestor of the noble House of Montmorency and the noble House of Montlhery. Life. He belongs to the family of the Alberic-Walter-Burchard, very present in the Province of Sens with two archbishops.

  2. Henry IV of France once said, that if ever the House of Bourbon should fail (i.e., become extinct), no European family deserved the French crown more than the House of Montmorency. Bouchard I's son Thibaud of Montmorency was the ancestor of the lords of Montlhéry. Matthieu I of Montmorency received in 1138 the post of constable, and died in 1160.

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  4. The Montmorency family was one of the three families that struggled for control of the French crown during the Wars of Religion between 1562 and 1598. In time, the Montmorency became allied with the Bourbon family against the Guise, the third of the competing groups.

  5. Feb 7, 2010 · In Brief. In the 1910s, Margaret Sanger began the family planning movement in the United States. While Sanger was not Jewish, Jews had an enormous impact on her activism, and her activism indelibly shaped the lives of Jewish women in America. Sanger opened the country’s first birth control clinic in 1916. In 1921, she founded the American ...

  6. Sep 9, 2002 · On November 10th, 1567, during the second of the French Wars of Religion, a large royal army moved north of Paris to wrest control of St Denis from a force of Protestants which was then threatening the capital. It was led to victory by a seventy-four-year-old commander who was wounded in the battle and died two days later. He was Anne de ...

  7. Jan 24, 2019 · Topics. Between 1916 and 1945 the American birth control movement secured the legalization of contraception and gave women access to birth control in more than eight hundred clinics across the country. In a provocative history of the behind-the-scenes struggle leading to those achievements, Carole R. McCann reassesses the movement's successes ...

  8. May 18, 2023 · The Huguenots held the cities of Rouen, Lyons, and Orléans, the latter taken by Condé on 2 April 1562. In Languedoc, Condé appointed Jacques de Crussol (l. 1540-1584) as leader of the Reformed party. Many Catholics were forced to flee the towns acquired by the Huguenots – Montpellier, Béziers, Nîmes, Uzès, Agde, and Beaucaire.

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