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The Treaty of Versailles of 1787 was a treaty of alliance signed between the French King Louis XVI and the Vietnamese lord Nguyễn Ánh, the future Emperor Gia Long. Nguyễn Ánh, whose family, the Nguyễn family , had been decimated by the Tây Sơn rebellion when he was 16 or 17, received the protection and aid of the French Catholic ...
Articles about the Dauphins of France, the title given to the heirs apparent to the throne of France from 1350 to 1791 and 1824 to 1830. [1] The word dauphin is French for dolphin.
Việt Nam: A History from Earliest Time to the Present. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-190-05379-6. Li, Tana (2018). Nguyen Cochinchina: Southern Vietnam in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-501-73257-7. Li, Yu (2020). The Chinese Writing System in Asia: An Interdisciplinary Perspective. Routledge.
Louis, Duke of Burgundy (1751–1761) Louis Henri, Duke of Bourbon; Louis, Duke of Burgundy; Louis, Dauphin of France (1729–1765) Louis, Duke of Orléans (1703–1752) Louis Alexandre, Count of Toulouse; Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême; Louis, Count of Clermont; Louis, Duke of Brittany (1707–1712) Louis, Duke of Brittany (1704–1705 ...
Mgr Pigneau de Behaine was the main instigator of the French intervention in Vietnam from 1777 to 1824.. The French first intervened in the dynastic battles of Vietnam in 1777 when 15-year-old Prince Nguyễn Ánh, fleeing from an offensive of the Tây Sơn, received shelter from Mgr Pigneau de Behaine in the southern Principality of Hà Tiên. [1]
Dauphin Louis, eldest son of King Louis XV of France, was widowed on 22 July 1746 when his wife, Infanta Maria Teresa, died giving birth to their only child, [3] [4] a daughter named after herself. Elizabeth Farnese , Maria Teresa's mother, had offered the Dauphin another sister, Infanta Maria Antonia . [ 5 ]
Louis, Dauphin of France [1] (Louis Ferdinand; 4 September 1729 – 20 December 1765) was the elder and only surviving son of King Louis XV of France and his wife, Queen Marie Leszczyńska. As a son of the king, Louis was a fils de France .
Charles of France, Duke of Berry, (31 July 1686 – 5 May 1714) was a grandson of Louis XIV of France. Although he was only a grandson of Louis XIV, Berry held the rank of fils de France ("son of France"), rather than petit-fils de France ("grandson of France"), as the son of the Dauphin, heir apparent to the throne.