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Le Patriote résistant, n°578 et 579 (janvier 1988) Delarue, Jacques [in French] (1968). "Part III La destruction du Vieux-Port de Marseille" [The Destruction of the Old Port of Marseille]. Trafics et crimes sous l'occupation [Trafficking and Crimes Under the Occupation] (in French). Paris: Fayard. pp. 237– 275. OCLC 3329965
Yakov M. Rabkin, Au nom de la Torah : une histoire de l’opposition juive au sionisme: 2007: Nigel Spencer: Augustino and the Choir of Destruction: Marie-Claire Blais, Augustino et le chœur de la déstruction: Sheila Fischman: My Sister's Blue Eyes: Jacques Poulin, Les Yeux bleus de Mistassini: Robert Majzels, Erín Moure: Notebook of Roses ...
Pair of shell cases enscribed with the names Hurlus and Tahure. Auve [1]; Beauséjour, Marne; Bignicourt-sur-Saultz (3/33 homes remained) [1] 30 men and 45 women and children were taken captive.
On May 23, following the announcement by Jean-François Carenco (Minister Delegate for Overseas Territories) that “Operation Wuambushu could end within two or three months with a return to mainland police and gendarmes dispatched", several elected officials from Mahor expressed in a column in Le Monde their concern about this "admission of ...
The French historian Henri Amouroux in La Grande histoire des Français sous l’Occupation, says that 20,000 civilians were killed in Calvados department, 10,000 in Seine-Maritime, 14,800 in the Manche, 4,200 in the Orne, around 3,000 in the Eure. All together, that makes more than 50,000 killed.
(in French) Jean-Hugues Oppel, Réveillez le président, Éditions Payot et rivages, 2007 (ISBN 978-2-7436-1630-4). The book is a fiction about the nuclear weapons of France; the book also contains about ten chapters on true historical incidents involving nuclear weapons and strategy (during the second half of the twentieth century).
The Charter for the Environment (French: Charte de l'environnement) is a constitutional law of France approved in 2005, forming part of the constitutional block (bloc de constitutionnalité) of French law having the same force as the Constitution.
Following the insurrection of 18 March 1871, which sparked off the Paris Commune, France found itself in a situation of civil war, on the one hand, the government led by Adolphe Thiers, who had fled to Versailles, where the National Assembly also sat in support of him, and on the other the Paris Commune, which ruled Paris alone, [7] despite attempts by insurrectionary communes in the provinces.