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  2. Perrier-Jouët - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perrier-Jouët

    Perrier-Jouët advertisement from 1923. Perrier-Jouët ([pɛʁje ʒuɛt]) is a Champagne producer based in the Épernay region of ChampagneThe house was founded in 1811 by Pierre-Nicolas Perrier and Rose Adélaide Jouët, and produces both vintage and non-vintage cuvee, approximately 3,000,000 bottles annually, with its prestige label named Belle Epoque.

  3. Casimir Pierre Périer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casimir_Pierre_Périer

    Casimir-Pierre Périer (11 October 1777 – 16 May 1832) was a French banker, mine owner, political leader and statesman. In business, through his bank in Paris and ownership of the Anzin Coal Co. in the Department of Nord , he contributed significantly to the economic development of France in the early stages of industrialization.

  4. Claude Perier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Perier

    But he loved them and saw to it that they had allowances. He ceded them income-providing properties. As for Claude's death, Bourset references the matter-of-fact report in the Duc d'Audiffret-Pasquier's Notices historiques sur la famille Perier (Paris, 1844), that "he died for having spent an hour in his unheated study wearing a mere dressing ...

  5. Pereire brothers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pereire_brothers

    Isaac and Émile Pereire. Émile Pereire (3 December 1800, Bordeaux - 5 January 1875, Paris) and his brother Isaac Pereire (25 November 1806, Bordeaux – 12 July 1880, Gretz-Armainvilliers) were major figures in the development of France's finance and infrastructure during the Second French Empire. [1]

  6. Jean Casimir-Perier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Casimir-Perier

    Jean Casimir-Perier was born in Paris on 8 November 1847, the son of Auguste Casimir-Perier, the grandson of Casimir Pierre Perier, premier of Louis Philippe, and the great grandson of Claude Périer, one of the founders of the Bank of France.

  7. Chapelle royale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapelle_royale

    On the 1683 retirement of Henry Du Mont and Pierre Robert the position of maître of the chapelle was divided into four positions: Pascal Collasse (1649–1709), sous-maître from 1683 to 1704, assistant to Lully until 1683, when he won one of the four seasonal assignments into which the Chapelle Royale directorship had been divided.

  8. Pierre-Nicolas Chantreau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre-Nicolas_Chantreau

    Pierre Nicolas Chantreau, called don Chantreau, (1741, in Paris – 25 October 1808, in Auch) was an 18th-century French historian, journalist, grammarian and lexicographer. Biography [ edit ]

  9. Eugène Pierre Nicolas Fournier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugène_Pierre_Nicolas...

    Eugène Pierre Nicolas Fournier. Eugène Pierre Nicolas Fournier (15 February 1834, Paris – 10 June 1884) was a French botanist. [1] He was particularly interested in ferns. He was a member of the Société Royale de Botanique de Belgique. The genus Fourniera (family Cyatheaceae) is named in his honor. [2]