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Paul Dubois was born on the 18 July 1829 in Nogent-sur-Seine, France.He began studying law to please his father who practiced as a notary, but gave this up in order to train as a sculptor; his enthusiasm for this possibly fanned by the admiration he had for the work of his great-uncle Jean-Baptiste Pigalle. [1]
Paul Dubois may refer to: Paul Dubois (sculptor) (1829–1905), French sculptor; Paul Antoine Dubois (1795–1871), French obstetrician; Paul Charles Dubois (1848–1918), Swiss neuropathologist; Paul Dubois (diplomat) (born 1943), Canadian ambassador to Germany; Paul Élie Dubois, French Orientalist painter; Paul Du Bois (1859–1938), Belgian ...
Paul Du Bois (French pronunciation: [pɔl dy bwa]; 1859–1938) was a Belgian sculptor and medalist, born in Aywaille, and died in Uccle, a municipality of Brussels . Du Bois was a student of Eugène Simonis and Charles van der Stappen .
Paul Charles Dubois (French pronunciation: [pɔl ʃaʁl dybwa]; 28 November 1848 – 4 November 1918) was a Swiss neuropathologist who was a native of La Chaux-de-Fonds. Dubois studied medicine at the University of Bern , and in 1876 was a general practitioner of medicine in Bern .
Military Courage is a bronze statue, by Paul Dubois. It is located in the West Garden, at Mount Vernon Place, Baltimore. [1] The statue is a copy of the original, on the Cenotaph of General Jucault de Lamoricière in Nantes Cathedral, given by William Thompson Walters. A reduced example is in the Walters Art Museum. [2]
Paul Dubois (born 1943 in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec) is a Canadian diplomat who served as the Ambassador of Canada to Germany from 2002 to 2008.
Paul-Alexis Dubois (French pronunciation: [pɔl alɛksi dybwa]; 27 January 1754 – 4 September 1796) commanded French divisions during the War of the First Coalition and was killed in action fighting against Habsburg Austria. He enlisted in a French infantry regiment in 1770 and transferred into the cavalry in 1776.
Jean-Paul Dubois in 2016. Jean-Paul Dubois (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ pɔl dybwa]; born 1950 in Toulouse, Haute-Garonne) is a French journalist and author. [1] He won the Prix Goncourt in 2019 for Tous les hommes n'habitent pas le monde de la même façon ("All Men Do Not Inhabit This World in the Same Way"), a novel told from the perspective of a prisoner looking back on life.