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Louis VI (1 December 1081 – 1 August 1137), called the Fat [1] (French: le Gros) or the Fighter (French: le Batailleur), was King of the Franks from 1108 to 1137. [2] Like his father Philip I , Louis made a lasting contribution to centralizing the institutions of royal power. [ 3 ]
Pierre Le Gros (12 April 1666 Paris – 3 May 1719 Rome) was a French sculptor, active almost exclusively in Baroque Rome where he was the pre-eminent sculptor for nearly two decades. [ 1 ] : 18
Coronation of Louis VI of France, called the Fat (French: le Gros). Marie was around 1080, perhaps near Longpont, she was the daughter of a knight, Renaud de Breuillet de Dourdan. [1] [2] She had three brothers, two of whom, N.N. de Brueillet and Godefroy de Breuillet became monks of the Longpont Abbey. [3]
Louis Le Gros (31 December 1893 in Gorée, Senegal – 10 September 1969 in Nice, France) was a politician from Senegal who served in the French Senate from 1952–1958.
Louis Le Gros laid siege to it in 1122 and destroyed it. Medieval city. Guy de Dampierre seized the town in 1212 on behalf of Philip II of France, which made the city ...
Children with Mirror, 1685–86, Versailles, Park, Bassin du Midi. In Paris, Le Gros entered the workshop of Jacques Sarazin as a pupil and later close assistant. He was working on the large funeral monument for the heart of the prince de Condé in the 1650s and, after Sarazin's death in 1660, took on the responsibility to erect the monument in the chapelle St.-Ignace of the Jesuit church ...
Louis Gros may refer to: Louis Prosper Gros (1893–1973), flying ace during World War I; Louis Le Gros (1893–1969), politician from Senegal
Louis Philippe I, Duke of Orléans (12 May 1725 – 18 November 1785), known as le Gros (the Fat), was a French royal of a cadet branch of the House of Bourbon.The First Prince of the Blood after 1752, he was the most senior male at the French court after the immediate royal family.