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Rue Saint-Lazare, a street in Paris; Gare Saint-Lazare, a railway station in Paris Réseau Saint-Lazare, a network of railway lines originating from Gare Saint Lazare; Saint-Lazare (Paris Métro), a railway station in Paris; Saint-Lazare Prison, Paris
9–10 years: 44: Francisco de Borbón y de la Torre, Duke of Seville (jure uxoris) Grand Master of the Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem: 1935: 1952: 16–17 years: Grand Bailiff of Spain, nominated as Lieutenant General of the Grand Magistry in 1930, then elected as Grand Master in 1935. 45: Francisco de Borbón y ...
10–11 years: Not usually listed by authors but a contemporary deed mentions him as being the serving magister of the Order. [3] 14: Jean de Meaux: Preceptor General of the Hospitallers of St Lazarus in Acre in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem: circa 1267: 1277: 9–10 years: He is titled Preceptor General in a charter dated 1267. [1] 15: Thomas ...
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Usage on es.wikipedia.org La estación Saint-Lazare (Monet) Anexo:Obras de Claude Monet; Usage on eu.wikipedia.org Saint-Lazareko geltokia (Monet) Usage on hr.wikipedia.org Kolodvor Saint-Lazare (Monet) Usage on ja.wikipedia.org サン=ラザール駅 (モネ) Usage on nl.wikipedia.org Le Pont de l'Europe (Monet) Usage on pt.wikipedia.org
The military order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem originated in a leper hospital founded in the twelfth century by crusaders of the Latin Kingdom. There had been earlier leper hospitals in the East, of which the Knights of St. Lazarus claimed to be the continuation, in order to have the appearance of remote antiquity and to pass as the oldest of all orders.
The Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem (Latin: Ordo Militaris et Hospitalis Sancti Lazari Hierosolymitani) is a Christian order that was statuted in 1910 by a council of Catholics in Paris, France, initially under the protection of Patriarch Cyril VIII Geha of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church. [7]
A special commission had found that the Réseau État Saint-Lazare was in need of electrification on the railway lines to Saint-Germain, Versailles Rive Droite, Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche, Puteaux, Issy-les-Moulineaux and Argenteuil. The Chemins de fer de l'Ouest and then the Chemin de fer de l'État from 1909 had worked towards that goal by ...