1000 resultados para King, Billie Jean


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Ancien possesseur : Argenson, Antoine-René de Voyer (1722-1787 ; marquis de Paulmy d')

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Incomplet de la fin. — Le dernier feuillet contient le compte des « ouvraiges fais à Cressy, pour le retenue, reparacion et entretenement du molin de lad. ville appartenant au Roy nostre sire et mons. le duc de Bourgongne, en l'année » 1461-1462. (Cf. A. de Champeaux et P. Gauchery. Les travaux d'art exécutés pour Jean de France, duc de Berry, Paris, 1894, in-4°.)

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Interrogatoires de Guillaume Perrin, procureur au parlement (fol. 1), — Jean Fiot, conseiller (fol. 7), — Pierre « Quarrey, » conseiller (fol. 13), — Jean Pouier, procureur (fol. 33), — Jean Lavisey (fol. 41), — Bénigne Desgaud, receveur de la Sainte-Chapelle (fol. 75), — Jacques La Verne (fol. 107), — etc.

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Ex-libris : 1er f. de parchemin : « liber sancti petri corbeie » ; — au verso du 1er f. de parchemin : « Liber S. Petri Corbeiensis » ; — f.1 : « Sti Germani a Pratis »

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Popularizing science without the support of scholars. Jean Lanteires and the Journal de Lausanne (1786-1792). - Founded in 1786 by Jean Lanteires, the Journal de Lausanne is a widespread, weekly journal with the express aim of disseminating scientific knowledge among the lower and middle classes. Its articles are easily comprehensible and cover a wide range of topics from literature to agriculture, from natural sciences to charity. Considerable space is given to reader's questions and comments. The journal can be situated somewhere between an almanac and a scientific journal. Lanteires' attempt to solicit contributions from scholars of medicine and natural sciences received a dismissive response. Of the few articles written by specialists, the majority deal with agriculture and charity. Lanteires' difficult relationship with the scholarly community is reflected in the journal's content. This makes the Journal de Lausanne a privileged observatory for studying the social context of the vulgarization process in late-eighteenth-century Switzerland and Europe.