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Jules Destrée (French: [dɛstʁe]; Marcinelle, 21
August 1863 – Brussels, 3
January 1936) was a
Walloon lawyer,
cultural critic and
socialist politician...
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Julien Destrée (or Destrez) was a 17th-century
French master cabinet-maker and architect.
Julien Destrée was
registered as a
bourgeois from
Lille in 1634...
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Joseph Destrée (3
August 1853 — 26
March 1932) was a
Belgian art historian. Born in Dinant, he
received a
degree in
philosophy and
letters from what is...
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Destrée (1867-1919) was a
Benedictine monk, a French-language poet, and a
Belgian literary critic. He was the
brother of the
politician Jules Destrée...
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Johannes Josephus Destrée (27
March 1827 in
Laeken - 17
March 1888 in The Hague) was a
Belgian landscape artist.
According to the RKD he was a
pupil of...
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Marie Destrée-Danse (February 19, 1866 – May 31, 1942) was a
Belgian painter-etcher and the wife of the art
historian and
politician Jules Destrée. Danse...
- 2 f.;
Pierre Destrée: The
Daimonion and the
Philosophical Mission –
Should the
Divine Sign
Remain Unique to Socrates? In:
Pierre Destrée,
Nicholas D....
- in Encyclopédie du
Mouvement wallon, Tome II, Charleroi,
Institut Jules Destrée, 2000, ISBN 2-87035-019-8 (or 2d ed., CD-ROM, 2003, ISBN 2-87035-028-7)...
- Burnet, Plato's Euthyprho,
Apology of Socrates, and Crito; p. 63, P.
Destrée, "The
Daimonion and the
Philosophical Mission",
Apeiron vol. 38 no. 2,...
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consisted of a
curved armor deck that was 38 to 43 mm (1.5 to 1.7 in) thick.
Destrées was
built at the ****nal de
Rochefort in Rochefort, France; her keel was...