Definition of Franquemont. Meaning of Franquemont. Synonyms of Franquemont

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Franquemont. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Franquemont and, of course, Franquemont synonyms and on the right images related to the word Franquemont.

Definition of Franquemont

No result for Franquemont. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Franquemont from wikipedia

- Franquemont is an ancient lordship on the banks of the river Doubs dominated by the castle of Franquemont. It comprised the river banks from le Theusseret...
- Friedrich von Franquemont (5 March 1770 – 2 January 1842) was a Württembergian general during the Napoleonic Wars and later a Württemberg State Secretary...
- Abigail M. Franquemont (born 1972) is an American textile crafts writer, lecturer and educator, based in Cusco, Peru. She spent her early childhood among...
- Franquemont may refer to: Franquemont, ancient lordship on the banks of the river Doubs in present France and Switzerland Abby Franquemont (born 1972)...
- von Franquemont (1797–1868), who lived in Ceylon and married Matthias Johann August David von Franquemont (1795-1844) Karoline Luise von Franquemont (Samarang...
- and in hand spindles or merging this category into others, such as Franquemont's approach of classing them as supported spindles. Grasped spindles remain...
- Chris Franquemont lived among the Chinchero people during the 1970s, studying traditional textile production techniques. Their daughter Abby Franquemont, having...
- popcorn machine in 1885 Greg Demos, b**** player for Guided by Voices Abby Franquemont, writer, revivalist of the art of hand spinning with a spindle George...
- 1867, in the workshop owned by batik pioneer Carolina Josephina von Franquemont (1817–1867). Photo courtesy of the Queen Sirikit Museum of Textiles,...
- d'Orsay, a Bonapartist general. His mother was Baroness Eleonore von Franquemont, an illegitimate daughter of the Duke of Württemberg and the Italian...