- the
Burgundians pillaged the town. Glanate,
known by late
Antiquity as
Glandèves became a bishopric; the
first known bishop was
Fraternus in 451 (Le Monti)...
-
Glandèves Cathedral (French: Cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-la-Sède de
Glandèves or Cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-la-Sède d'Entrevaux), now the
Chapelle de l'Hôpital...
-
Delphine of
Glandèves (or of Sabran) was born in 1284 in
region of Provence, now part of France. She died on 26
November 1358,
having lived as a Franciscan...
- taxation. In the 16th century, the bishop's
official seat at the
Glandèves Cathedral in
Glandèves was abandoned, and a new one,
Entrevaux Cathedral, was constructed...
- of
American Independence.
Glandevès was born to the
family of
Marie Hiéronyme de
Bruny and of
Charles François de
Glandevès du Castellet. He was cousin...
- 442;
Toulon in 451;
Senez in 406, Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux in 517; and
Glandèves in 541. The
oldest Christian structure still surviving in
Provence is...
-
Roman Catholic church and
former cathedral in
Glandèves, France. It was the seat of the
bishops of
Glandèves, who
moved their prin****l
residence to Entrevaux...
-
Cerchi on 24 July 1694,
Helen Enselmini on 29
October 1695 and
Delphine of
Glandèves in 1694.
Innocent XII was
already considerably ill on 25
December 1699...
- 1480–1481
Pierre de La
Jaille (see Château de Ranton) 1482–1483
Raymond de
Glandevès-Faucon 1483 Palamède de
Forbin 1485–1493
Aymar de Poitiers,
Count of Valentinois...
- a form of the
Latin Delphina,
meaning woman from Delphi.
Delphine of
Glandèves was a 14th-century nun from Provence.
Notable people with the name include:...