- was
originally known as En
Marche ! (EM) and
later La République En
Marche ! (transl. The
Republic on the Move, LREM,
LaREM or REM),
before adopting...
- The
County of
La Marche (French pronunciation: [maʁʃ] ; Occitan:
la Marcha) was a
medieval French county,
approximately corresponding to the
modern département...
-
Almodis de
la Marche (c. 1020 – 16
October 1071) was a
French noble famed for her marriages. She and her
third husband,
Ramon Berenguer I,
Count of Barcelona...
-
Marche (/ˈmɑːrkeɪ/ MAR-kay; Italian: [ˈmarke] ), in
English sometimes referred to as the
Marches (/ˈmɑːrtʃɪz/ MAR-chiz), is one of the
twenty regions of...
- Lord of
Lusignan and
Count of
La Marche (as Hugh I), the son and
successor of Hugh
V of
Lusignan and
Almodis de
la Marche.
Despite his piety, Hugh was...
-
La Marche is a cave and
archaeological site
located in Lussac-les-Châteaux, a
commune in the
department of Vienne,
western France. It is an archaeological...
-
Ramis in the
films Ghostbusters and
Ghostbusters II,
voiced by
Maurice LaMarche in the
animated television series The Real
Ghostbusters and
Extreme Ghostbusters...
- Hugh X de
Lusignan or Hugh
V of
La Marche (c. 1183 – c. 5 June 1249, Angoulême) was
Seigneur de
Lusignan and
Count of
La Marche in
November 1219 and was...
-
La Marche (French pronunciation: [
la maʁʃ]) is a
commune in the Nièvre
department in
central France.
La Marche station has rail
connections to
Nevers and...
-
La Longue marche is a 1966
French drama film
directed by
Alexandre Astruc,
starring Robert Hossein, Jean-Louis
Trintignant and
Maurice Ronet. The narrative...