- Jean-Baptiste
Nompère de Champagny, 1st duc de
Cadore (4
August 1756 – 3 July 1834) was a
French admiral and politician. He was born in Roanne, Loire...
- (1799–1804)
Preceded by Charles-Frédéric
Reinhard Succeeded by Jean-Baptiste de
Nompère de
Champagny In
office 15 July 1797 – 20 July 1799 Head of
State Directory...
-
rebracketed to 'an adder' (just as 'a napron'
became 'an apron' and 'a
nompere'
changed into 'an umpire'). In
keeping with its wide
distribution and familiarity...
-
Louis Alix de
Nompère de
Champagny (12 June 1796, Saint-Vincent-de-Boisset - 27
January 1870, Boulogne-sur-Seine) was a
French politician and diplomat...
- Jews who
accepted non-Jews as
their equals. In a
letter to Jean-Baptiste
Nompère de Champagny,
Minister of the
Interior on 29
November 1806,
Napoleon wrote:...
-
Political offices Preceded by
Lucien Bonaparte Minister of the
Interior 1800–1804 Succeeded by Jean-Baptiste
Nompère de Champagny...
-
educational reformer, and
saint in the
Roman Catholic Church Jean-Baptiste de
Nompère de Champagny, 1st Duc de Cadore,
French admiral and
politician Jean-Baptiste...
- Talleyrand,
prince de Bénévent 22
November 1799 9
August 1807 Jean-Baptiste
Nompère de Champagny, duc de
Cadore 9
August 1807 17
April 1811
Hugues Bernard...
- In cricket, an
umpire (from the Old
French nompere meaning not a peer, i.e. not a
member of one of the teams, impartial) is a
person who has the authority...
- Édouard Mortier, Duc de Trévise, 1808 (extinct in 1912) Jean-Baptiste
Nompère de Champagny, Duc de Cadore, (extinct in 1893)
Nicolas Oudinot, Duc de...