- Orélie-Antoine de
Tounens (born
Antoine Tounens) (12 May 1825 – 17
September 1878) was a
French avoué and
adventurer who
proclaimed by two
decrees on...
- Rodríguez,
commander of the
Chilean troops, to
arrest Antoine de
Tounens on
January 5, 1862.
Tounens was then
imprisoned and
declared insane on
September 2, 1862...
- and Patagonia. In 1981, his
novel Moi,
Antoine de
Tounens, roi de
Patagonie (I,
Antoine of
Tounens, King of Patagonia) won the
Grand Prix du
Roman (award...
-
asked the
nephew of
Antoine de
Tounens to give up the
throne of Araucanía,
invoking the last
wishes of
Antoine de
Tounens. Previously, on
August 28, 1873...
- He was
deposed in 1979. In 1860, a
French adventurer, Orélie-Antoine de
Tounens,
proclaimed the "Kingdom of Araucanía" in
Chile with the
support of local...
- de
Tounens, roi de
Patagonie is a 1981
novel by the
French writer Jean Raspail. It
tells the
story of the
French adventurer Orélie-Antoine de
Tounens, who...
-
Buenos Aires in 1871,
reportedly this had been
ordered by Orélie-Antoine de
Tounens, the so-called King of Araucanía and Patagonia.
Following the
model of...
-
Indigenous peoples of the region. In 1860,
French adventurer Orelie-Antoine de
Tounens proclaimed himself king of the
Kingdom of Araucanía and
Patagonia of the...
-
Antoine de
Tounens,
first "king of
Araucania and Patagonia" did not
justify his
status of sovereign.
Since the
death of
Antoine de
Tounens,
seven French...
- guard, so you don't have to say: 'If only I'd known!'": 159 Tann jis nou
tounen pwa tann To wait
forever (lit. "left
hanging until we
became string beans"...