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  1. 12 de oct. de 2018 · Charles Maurice de Talleyrand (born February 2, 1754, in Paris, France—died May 17, 1838, in Paris), was a defrocked French Bishop, diplomat, foreign minister, and politician. Alternately renowned and reviled for his tactical skills of political survival, Talleyrand served at the highest levels of the French government for nearly half a century during the reign of King Louis XVI, the French ...

  2. Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord, más conocido como Talleyrand /talɛˈʀɑ̃/, ( París, 2 de febrero de 1754- ibídem, 17 de mayo de 1838) fue un sacerdote, obispo, político, diplomático y estadista francés, de extrema relevancia e influencia en los acontecimientos de finales del siglo XVIII e inicios del XIX, que logró ...

  3. Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord fue un político francés (París, 1754-1838). Este anfitrión fastuoso albergaba una mesa que estaba considerada una de las primeras de Europa. De hecho, tuvo a su servicio al célebre pastelero Avice y a Antonin Carême, de cuyo éxito fue en gran parte responsable. Con su chef Bouchée, que procedía de la casa del príncipe de Condé, Talleyrand ...

  4. 9 de may. de 2018 · TALLEYRAND, CHARLES MAURICE DE (1754–1838), arguably the most famous diplomat that France ever produced. Charles Maurice de Talleyrand -Périgord was born in Paris on 2 February, the son of a noble army officer. Neglected by his parents, as a young boy he sustained a foot injury that gave him a limp for the rest of his life, thus ruling out ...

  5. Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord ONLH OSE ( Paris, 2 de fevereiro de 1754 – Paris, 17 de maio de 1838) foi um político e diplomata francês. Ele ocupou em quatro ocasiões diferentes o cargo de Ministro dos Negócios Estrangeiros e também foi o primeiro Primeiro-Ministro da França entre julho e setembro de 1815 sob Luís XVIII depois da restauração francesa .

  6. Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, (born Feb. 2, 1754, Paris, France—died May 17, 1838, Paris), French statesman. Ordained a priest, he became bishop of Autun in 1788. Elected to represent the clergy at the Estates-General (1789), he became the “bishop of the Revolution” by calling for confiscation of church property to fund the new ...