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  1. The governmental history of Louis XIV’s reign is customarily divided into two parts: 1643 to 1661 when Mazarin was chief minister, and 1661 to 1715 when Louis XIV ruled personally. This demarcation possesses a certain logic, but we should perceive the ‘personal reign’ as an extension or development of the first period, not as a reaction against it.

  2. Hardcover Book USD 69.99 USD 139.99. 50% discount Price excludes VAT (USA) Durable hardcover edition. Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days. Free shipping worldwide -. Applications and the richness of approaches to the Riordan group is captured in this comprehensive monograph, authored by world experts in this field.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LudovingiansLudovingians - Wikipedia

    Information board at the ruins of the Ludovingian family castle, the Schauenburg near Friedrichroda. The Ludovingians or Ludowingians ( German: Ludowinger) were the ruling dynasty of Thuringia and Hesse during the 11th to 13th centuries. Their progenitor was Louis the Bearded who was descended from a noble family whose genealogy cannot be ...

  4. Louis the Stammerer. Louis II, known as Louis the Stammerer ( French: Louis le Bègue; 1 November 846 – 10 April 879), was the king of Aquitaine and later the king of West Francia. He was the eldest son of Emperor Charles the Bald and Ermentrude of Orléans. [1] Louis the Stammerer was physically weak and outlived his father by a year and a half.

  5. USS RHODE ISLAND Blue (SSBN 740) Mar 2013 - Jul 2015 2 years 5 months. Kings Bay, GA. • Led 160 personnel and managed a $2.5M annual budget, including all operations, maintenance, logistics, and ...

    • Sargent Aerospace & Defense
  6. Louis the Springer (German: Ludwig der Springer) sometimes called Louis the Jumper also known as Louis of Schauenburg (1042 – 1123 in Reinhardsbrunn) was a German nobleman. He was the ruling count of Thuringia from 1056 until his death. Little is known about him although he is mentioned in many legends.

  7. The Free World, Louis Menand’s diffuse, voluminous history of “art and thought in the Cold War,” attempts to enfold between its covers the whole cosmos of enterprise and achievement that defined American postwar culture, from Elvis Presley and the Beatles to Stephen Sondheim and Leonard Bernstein, from Jean-Paul Sartre and the French Existentialists to Jackson Pollock and the Abstract ...