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  1. Saint Denis, the first bishop of Paris, was martyred in about 250 AD. He was buried in the cemetery of Catolacus. Denis' tomb became a place of worship. During the French Revolution in 1793, the city was renamed Franciade, and the royal necropolis was looted and destroyed. The name was changed back in 1803.

  2. Saint Denis. Saint Denis is the patron saint of France. Saint Denis was the first bishop of Paris. He supposedly went there between 250 and 270. He was executed in 272. According to legend, he was beheaded. After his beheading, he walked away, his head under his arms, along what is today the Rue des Martyrs in Paris.

  3. Seine-Saint-Denis (French pronunciation: [sɛn sɛ̃ d(ə)ni]) is a department of France located in the Grand Paris metropolis in the Île-de-France region. In French, it is often referred to colloquially as quatre-vingt treize or neuf trois ("ninety-three" or "nine three"), after its official administrative number, 93.

  4. Ruth Saint Denis. Ruth Saint Denis (nombre artístico de Ruth Dennis, Newark, New Jersey, 20 de enero de 1879 – Los Ángeles, California, 21 de julio de 1968) fue una bailarina, pedagoga y pionera de la danza moderna estadounidense .

  5. La basilica di Saint-Denis (in francese: basilique Saint-Denis) è un famoso edificio gotico, situato nell' omonimo comune della cintura di Parigi, in Francia. Dal 1966 è diventata cattedrale della diocesi di Saint-Denis. Anche se è universalmente conosciuta come la basilica di Saint-Denis, in realtà il tempio non ha il titolo di basilica ...

  6. Catedrala din Saint-Denis, cunoscută și ca Basilica Saint-Denis (în franceză Basilique Saint-Denis ), este o biserică aflată în centrul orașului Saint-Denis, acum o suburbie din nordul Parisului. Clădirea este de importanță istorică și arhitecturală, deoarece capela sa, terminată în 1144, este considerată a fi primul exemplu de ...

  7. Saint-Denis was founded in 1669 by Étienne Regnault, the first governor of Bourbon Island (as La Réunion was then called), on the northern side of the island, where a larger and more fertile plain was deemed more propitious for the development of settlements than the drier and more barren area of Saint-Paul on the western side of the island.