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  1. Coralie Grévy, née Coralie Marie Louise Eudoxie Fraisse le 13 août 1811 à Narbonne et morte le 1er mars 1893 à Mont-sous-Vaudrey, est l'épouse de Jules Grévy, président de la République française du 30 janvier 1879 au 2 décembre 1887 .

    • Coralie Marie Louise Eudoxie Fraisse
    • Cécile Carnot
  2. Coralie Grévy (1811–1893) was the wife of President of France Jules Grévy. [1] She was born Coralie Fraisse in 1811, and was the daughter of a leatherworker in Narbonne. [1] She married Jules Grévy in 1848, and they had one daughter, Alice. In 1881, Alice married the Deputy President, Daniel Wilson. [1]

  3. Se casa en 1848 con Coralie Grévy —su apellido de nacimiento era Fraisse—, con la cual tiene una hija, de nombre Alice (1849-1938). Su carrera política comienza con la revolución de 1848, cuando es nombrado comisario de la República. Es elegido diputado en abril de 1848, en la asamblea constituyente.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jules_GrévyJules Grévy - Wikipedia

    • Early Life and Career
    • Second Republic
    • Third Republic
    • Presidency
    • Personal Life
    • Further Reading

    Grévy was born on 15 August 1807 in Mont-sous-Vaudrey, in the department of Jura, into a republican family. His paternal grandfather, Nicolas Grévy (1736–1812), the son of farmers from Aumont, moved to Mont-sous-Vaudrey during the French Revolution, where he bought the property of la Grangerie. He was a justice of the peace. Grévy's parents were Fr...

    In 1848, a revolution in France abolished the July Monarchy and led to the creation of the Second Republic, and with it Grévy was appointed Commissioner of the Republic for the department of Jura. In April 1848 he was elected by that department for a seat in the constituent National Assembly. On the signed declaration for his candidacy, Grévy deman...

    Grévy resumed his political career in the last years of the Empire. In 1868 he was elected to the Corps législatif, where he quickly emerged as a leader of the liberal opposition. Along with Adolphe Thiers and Léon Gambetta he opposed the declaration of the Franco-Prussian War, in 1870, and condemned the socialist insurrection of the Paris Commune....

    Throughout his presidency, Grévy sought to minimize his powers and instead favored a strong legislature. On 6 February 1879, shortly after taking office, he made a speech before the Chambers where he explained his vision of the role of President: “Subject with sincerity to the great law of the parliamentary regime, I will never enter into battle ag...

    Grévy married in 1848 to Coralie Frassie, the daughter of a tanner from Narbonne.They had one daughter, Alice (1849–1938), who married Daniel Wilson in 1881. He died in his hometown of Mont-sous-Vaudrey on 9 September 1891, following a pulmonary edema. His state funeralwas held on 14 September. Initiated at the masonic lodge "La Constante Amitié" i...

    Bell, David, et al. eds. Biographical dictionary of French political leaders since 1870(1990) pp 189-190.
    Palmer, Michael. "Daniel Wilson and the decorations scandal of 1887." Modern & Contemporary France 1.2 (1993): 139-150. online
  5. Jules Grévy se marie le 29 août 1848 à Paris, avec Coralie Fraisse, fille d'un négociant tanneur de Narbonne. Ils ont une fille : Alice (1849-1938). Jules Ferry fut plus tard témoin du mariage de sa fille avec Daniel Wilson, en 1881 3 .

  6. Grévy's zebra ( Equus grevyi ), also known as the imperial zebra, is the largest living wild equid and the most threatened of the three species of zebra, the other two being the plains zebra and the mountain zebra. Named after Jules Grévy, it is found in parts of Kenya and Ethiopia.

  7. Jules Grévy. François-Judith-Paul Grévy (* 15. August 1807 in Mont-sous-Vaudrey, Département Jura; † 9. September 1891 ebenda) war französischer Anwalt und Politiker. Er war Staatspräsident von 1879 bis 1887.