Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Claudine de Tencin była cenioną powieściopisarką. Za największe zalety jej powieści uznawano prostotę i wdzięk – przymioty, których trudno było się spodziewać po twórczości osoby o takim życiorysie. Za najlepszą z powieści pani de Tencin uznawana jest Mémoires du comte de Comminge (1735), co do której jednak istnieją ...

  2. TENCIN, CLAUDINE ALEXANDRINE GUERIN DE (1681–1749), French courtesan and author, was born at Grenoble. Her father, Antoine Guerin, sieur de Tencin, was president of the parlement of Grenoble. Claudine was brought up at a convent near Grenoble and, at the wish of her parents, took the veil, but broke her vows and succeeded, in 1714, in gaining formal permission from the pope for her ...

  3. Correspondance du Cardinal de Tencin et de Mdme de Tencin avec le duc de Richelieu, sur les intrigues de la cour de France Collection de Mémoires historiques du règne de Louis XV., de Duclos, de Massillon etc: Authors: Pierre Guérin de Tencin, Claudine Alexandrine Guérin de Tencin: Published: 1790: Original from: the Bavarian State Library ...

  4. In 1756 Charlotte Lennox, already a celebrated novelist—she had just published her most renowned work, The Female Quixote, a year before—translated from the original French one of the most successful novels written by Madame Claudine Gérin, the marquise de Tencin, Mémoires du comte de Comminge (1735).

  5. Works about de Tencin [edit] " Tencin, Claudine Guérin de ," in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed., 1911) Some or all works by this author were published before January 1, 1929, and are in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

  6. "Claudine-Alexandrine Guérin Tencin, marquise de" published on by null. (1681–1749).For decades this sometime nun was notorious for her sexual indiscretions, often documented (d'Alembert was the illegitimate son of her affair with a Chevalier Destouches) and more often wildly ...

  7. Claudine Alexandrine Sophie Guérin de Tencin, baronne de Saint-Martin de l’isle de Ré, née le 27 avril 1682 à Grenoble, morte le 4 décembre 1749 à Paris, est une femme de lettres tenant un célèbre salon littéraire de l'époque. Elle est la mère de Jean d'Alembert.