People from Aude

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Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 39. Chapters: People from Carcassonne, People from Castelnaudary, People from Limoux, People from Narbonne, Bérenger Saunière, Armand Barbès, Charles Trenet, Louis Belmas, Georges Canguilhem, Fabre d'Églantine, Olivia Ruiz, Henry... Viac o knihe

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Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 39. Chapters: People from Carcassonne, People from Castelnaudary, People from Limoux, People from Narbonne, Bérenger Saunière, Armand Barbès, Charles Trenet, Louis Belmas, Georges Canguilhem, Fabre d'Églantine, Olivia Ruiz, Henry de Monfreid, Jean-François Roberval, Jean-Joseph de Mondonville, Albert Fert, Francis de Gaston, Chevalier de Levis, Makhir of Narbonne, Gilbert Benausse, Moses ha-Darshan, Gérard Schivardi, Bernard-Georges-François Frère, Jean Cau, Paul of Narbonne, Dimitri Szarzewski, Ferdinand Alquié, Philippe de Rigaud Vaudreuil, Ferréol of Uzès, Yusuf ibn 'Abd al-Rahman al-Fihri, Joseph ben Samuel Bonfils, Bonfilh, Rusticus of Narbonne, Joël Prévost, David Kimhi, Michael Martchenko, Alexandre Guiraud, Guilhem Fabre, Franck Tournaire, Prosper Montagné, Antoine-François Andréossy, Jean Paul de Gua de Malves, Eugène Py, Raymond Brutinel, Joë Bousquet, Guillaume Bélibaste, André Dufraisse, Aaron ben Jacob ha-Kohen, Oliver de Termes, Alexandre Soumet, André Héléna, Fra' Moriale, Antoine Marfan, Guillaume Bouzignac, Paul Guiraud, Renat Nelli, Geoffrey Doumeng, Nicolas Raynier, Moses ben Joseph ben Merwan ha-Levi, Bernart Alanhan de Narbona, Abdelkader Bouhenia, Claudi Martí, Jean-Claude Perez, Jean-Paul Dupré, Kalonymus ben Todros, René Araou, Isaac ben Merwan ha-Levi, Jacques Bascou, Théophile Barrau, Benjamin Lariche, Louis-Félix Amiel, Miló of Narbonne, Uthman ibn Naissa, Radulf of Narbonne, Gilbert of Narbonne. Excerpt: François Bérenger Saunière (April 11, 1852 - January 22, 1917) was a priest in the French village of Rennes-le-Château, in the Aude region, officially from 1885 to 1909 (when he was transferred to another village by his bishop, that he declined and subsequently resigned) and after 1909, until his death in 1917, in the role of Free Priest (a priest working independently without a parish). The epitaph on Saunière's original 1917 gravestone read that he was 'priest of Rennes-le-Château 1885-1917'. From 1909 Bérenger Saunière held masses in an altar constructed in his Villa Bethania. He would be unknown today if not for the fact that he is a central figure in many of the conspiracy theories surrounding Rennes-le-Château. These speculations form the basis of several pseudohistorical documentaries and books such as the 1982 Holy Blood, Holy Grail by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, and Henry Lincoln. Many elements of these theories were later used by Dan Brown in his best-selling 2003 novel The Da Vinci Code, in which the fictional character Jacques Saunière is named after the priest. Grave in Rennes-le-ChâteauFrançois Bérenger Saunière was born on April 11, 1852 in Montazels, in the Arrondissement of Limoux of the Aude region. He was the eldest of seven children, having three brothers (Alfred, Martial, and Joseph) and three sisters (Mathilde, Adeline, and Marie-Louise). He was the son of Marguerite Hugues and Joseph Saunière (1823-1906), also called "cubié", who was the mayor of Montazels (Aude), managed the local flour mill, and was the steward of Marquis de Cazermajou's castle. Alfred became a priest; Joseph wanted to be a physician but died at 25. Bérenger, for his part, was an athlete and regarded as insolent, independent and fundamentalist, and routinely rebelled against hierarchy. He went to school at St. Louis in Limoux, entered the seminary in Carcassonne in 1874, and was ordained as a priest in June, 1879. From July 16, 1879 until 1882, he was a vicar in another

  • Vydavateľstvo: Books LLC, Reference Series
  • Formát: Paperback
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  • ISBN: 9781156704240

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