-
Almire Gandonnière (3
August 1814, Loué – 25
October 1863, San Francisco) was a
French writer,
remembered today only as the
collaborator with
Hector Berlioz...
- al-kafiir),
alkansiya (alcancia, al-kanziyya),
aldaba (aldaba, al-dabba),
almires (almirez, al-mihras),
baryo (barrio, al-barri),
kapre (cafre, kafir), kisame...
- 730415 (Talabong-Pansacola
Ancestral House)
Almires-Clemente
Ancestral House Ancestral house of the
Almires-Clemente Family, and
residence of Regional...
- of
Almire, a once
prosperous and
beautiful land of
forests and plains, was
ruled by the late Lord Vanaduke.
Neighbouring kingdoms feared Almire's growing...
- from Sp.
alcachofa and
ultimately from
Arabic الخُرْشُوف, al-ḵuršūf),
almires (meaning
small mortar, from Sp.
almirez and
ultimately from
Arabic المِهْرَاس...
- Morvan, Les
Chouans de la Mayenne. 1792 - 1796, Lévy, Paris, 1900 Abbé
Almire Belin (dir.), La Révolution dans le Maine.
Revue bimestrielle, Imprimerie...
- the
material in 1845, to make a
larger work, with some
additional text by
Almire Gandonnière to Berlioz's specifications, that he
first called a "concert...
- corde : Mme
Saqui (1786-1866) (in French). Fasquelle. p. 139.. Lepelletier,
Almire René
Jacques (1876). Traité
complet de
physiologie à l'usage des gens du...
- (1829–1905). He was born in Peoria, IL and he had
three younger sisters;
Almire "Myra"
Johnson (1853–1883), Emma
Rebecca Johnson (1855–1904) and Sophie...
- he was
martyred by the
Arian Visigoths (c. 554)
Saint Almirus (Almer,
Almire), born in
Auvergne in France, he
finally went to live as a
hermit at Gréez-sur-Roc...