-
favourably noted. The year
before the
French Revolution broke out, he and
Champcenetz published a lampoon,
titled Petit Almanach de nos
grands hommes pour...
-
Louis René
Quentin de Richebourg,
marquis de
Champcenetz (1723-1813), was a
French official. He was
governor of the
Tuileries Palace at the time of the...
- Louis-Quentin de Richebourg,
Marquis de
Champcenetz (father of
Louis René
Quentin de
Richebourg de
Champcenetz).
Through her
personal friend Diane de Polignac...
-
Louis René
Quentin de
Richebourg de
Champcenetz; (1759, in
Paris – 23 July 1794, Paris) was a
French journalist guillotined for his writings. He was the...
- Véry [fr] as
Pulcherie the Cook
Rosette as
Franchette Léonard
Cobiant as
Champcenetz François
Marthouret as
Dumouriez Caroline Morin as
Nanon Marie Rivière...
- also
containing Nicolas Chamfort,
Antoine de Rivarol,
Louis René de
Champcenetz, etc. On the
other hand he has the
credit of
caring for Jean-Jacques...
- thereafter.
Edited by
Antoine de Rivarol, its
contributors included Louis de
Champcenetz, Gérard de Lally-Tollendal, the
Comte de Montlosier, Jean-Gabriel Peltier...
-
Muses was both much
ridiculed and much imitated. Mercier,
Rivarol and
Champcenetz never hesitated to
attack it,
dubbing it L'Almanach des
Buses ("Almanac...
- anti-establishment
aristocrat and
intimate friend of the
chevalier de
Champcenetz who was, like him, sent to the fort de Ham for misconduct), the music-loving...
-
central Paris.
Among them was Gattey’s,
which published Rivarol and
Champcenetz's satirical, anti-revolutionary pamphlet, Les
Actes des Apôtres (in English:...