- The château
de Grosbois (French pronunciation: [ʃɑto də ɡʁobwɑ]) is a
castle in Boissy-Saint-Léger, Val-
de-Marne, France. In 1190,
Philip II of France...
- Montarville, or
de Montarville, Grandpré,
DeGrandpré, or
de Grandpré,
Grosbois,
DeGrosbois or
de Grosbois, Des Rochés or DesRocher,
Monbrun or
de Monbrun, LaPerrière...
- 3rd
Prince of
Wagram (24
March 1836,
Paris – 15 July 1911, Château
de Grosbois) was a
French nobleman and
prince of Wagram. He was the son of Napoléon...
-
Alexandre Berthier grew up in the family's
ancestral home, the Château
de Grosbois, a
large estate in Boissy-Saint-Léger,
southeast of Paris. He had two...
- the Château
de Grosbois. Max Reyne: Les 26 Maréchaux
de Napoléon:
Soldats de la Révolution,
gloires de l'Empire, 1990 Château
de Grosbois, information...
- Tancrède
Boucher de Grosbois (November 6, 1846 –
September 30, 1926) was a
physician and
political figure in Quebec. He
represented Shefford in the Legislative...
- abdication,
Berthier retired to Château
de Grosbois, his 600-acre (2.4 km2)
estate at Boissy-Saint-Léger, Val-
de-Marne. He made
peace with
Louis XVIII in...
-
Grosbois (French pronunciation: [ɡʁobwa]) is a
commune in the
Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté
region in
eastern France.
Communes of the...
- Québécois folk music. The group's core
members are
Alexandre « Moulin »
de Grosbois-Garand and Mélisande Gélinas-Fauteux, a
married couple from Beloeil,...
-
Boucher de Grosbois 1654–1658
Jacques Leneuf de La
Poterie 1658–1662
Pierre Boucher de Grosbois 1662–1668 René
Gaultier de Varennes 1668–1689
Claude de Ramezay...