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Topic: Hippolyte Passy


  
  Passy, Frédéric
The tradition of the French civil service was strong in Passy's family, his uncle, Hippolyte Passy (1793-1880), rising to become a cabinet minister under both Louis Philippe and Louis Napoleon.
Passy was not, however, a cloistered scholar; he was a man of action.
Passy was a renowned speaker, noted for the intellectual demands he made on his audiences, as well as for his powerful voice, his ample gestures, and his majestic and dignified manner.
www.cartage.org.lb /en/themes/biographies/mainbiographies/p/passy/passy.htm   (614 words)

  
  Science Fair Projects - Frédéric Passy
Passy was born in Paris and lived there his entire life of ninety years.
Passy lectured on economic subjects in virtually every city and university of any consequence in France and continued a stream of publications on economic subjects, some of the more important being Les Machines et leur influence sur le développement de l'humanité (1866), Malthus et sa doctrine (1868), L'Histoire du travail (1873).
Passy was a renowned speaker, noted for the intellectual demands he made on his audiences, as well as for his powerful voice, his ample gestures, and his majestic and dignified manner.
www.all-science-fair-projects.com /science_fair_projects_encyclopedia/Fr%E9d%E9ric_Passy   (1052 words)

  
 The Dispatch - Serving the Lexington, NC - News
Frédéric Passy (May 20, 1822 June 12, 1912) was a French economist and a joint winner (together with Henry Dunant) of the first Nobel Peace Prize awarded in 1901.
Born in Paris, Passy's uncle Hippolyte Passy was a cabinet minister for both Louis Philippe and Louis Napoleon.
Passy directly engaged in political questions, advocating educational reform and intervening to prevent war between France and Prussia over Luxembourg.
www.the-dispatch.com /apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=NEWS&template=wiki&text=Frederic_Passy   (348 words)

  
 Frédéric Passy@Everything2.com
Known as "a pacifist before his time", Passy was also an idealist, as maybe most advocates for world peace are; never-the-less, his words rang true a hundred years ago as surely as they do today.
Born in Paris, France on May 20, 1822, Frédéric Passy was of a family seeped in the tradition of civil service, as far back as the mid-18th century when his uncle, Hippolyte Passy, served under both Louis Philippe and Louis Napolean.
Passy left the employ of the state and began what would become a prodigious volume of publications as well as public lectures.
www.everything2.com /index.pl?node_id=974343   (641 words)

  
 Hippolyte Passy - Wikipédia
Hippolyte Philibert Passy est un économiste et homme politique français né à Garches (actuel département des Hauts-de-Seine) le 16 octobre 1793 et mort à Paris le 1
Passy fut donc élu par 227 voix contre 193 à Barrot.
Hippolyte Passy est un vieillard chauve, quelques cheveux blancs aux tempes, l’œil petit, brillant et vif, grand et allègre.
fr.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hippolyte_Passy#Biographie   (1268 words)

  
 Passy - Paris.fr
Le cimetière de Passy a ouvert ses portes le 20 septembre 1820.
Le cimetière actuel remplace l'ancien cimetière communal de Passy qui s'étendait, jusqu'à sa fermeture en 1802 pour raisons de salubrité, le long des numéros impairs de la rue Lekain.
Par ailleurs, il traduit bien l'aspect cossu et soigné des beaux quartiers de l'ouest de la capitale, au centre desquels il s'inscrit.
www.paris.fr /portail/Parcs/Portal.lut?page_id=1765   (1116 words)

  
 Jean Giraudoux
Hippolyte Jean Giraudoux (October 29, 1882 - January 31, 1944) was a French dramatist who wrote internationally acclaimed plays.
Giraudoux was also a prose writer and served France as a diplomat and government official.
He is buried in the Cimetière de Passy, Paris, France.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/je/Jean_Giraudoux.html   (115 words)

  
 Biographie de Frédéric Passy, prix nobel de la Paix - The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy
Frédéric Passy (May 20, 1822 - June 12, 1912) was a French economist and a joint winner (together with Henry Dunant) of the first Nobel Peace Prize awarded in 1901.
Born in Paris, Passy's uncle Hippolyte Passy was a cabinet minister for both Louis Philippe and Louis Napoleon.
Passy directly engaged in political questions, advocating educational reform and intervening to prevent war between France and Prussia over Luxembourg.
www.politique-info.org /article-1435097.html   (493 words)

  
 Frédéric Passy
Frédéric Passy (May 20, 1822-June 12, 1912) was born in Paris and lived there his life of ninety years.
Educated as a lawyer, Frédéric Passy entered the civil service at the age of twenty-two as an accountant in the State Council, but left after three years to devote himself to systematic study of economies.
In 1888 Cramer headed a delegation of nine British members of Parliament who met in Paris with a delegation of twenty-four French deputies, headed by Passy, to discuss arbitration and to lay the groundwork for an organisation to advance its acceptance.
www.ipu.org /strct-e/passy.htm   (544 words)

  
 Passy - LoveToKnow 1911
"Frederic PASSY (1822-1912), French economist and pacifist, was born in 1822 and was a nephew of the economist Hippolyte Passy, finance minister to Louis Philippe and to Louis Napoleon's Republican Government.
Under his uncle's influence Frederic devoted himself to economic studies, and to that end gave up the appointment as auditor of the Conseil de Droit, which he had held during 1846-49.
This page was last modified 09:37, 27 Jul 2006.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Passy   (233 words)

  
 Hippolyte Passy
Abacci > Abaccipedia > Hi > Hippolyte Passy
Sorry, "Hippolyte Passy" still seems to be on our 'things to do' list...
On large and small farms, and their influence on the social economy: Including a view of the progress of the division of the soil in France since 1815
www.abacci.com /wikipedia/topic.aspx?cur_title=Hippolyte_Passy   (59 words)

  
 Frédéric Passy - Slider   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Frédéric Passy (May 20, 1822 – June 12, 1912) was a French economist and advocate of international arbitration.
The tradition of the French civil service was strong in Passy's family, his uncle, Hippolyte Passy (1793–1880), rising to become a cabinet minister under both Louis Philippe and Louis Napoleon.
Passy, Frédéric, «Peace Movement in Europe», American Journal of Sociology, 2 (July, 1896) 1–12.
enc.slider.com /Enc/Frederic_Passy   (893 words)

  
 The Teeth of the Tiger eBook
Hippolyte Fauville, civil engineer, lived on the Boulevard Suchet, near the fortifications, in a fair-sized private house having on its left a small garden in which he had built a large room that served as his study.
The garden was thus reduced to a few trees and to a strip of grass along the railings, which were covered with ivy and contained a gate that opened on the Boulevard Suchet.
Don Luis Perenna went with Mazeroux to the commissary’s office at Passy, where Mazeroux, on Perenna’s instructions, gave his name and asked to have M. Fauville’s house watched during the night by two policemen who were to arrest any suspicious person trying to obtain admission.
www.bookrags.com /ebooks/13058/26.html   (416 words)

  
 Frédéric Passy - Biography
The Passy M S S are in the Library of the Peace Palace at The Hague.
Passy, Frédéric, «Peace Movement in Europe», American Journal of Sociology, 2 (July, 1896) 1-12.
Van Schilfgaarde, Waszkléwicz, «Frédéric Passy», in Mannen en vrouwen van beteekenis in onze dagen.
nobelprize.org /nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1901/passy-bio.html   (893 words)

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