Gillot Saint-Evre in the context of Joseph-Jacques Ramée


Gillot Saint-Evre in the context of Joseph-Jacques Ramée

⭐ Core Definition: Gillot Saint-Evre

Gillot Saint-Evre (1791, Boult-sur-Suippe – 1858, Paris) was a French painter and engraver. He created scenes on historical and literary subjects, as well as genre scenes and portraits.

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👉 Gillot Saint-Evre in the context of Joseph-Jacques Ramée

Joseph-Jacques Ramée (April 26, 1764 in Charlemont, France — May 18, 1842 at the Chateau de Beaurains, Noyon) was a French architect, interior designer, and landscape architect working within the neoclassicist idiom. He was a student of the architect and landscape architect François-Joseph Bélanger. In his lifetime, he worked in France, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, and the United States. He also published books on landscaping with his own numerous garden designs as examples. Ramée is known for his work at Union College, in Schenectady, New York, where in 1812 he designed the first comprehensively planned college campus in America

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Gillot Saint-Evre in the context of Treaty of Vervins

The Peace of Vervins or Treaty of Vervins was signed between the representatives of Henry IV of France and Philip II of Spain under the auspices of the papal legates of Clement VIII, on 2 May 1598 at the small town of Vervins in Picardy, northern France, close to the territory of the Habsburg Netherlands.

View the full Wikipedia page for Treaty of Vervins
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