Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Mera Naam Joker Simi Swimming

answer to the riddle number 2





Hello and welcome to this blogging, Ruth . Thank you for your compliments and for your wish ... And hello also to C, our mutual friend, who made you know ...

You offer me two answers out of five (see the text of the response of Ruth in the commentary to the previous post) but does 're answers are not good: whether the painter Louis-Philibert Debucourt ( 1755-1832) or the presumed dedicatee of the table, Manon Roland - Jeanne Marie Philipon (or Phlipon) by marriage became Viscountess of Platière Roland (1754-1793) - the two characters were too young at the time the table was painted and exhibited ...

Madame Roland died guillotined, not for being falsely accused of having mixed Government of France but for it to be really busy and have influenced the choice cons-revolutionary her husband Minister Roland and the Girondins group, including François Buzot the man she loved platonically and a few other admirers of her beauty, her generous nature and his political acumen. Alphonse de Lamartine in his Histoire des Girondins said she saved the life of Robespierre after the massacre of the Champ de Mars in persuading her husband to offer asylum to the young tribune (July 17, 1791).

In June 1793 she was imprisoned; she was indicted by the artist JL David (friend of Robespierre and Saint-Just, a former friend of Roland) September 14, 1793 appointed member of the Committee of General Security and Chairman of the Section of interrogation? Possible.

She faced only the prison, his trial and death - November 8, 1793 - her husband and her lover Buzot having been indicted by the Convention, they fled and attempted to raise the western provinces; Manon had not been persuaded to follow Roland because there were still too "she said do in Paris. His legend has it that on his way to execution, Seeing the plaster statue of Liberty on display at the current Place de la Concorde (to commemorate the 10th August 1792) it is exclaimed: "O Liberty, what crimes are committed in thy name! . Learning his death, Roland committed suicide, and a few months after Francis Buzot perished in the same way with Petion, a former mayor of Paris, a leader of the party Girondin.

On the engraving which represents (in this head position), Manon is the "cap in Gironde" because it was a time when political feelings and clothes were not the same. I think for the winter prochain: une robe "Elyséenne? A chapeau contre les intempéries, couleur de Rose "in the Royal!

But réponse vous donc au moins a contribution nouvel index ... En fin de semaine prochaine d'autres J'en women. Dans cette attente ... cherchez bien ... Votre C.


Another answer to the riddle number 2 ...


Dear Ruth, hello and welcome to this bloggue. Thanks for the compliments and good wishes, and a salute to C, our common friend who introduced you among the visitors of this site, still adding to its international ...

I propose two answers (on the five required - see the comment of Ruth at the end of the previous post), but they are the right ones: the painter is
Debucourt Philibert-Louis (1755-1832) has the claimed dedicatee of the picture, Manon Roland (Jeanne Marie Philipon - or Phlipon - became Viscountess Roland de La Plata (1754-1793) married Jean-Marie Roland de la Plata, an official of the realm) were too young when the ' enigmatic picture was painted and exhibited.

Unlike the character that you should identify, Madame Roland died beheaded for his real influence on decisions of a government in power between 1791 and 1792, said the most revolutionary too hard in favor of Louis XVI. Among the political figures who were influenced by Manon, there almost the entire group of "Girondins" ( Girondins so called because they often originating in the Gironde or the territory where there is the city of Bordeaux or the Atlantic Brissotins ( Brissotini ) by the name of their leader Brissot). Manon
after more than ten years of a comfortable marriage with a man twenty years older than her, she fell in love - Platonic is said - by François
Buzot , deputy general meeting of Normandy convention, but he too "Girondins", as opposed to the "Montagnards" (Montanari) and the "Jacobins" (Jacobini) the more radical group of the Assembly.


I Girondins were accused of treason in 1793, many were arrested and guillotined, but also the same fate awaited Montagnards Danton et Camille Desmoulins in the spring of 1794. (How long, in July of 1794 a small group of politicians and businessmen under threat of falling under the same charges could send Jacobin Robespierre and his group ultraradicale to the scaffold).
not only admired the generosity of the Girondins, political intelligence and beauty of Manon: Alphonse de Lamartine in his Histoire des Girondins (History of Girondins) Manon tells how he saved the life of Robespierre, prompting her husband to procure an asylum Roland on the evening of July 17, 1791 agenda for a popular uprising ended in blood (Massacre du Champ de Mars) and the bloody repression which Robespierre was not considered innocent. In June 1793

Manon was arrested and taken to jail, and later, to have the charge against her may have been the painter Jacques-Louis David (friend of Robespierre and Saint-Just, but also ex-friend Roland de La Plata) appointed September 14, 1793 the Committee of General Security and the President of the Chamber of interrogations.
Buzot and her husband had fled the province during the spring of 1793, trying to raise the provinces in western France against the government but she would not follow Roland and remained in Paris where there was much to do ... maybe also hoped that Buzot back to her in Paris.

face alone in captivity, the unjust trial where the prosecutor would not let her speak and, on November 8, 1793, death on the scaffold. Had the strength, knowing sentenced to write political memory to complete its work and recount in detail their process and, last hour, to escape from his prison by other prisoners taking leave without saying he was going to die. He also says that his legend, climbed on the scaffold in the square and saw a statue of plaster representing Liberty (the statue was exhibited during the summer of 1793 on the present Place de la Concorde to commemorate the day of 10 August 1792) Madame Roland has said "O Freedom! How many crimes in your name. " Roland Informed by his death and committed suicide several months later also Buzot died in the same way with his friend Petion, a former mayor of Paris.

Sull'incisione showing above text, Manon takes the "bonnet à la Girondine, a headset that - custom of the time - women identified as supporters of the moderate policies of the Girondins ... that the fashion today follow this principle and who knows ... we may choose to dress, choosing from the colors of the rainbow, or merge ...

This gives you my answer then a another clue.
At the end of next week I will give you three more. In this perspective, look for your ...

C.

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