Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Jean-Baptiste Antoine Colbert, marquis de Seignelay et de Châteauneuf-sur-Cher, baron de Lignières, est un homme politique français né le 1 er novembre 1651 à Paris et mort le 3 novembre 1690. Secrétaire d’État de la Marine entre 1683 et 1690, il est le fils du marquant ministre Jean-Baptiste Colbert .

  2. Jean-Baptiste Antoine Colbert, Marquis of Seignelay (1 November 1651 – 3 November 1690) was a French politician. He was the eldest son of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, nephew of Charles Colbert de Croissy and cousin of Jean-Baptiste Colbert de Torcy. Life. Seignelay married twice; firstly to Marie Marguerite d'Alegre, who died in 1678.

  3. Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Marquis de Seignelay (16511690) , followed his father as Secretary of State of the Navy Jacques-Nicolas Colbert (1654–1707) , Archbishop of Rouen . Jean-Jules-Armand Colbert (1664–1704) , marquis de Blainville, killed at the Battle of Blenheim .

  4. Biographie de JEAN-BAPTISTE SEIGNELAY COLBERT marquis de (1651-1690). Fils aîné et préféré de Jean-Baptiste Colbert qui avait obtenu pour lui la survivance de ses charges et le prépara avec soin à sa future mission. En 1670 et 1671, Seignelay visite les ports de France, l'Italie, les...

  5. Jean-Baptiste Colbert, marquis de Seignelay (born Nov. 1, 1651, Paris—died Nov. 3, 1690, Versailles, Fr.) was the French secretary of state under Louis XIV. As the eldest son of the famous secretary of state of that name, Colbert was given the best possible tutors, who found him bright but lazy.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Seignelay, Jean-Baptiste Colbert marchese di Enciclopedia on line Uomo politico (Parigi 1651 - Versailles 1690), figlio del grande Colbert; segretario di stato per la Marina (1683), poi (1689) ministro.

  7. Jean-Baptiste Colbert, French statesman who served as comptroller general of finance (1665–83) and secretary of state for the navy (1668–83) under King Louis XIV of France. He carried out the program of economic reconstruction that helped make France the dominant power in Europe.