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Paris$58063$ - traducción al holandés

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Paris Peace Conference; Paris Convention; Paris convention; Paris Accords; Paris peace talks; Paris Peace Conference (disambiguation); Paris Accord; Paris Protocol; Paris Accords (disambiguation); Paris Conference (disambiguation); Paris convention (disambiguation); Paris Conference; Paris Protocol (disambiguation); Paris peace conference; Paris Principle; Paris Principles; Paris Principles (disambiguation); Paris principle; Paris principles; Paris agreements; Paris agreements (disambiguation); Paris meetings, agreements and declarations (disambiguation); Paris meetings, agreements and declarations

Paris      
n. Parijs, hoofdstad v. Frankrijk; stad in Texas (V.S.); Trojaanse prins die Helena van Troje, die de Trojaanse Oorlog begon, ontvoerde, ook bekend als Alexandros of Alexander (Griekse Mythologie)
Euro Disney         
  • 'Disneyland Hotel'. Through the hotel is the entrance ticket hall to the Park.
  • Disney Newport Bay Club
  • Marne-la-Vallée – Chessy station, view to the platform area
THEME PARK RESORT IN FRANCE, PARTIALLY OWNED BY THE WALT DISNEY COMPANY
Eurodisney; EuroDisney; Euro Disney Resort; Disneyland Paris Resort; DLRP; Euro Disney; Disneyland paris; Disney Resort Paris; Disney Paris; Paris Disneyland; Euro Disneyland Paris; Euro Disney Paris; Euro-Disney; Disneyland Resort Paris; Magic on Parade; Disney's Once Upon a Dream Parade
Euro Disny
commune of paris         
  • [[Adolphe Thiers]], the chief executive of the French Government during the Commune
  • A barricade constructed by the Commune in April 1871 on the Rue de Rivoli near the Hotel de Ville. The figures are blurred due to the camera's lengthy exposure time, an effect commonly seen in early photographs.
  • Barricades during the Paris Commune, near the [[Place de la Concorde]]
  • A Battery in the Montmartre Hills.
  • Destruction of the [[Vendôme Column]] during the Paris Commune. The column's destruction realized an official proposition made the previous September by painter [[Gustave Courbet]], who, after the collapse of the Commune, was sentenced to six months in prison and later ordered to pay for putting the column back up. He could never pay, and died soon after in exile.
  • Communards defending a barricade on the [[Rue de Rivoli]]
  • A plaque honours the dead of the Commune in [[Père Lachaise Cemetery]].
  • The celebration of the election of the Commune, 28 March 1871
  • A barricade on [[Place Blanche]] during Bloody Week, whose defenders included [[Louise Michel]] and a unit of 30 women
  • When the battle was over, Parisians buried the bodies of the Communards in temporary mass graves. They were quickly moved to the public cemeteries, where between 6,000 and 7,000 Communards were buried.
  • Fires lit by the Commune during the night of May 23–24
  • The Church of [[Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois]] was briefly turned into a Socialist women's club
  • The popular journalist [[Félix Pyat]] became one of the most influential members of the Commune and its Committee for Public Safety. He went into exile during the Bloody Week, was later amnestied and elected to the National Assembly.
  • The killing of Generals Clément-Thomas (above) and Lecomte by national guardsmen on 18 March sparked the armed conflict between the French Army and the National Guard.
  • [[Jaroslav Dombrowski]], a Polish exile and former military officer, was one of the few capable commanders of the National Guard. He was killed early in the Bloody Week.
  • National Guard commander Jules Bergeret escaped Paris during the Bloody Week and went into exile in New York, where he died in 1905.
  • Revolutionary units of the National Guard briefly seized the Hôtel de Ville on 31 October 1870, but the uprising failed.
  • Ruins of the [[Tuileries Palace]], burned by the Communards on 23–24 May
  • [[Louis Auguste Blanqui]], leader of the Commune's far-left faction, was imprisoned for the entire time of the Commune.
  • [[Louis Charles Delescluze]], last military leader of the Commune, was shot dead after he stood atop a barricade, unarmed.
  • [[Louise Michel]], anarchist and famed "Red Virgin of Montmartre", became an important part of the legend of the Commune.
  • [[Eugène Varlin]], one of the leaders of the Commune, was captured and shot by soldiers at Montmartre on 28 May, the last day of the uprising.
  • ''A street in Paris in May 1871'', by [[Maximilien Luce]]
  • Communards killed in 1871
  • View of the Rue de Rivoli after Bloody Week
  • Vendôme column]], about to be torn down by the Communards.
  • Hôtel de Ville]] of Paris, the headquarters of the Commune, burned by the National Guard on 24 May and later rebuilt
  • The red banner from the Commune brought to Moscow by French communists in June 1924<br />[[Kliment Voroshilov]] is at right, [[Grigory Zinoviev]] third from right, [[Avel Enukidze]] fourth, and [[Nikolay Antipov]] fifth.
  • The Commune's deputy prosecutor [[Théophile Ferré]], who handed over six hostages for execution, was executed in November 1871.
  • [[Eugène Varlin]] led several thousand National Guard soldiers to march to the Hôtel de Ville chanting "Long Live the Commune!"
REVOLUTIONARY CITY COUNCIL OF PARIS IN 1871
Revolutionary Commune of Paris; Commune of Paris; Commune de Paris; Commune of Paris, 1871; 1871 Commune of Paris; Paris commune; Martyrs of the Paris Commune; Paris Commune, Martyrs of the; The Paris Commune; Paris Commune of 1871; Parisian commune; Paris Worker's Commune; Paris Workers Commune; Second paris commune; Paris Commune (1871); Comune of Paris; Paris comune
korte socialistische en reformistischte regering in Parijs gevormd (1792-1794) door een onwettige overname van leiding van oppermacht van de kant van het gedeelte van de vertegenwoordigers gekozen door gemeentes die de stedelijke arbeiders en winkeliers en radicale burgers uit de middenstand

Definición

Paris Club
The Paris Club has become a popular designation for meetings between representatives of a developing country that wishes to renegotiate its "official" debt (normally excluding debts owed by and to the private sector without official guarantees) and representatives of the relevant creditor governments and international institutions. These meetings usually occur at the request of a debtor country that wishes to consolidate all or part of its debt service payments falling due over a specified period. Meetings are traditionally chaired by a senior official of the French Treasury Department. Comparable meetings occasionally take place in London and in New York for countries that wish to renegotiate repayment terms for their debts to private banks. These meetings are sometimes called "creditor clubs." See: London Club

Wikipedia

List of Paris meetings, agreements and declarations

Agreements and declarations resulting from meetings in Paris include: