garniture de bureau - significado y definición. Qué es garniture de bureau
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Qué (quién) es garniture de bureau - definición

INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
Deuxième bureau; Deuxième Bureau de l'État-major général; Deuxieme Bureau; Deuxieme bureau; Deuxieme Bureau de l'Etat-major general; 2nd Bureau

Bureau de La Rivière         
POLITICIAN
Bureau de La Riviere
Bureau de La Rivière was a French politician, knight and royal adviser. He was the chamberlain of Charles V the Wise and an advisor to Charles VI the Beloved.
garniture         
  • A garniture of an [[ormolu]] clock and candelabra
  • The garniture of [[Greenwich armour]] for [[Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester]], as recorded in their pattern book, the Jacob album
  • Garniture of three [[Bristol porcelain]] vases, c. 1773, painted by Michel Socquet.
GROUP OF RELATED DECORATIVE OBJECTS
Garniture de cheminée
n.
Embellishments, decorations, ornaments, adornments, furniture, ornamental appendages, setting off.
Garniture         
  • A garniture of an [[ormolu]] clock and candelabra
  • The garniture of [[Greenwich armour]] for [[Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester]], as recorded in their pattern book, the Jacob album
  • Garniture of three [[Bristol porcelain]] vases, c. 1773, painted by Michel Socquet.
GROUP OF RELATED DECORATIVE OBJECTS
Garniture de cheminée
A garniture is a number or collection of any matching, but usually not identical, decorative objects intended to be displayed together.Merriam-Webster.

Wikipedia

Deuxième Bureau

The Deuxième Bureau de l'État-major général ("Second Bureau of the General Staff") was France's external military intelligence agency from 1871 to 1940. It was dissolved together with the Third Republic upon the armistice with Germany. However the term "Deuxième Bureau" (French: [døzjɛm byʁo]), like "MI6" and "KGB", outlived the original organization as a general label for the country's intelligence service.

French military intelligence was composed of two separate bureaus prior to World War II. The Premier Bureau was charged with informing the high command about the state of French, allied and friendly troops, while the Deuxième Bureau developed intelligence concerning enemy troops. The Deuxième Bureau was celebrated for its cryptanalytical work, but it was criticized for its involvement in the Dreyfus affair and its consistent overestimation of German military formations prior to World War II.

Its final director was Colonel Louis Rivet.