RFC 1795 - definição. O que é RFC 1795. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é RFC 1795 - definição

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
RfC; Rfc; RFC (disambiguation); RFc

RFC 1795      
<networking, standard> The RFC that defines {Data Link Switching}. rfc:1795">rfc:1795. (2008-01-11)
1795–1820 in Western fashion         
  • An idealized classicized depiction of an [[English Regency]] domestic scene
  • English and French fashions, 1815. The [[morning dress]] has back gathers and long sleeves, and like the walking costume, has trim at the hemline and new detail at the upper sleeve.
  • The three Consuls of French Republic in 1799-1804 : (L-R) [[Jean-Jacques-Régis de Cambacérès]] (1753-1824), [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] (1769-1821), and [[Charles-François Lebrun]] (1739-1824). While the older ones, Cambacérès and Lebrun, wear old-fashioned powdered wigs, younger Napoleon wears a fashionable short unpowdered hairstyle.
  • Deputy]] for [[Saint-Domingue]].
  • Painting of a family game of checkers ("jeu de dames") by French artist [[Louis-Léopold Boilly]], c. 1803.
  • Portrait of [[Caroline Murat]] and her daughter Letizia, painted in 1807 by [[Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun]]. Madame Murat wears the formal red train of [[court dress]] over her high-waisted gown.
  • Doña Isabel de Porcel]], 1805.
  • Fashion Plate (The Russian & Prussian Bonnet & Pelisse), published in ''[[La Belle Assemblée]]'', July 1, 1814
  • 1811 dance dress
  • 1815}} (by [[Georg Friedrich Kersting]]).
  • [[Hortense de Beauharnais]]
  • Louvre]].
  • Artist [[Jean-Baptiste Isabey]] wears a cropped riding coat and dark breeches tucked into boots. He carries his hat and gloves, 1795.
  • ca. 1813
  • Emma, Lady Hamilto]]n by [[Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun]] ca. 1790s.
  • French lady in 1808; the style was often accompanied by a [[shawl]] or similar wrap, or a short "Spencer" jacket, as the dresses were light and left much uncovered
  • A well-to-do family edges cautiously along a plank to avoid the muddy streets of Paris, by Boilly, 1803
  • Madame Raymond de Verninac]]'' by [[Jacques-Louis David]], with clothes and chair in [[Directoire style]]. "Year 7", that is 1798–99.
  • Miniature portrait of a Russian lady, Russian school, c. 1800
  • 1811 illustration of underclothes, showing one form of Regency "stays"
  • [[Pierre Seriziat]] in riding dress, 1795. His snug leather breeches have a tie and buttons at the knee and a fall front. The white waistcoat is [[double-breasted]], a popular style at this time. His tall hat is slightly conical.
  • A satirical 1796 contrast between old Elizabethan and Directoire clothing styles: ''Too Much and Too Little'', reads the caption of this caricature by [[Isaac Cruikshank]]
COSTUME AND FASHION 1795-1820
Regency fashions; Regency fashion; Regency dress; 1795-1820 in fashion; 1795–1820 in fashion; 1795-1820 in Western fashion; 1800s in Western fashion; 1810s in Western fashion
Fashion in the period 1795–1820 in European and European-influenced countries saw the final triumph of undress or informal styles over the brocades, lace, periwigs and powder of the earlier 18th century. In the aftermath of the French Revolution, no one wanted to appear to be a member of the French aristocracy, and people began using clothing more as a form of individual expression of the true self than as a pure indication of social status.
History of Poland (1795–1918)         
ASPECT OF HISTORY
History of Poland, Partitioned Poland 1795-1914; Partitioned Poland (1795-1914); Partitioned Poland (1795-1918); History of Poland (1795-1918); Partitioned Poland; History of Poland under partitions; Partitioned Poland (1795–1914)
From 1795 to 1918, Poland was split between Prussia, the Habsburg monarchy, and Russia and had no independent existence. In 1795 the third and the last of the three 18th-century partitions of Poland ended the existence of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

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