ng>TURSAN André, (dit Despagnac), ex président à la cour
des aides de Montauban, 51 ans, né et domicilié à Ladvéze-Rivière (Gers),
comme contre-révolutionnaire.
BELGINGUE Jean Claude, cordonnier, soldat au 29ème régiment
d'infanterie, domicilié à Besançon (Doubs), comme contre-révolutionnaire.
BIRANGUES Antoine Edmé, (dit Lamotte), ex noble,
marchand de bois, domicilié à Montargis (Loiret), comme contre-révolutionnaire.
FORIEN Jean, déserteur, 27 ans, né et domicilié à Sentilly
(Loiret), comme contre-révolutionnaire.
...
nés à Caussade, canton de Montauban (Lot):
GENIBRE Bertrand, journalier, 21 ans, comme contre-révolutionnaire.
SAVIT-LABAT Jean, adjudant aux charrois de l'armée des
Pyrénées Orientale 30 ans, comme ennemi du peuple, en disant que Capet
n'était pas coupable et qu'il était mort innocent, et comme ayant assisté
à une messe célébrée pour le tyran.
...
domiciliés à Caussade:
CLAVIERRE Jean Pierre, ex curé, 64 ans, né à Catelnon-Demoratier,
comme contre-révolutionnaire.
LABAT Jean Savit, adjudant aux charrois, comme contre-révolutionnaire.
LACROIX Dominique, aubergiste, 44 ans, né à Mautauban,
comme contre-révolutionnaire et fanatique.
...
nés et domiciliés à Caussade:
PICHOLIER Jean François, juge de paix, 51 ans, comme
ennemi du peuple, ayant dit que la Convention n'était composée que de
coquins qui ne cherchaient qu'a mettre le désordre dans toute la France,
et à faire égorger les citoyens.
RIETTE Jean, cordonnier, 28 ans, comme ennemi du Peuple,
ayant parcouru les rues de Caussade le 27 janvier 1793, en criant " nous
n’avons plus de roi, il est mort ; A bas les cocardes nationales, il faut
en prendre de noires ".
... comme contre-révolutionnaires:
BASTIE Antoine Ange, 29 ans BORIE Joseph journalier,
30 ans BORIE Raimond, cordonnier, 19 ans
CALMETTE Moffré, chandelier, 36 ans CASSAIGNES
Jacques (dit Cauvin), 27 ans, tourneur CASSAIGNES
Jean (dit Cauvin), 28 ans, commis marchand DELPECHE-ST-TOU,
Raymond, père, 63 ans, vivant de son bien,comme contre-révolutionnaire.
DELPECHE-ST-TOU, fils, 38 ans, comme contre-révolutionnaire.
FOUSSE-GRIVE François, épinglier, 27 ans
MOULET Pierre, fruitier, 50 ans, comme contre-révolutionnaire
et fanatique.
1793:
BESNARD Julien, laboureur, domicilié à Bain (Ille-et-Vilaine),
comme contre-révolutionnaire par le tribunal criminel du département d'Ille-et-Vilaine.
1661 Andrea Ouche Sacchi, Italian artist born on 30
November 1599.
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Births
which occurred on a 21 June: 2003 Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (768 pages) by J. K. Rawlings, goes on sale at $17.97, with some one million copies already paid in advance. The 8.5 million copies printed are the largest first edition in history. The preceding books of the series were Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (1997), Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (1998), Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azbakan (1999), Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (July 2000) 1966 Washoe Pan Satyrus is adopted by Drs. Beatrix T. and R. Allen Gardner. They would raise her in their home as if she were a human child. Washoe would be the first nonhuman to acquire a human language American Sign Language. Washoe moved with Roger and Deborah Fouts to the University of Oklahoma in 1970 and came to Central Washington University in 1980. There she lived with fellow chimpanzees Moja Lemsip [18 Nov 1972 06 Jun 2002], Loulis Yerkes, Dar es Salaam, and Tatu Oklahoma CHCI chimpcam (M-F 09:00-12:00 and 13:00-15:30 Sa 09:00-12:00 Su 12:00-15:30 Pacific Time) 1957 Berke Breathed breathed his first breath. He would become a cartoonist.
1935 Françoise Sagan France, novelist (Bon Jour Tristesse) 1925 Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas, ex presidente de Bolivia. 1925 Giovanni Spadolini, politico y escritor italiano 1912 Mary McCarthy US, novelist (Group) 1905 Jean-Paul Sartre (philosopher, writer: Being and Nothingness; playwright: No Exit, The Flies, The Age of Reason; rejected Nobel Prize for literature [1964]) 1903 Al Hirschfeld cartoonist (1975 Tony Award) 1893 First Ferris wheel premieres (Chicago's Columbian Exposition) 1892 Reinhold Niebuhr US, theologian (Nature and Destiny of Man) 1882 Rockwell Kent painter, printmaker, illustrator, who died on 13 March 1971. Kent also wrote and illustrated books such as Wilderness: A Journal of Quiet Adventure in Alaska (1920) Voyaging: Southward from the Strait of Magellan. (1922) Salamina (1935) Greenland Journal (1960) his autobiography It's Me, O Lord (1955). MORE ON KENT AT ART 4 JUNE with links to images. 1880 Arnold Lucius Gessell, psicólogo y pediatra estadounidense. 1859 Henry Ossawa Tanner, Black US Realist painter born in Pittsburgh PA, who died on 25 May 1937 in Paris, France. MORE ON TANNER AT ART 4 JUNE with links to images. 1858 María Cristina de Austria, reina de España. 1850 Johann Hamza, Austrian artist who died in 1927. 1847 Wilhelm Velten, Russian German painter who died in 1929. Harvest scene 1845 Luis Jiménez Aranda, Spanish Impressionist painter who died in 1928. — links to images. 1834 Reaping machine patent obtained by Cyrus Hall McCormick. 1828 Giuseppe Bruno, Italian philosopher, engineer, mathematician, who died on 04 February 1893 1821 The African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Zion Church is formally constituted in New York City. Nineteen clergymen were present, representing six African-American churches from New York City; Philadelphia; New Haven, CT and Newark, NJ. 1819 Jacques Offenbach, compositor francés. 1814 Charles-Théodore Frère frère Bey, French painter specialized in Orientalism, who died on 24 March 1888. MORE ON FRÈRE AT ART 4 JUNE with links to images. 1805 José María El Tempranillo, bandolero español. 1781 Siméon Poisson, mathematician 1774 Daniel D Tompkins (D-R), 6th US vice-president (1817-25) 1773 Jorge Juan y Santacilia, matemático y físico español. 1744 Wybrand Hendriks, Dutch artist who died on 28 January 1831. — more 1640 Abraham Mignon, German painter who died in 1679. MORE ON MIGNON AT ART 4 JUNE with links to images. 1639 Increase Mather, in Dorchester, Massachusetts, Boston Congregational minister, author, and educator, influential in the councils of New England during the period when leadership passed to the first native-born generation. He published nearly 100 books including , and is credited with helping end executions for witchcraft in colonial America. He was the son of Richard Mather [1596 22 Apr 1669], son-in-law of John Cotton, and father of Cotton Mather [12 Feb 1663 13 Feb 1728]. Increase Mather died on 23 August 1723 in Boston.
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