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La Nat', la célèbre boulangère de Franche-Comté, nous raconte son enfance. C'était déjà un sacré numéro!Histoire écrite et interprétée par Céline Kallmann, réalisation et musiques Alexandre Ferreira, production Benjamin Muller. Générique : Vlad Gluschenko - Time. Retrouvez Encore une histoire sur Instagram, Facebook et Twitter.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
La Nat', la célèbre boulangère de Franche-Comté, nous raconte son enfance. C'était déjà un sacré numéro!Histoire écrite et interprétée par Céline Kallmann, réalisation et musiques Alexandre Ferreira, production Benjamin Muller. Générique : Vlad Gluschenko - Time. Retrouvez Encore une histoire sur Instagram, Facebook et Twitter.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
La Nat', la célèbre boulangère de Franche-Comté, nous raconte son enfance. C'était déjà un sacré numéro!Histoire écrite et interprétée par Céline Kallmann, réalisation et musiques Alexandre Ferreira, production Benjamin Muller. Générique : Vlad Gluschenko - Time. Retrouvez Encore une histoire sur Instagram, Facebook et Twitter.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
101 Femmes de Matignon est un concours visant à mettre en lumière une femme entrepreneure dans chaque département français. Letizia Iacovelli représentait la haute saône, elle nous raconte !
Le journal du vendredi 8 mars 2024
Une nuit disco et eurodance, du rock et une soirée inédite à la patinoire ! Hélène nous dévoile le programme de ce mois de Mars à La Poudrière de Belfort.
Un programme éclectique, familiale et surprenant. Hélène Faure de la Poudrière Belfort nous dévoile les immanquables dans ce podcast
Peintures, sculptures, photographies, ateliers... Anne Paris du Rotary club de Vesoul nous présente la 4° édition du Rotary Art dans ce podcast
"A 45 ans, j'ai toujours eu l'envie d'ouvrir ma boutique..." Dans cette interview inspirante, découvrez le parcours et la reconversion de Karine Guédat, et son entreprise "Ma cuisine en bocal" à Lure
In Episode 60, I interview Regine Rousseau!! Regine T. Rousseau, wine and spirits expert, writer, presenter, and media personality, focuses on making wine knowledge accessible to people at all levels of proficiency. She is recognized as 2022 Leader in the Wine Industry by Wine Business Monthly, a nominee of 2020 Wine Enthusiast Wine Star Awards, Wine Educator of the Year, a WSET Level 3 with Merit, an International Sommelier Guild Level II, and Executive Bourbon Steward, Stave and Thief. She received the 2021 Alumni Achievement Award from Knox College. Regine has traveled around the globe sharing her wine and spirits expertise. She has authored or been featured in articles in the The Drop, New Yorker, Wine Enthusiast, Pix Wine, Black Enterprise, Black Food and Beverage, Wine Spectator, the Zoe Report, Forbes, VinePair , Afar and Chicago Tribune. Regine fell in love with wine while studying abroad during college in Besançon, France and began her career as a salesperson for a wine distributor. While in this role, she noticed a disconnect between wine professionals and consumers. Making wine approachable became a central premise of Regine's work. In 2013, Regine established Shall We Wine, a wine and spirits experiential marketing, event planning, and education company. Working with national and boutique winemakers, distilleries, importers, and distributors, she increases brand awareness, reach, and revenue for clients through innovative and traditional approaches. These include in-person and on-line activations, events, sponsorships, videos, media and social media services, and speaker and influencer marketing. She and her team are masters at translating complex terminology into language that individuals of every level of wine expertise and interest appreciates. Regine's speaking, keynote, moderator and panelist engagements include South Beach Wine and Food Festival (2022 and 2023), Blacks in Wine Symposium, Wonder Women in Wine, I.E.E.M Conference - Pinot Grigio delle Venezie, SoloCEO Summit, www.tastings.com, and Association of Writers and Writers' Programs. She is columnist for Pix Wines and a blogger on shallwewine.com, has served as subject matter expert for VinePair, has been interviewed on You & Me Chicago, WGN Chicago, Windy City Live, and Great Day Washington. Regine was the virtual event moderator for Gallo International Women's Month (2021 and 2023). Regine is a regular contributor for WGN's Daytime Chicago television show. Language is integral to Rousseau's work as a poet and published author where wine and written word are often interwoven. In her book Searching for Cloves and Lilies: The Wine Edition, Regine illustrates the dynamics of personal relationships while pairing each poem with wine that echoes the mood of her writing. Regine is recipient of the Wine Bloggers Conference Ethnifacts Diversity Scholarship, grants from McBride Sisters Collections and Allies for Community Business, and Knox College's 2020 Alumni Achievement Award. She is fluent in French, Haitian Creole, and English. She has a BA from Knox College, studied at L'Université de Franche Comte and Centre de Linguistique Appliquée.
Hey everybody! I'm back today with another episode, 3 recommendation (a movie, a TV episode and a book), another Santa and more of The Lost Years of Santa Claus! Today we're traveling to France to discuss the wonderful fairy godmother named Tante Arie (Aunt Airie/Aunt Arie)! She is a fascinating blend of so much history, with enormous powers and abilities as well! From the Franche-Comte region of France near the Swiss border, this lovely lady brings gifts and a lot more. Listen, learn and share her story with others! As always, please like and subscribe to the podcast, and share it to all of your friends! Follow the podcast on social media as well, and reach out to us via email: lostchristmaspodcast@gmail.com www.facebook.com/lostchristmaspodcast www.twitter.com/lostchristmasp1 www.instagram.com/lostchristmaspodcast Special thanks to: The Christmas Song/Heaven/Slow 3/4 Song by Peter Evans, Tom Blancarte, and Brandon Seabrook - CC by 3.0 Santa Claws is Coming by Ergo Phizmiz - CC by 3.0 holiday by Dee Yan-Key - CC by 3.0 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lostchristmaspodcast/message
Shlomo Malka reçoit Elena Bovo pour son livre sur « La foule » paru aux éditions de Franche-Comte.
durée : 00:04:39 - Journaux d'infos France Bleu Besançon
DESTINATION COLLECTIONS #17 FRAC Franche-Comté Une rencontre avec Aline Noblat, médiatrice Exposition « Montag ou la bibliothèque à venir », du 15 octobre 2017 au 14 janvier 2018 Œuvre racontée Katie Paterson, Future Library, 2014-2114 Cet entretien a été réalisé à Besançon par Mathilde Ayoub le 31 octobre 2017. Création sonore de Paul Behnam, édition de Benjamin Delille. Destination Collections est une série produite par Mathilde Ayoub, coordination Valentine Gouget. Visuel Hange&Colin.
Kieko Matteson's Forests in Revolutionary France: Conservation, Community, and Conflict, 1669-1848 (Cambridge University Press, 2015) is an impressive study of the economic and political vitality of the forest, from the reign of Louis XIV through the middle of the nineteenth century. Focusing on the Franche-Comte region, the book explores the meanings and values of the forest to a range of stakeholders– the state, landowners, manufacturers, and peasants–all of whom sought varying modes and degrees of control over Frances woodland resources and spaces. Examining key moments in the states attempt to manage the forest, the book pays close attention to local forms of response and resistance to interventions such as the Ordinance of 1669 and the Forest Code of 1827. Revealing the deeply political significance of environmental resources and concerns throughout a period of revolutionary upheaval, including shifts from monarchy to republic to empire, and back again, Forests in Revolutionary France is a book that reminds us of the connections and tensions between the histories of central authorities and everyday lives, between private and public interests, and between tradition and modernity in the discourses and practices of conservation, community, and property over two centuries. Examining the long and complex history that notions of preservation and degradation have had in France, as elsewhere, the book also contributes to our understanding of contemporary concerns over the uses and abuses of the forest in an era of increasing awareness of climate change and the need for more sustainable alternatives to existing/previous approaches to the natural environment.
Kieko Matteson’s Forests in Revolutionary France: Conservation, Community, and Conflict, 1669-1848 (Cambridge University Press, 2015) is an impressive study of the economic and political vitality of the forest, from the reign of Louis XIV through the middle of the nineteenth century. Focusing on the Franche-Comte region, the book explores the meanings and values of the forest to a range of stakeholders– the state, landowners, manufacturers, and peasants–all of whom sought varying modes and degrees of control over Frances woodland resources and spaces. Examining key moments in the states attempt to manage the forest, the book pays close attention to local forms of response and resistance to interventions such as the Ordinance of 1669 and the Forest Code of 1827. Revealing the deeply political significance of environmental resources and concerns throughout a period of revolutionary upheaval, including shifts from monarchy to republic to empire, and back again, Forests in Revolutionary France is a book that reminds us of the connections and tensions between the histories of central authorities and everyday lives, between private and public interests, and between tradition and modernity in the discourses and practices of conservation, community, and property over two centuries. Examining the long and complex history that notions of preservation and degradation have had in France, as elsewhere, the book also contributes to our understanding of contemporary concerns over the uses and abuses of the forest in an era of increasing awareness of climate change and the need for more sustainable alternatives to existing/previous approaches to the natural environment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kieko Matteson’s Forests in Revolutionary France: Conservation, Community, and Conflict, 1669-1848 (Cambridge University Press, 2015) is an impressive study of the economic and political vitality of the forest, from the reign of Louis XIV through the middle of the nineteenth century. Focusing on the Franche-Comte region, the book explores the meanings and values of the forest to a range of stakeholders– the state, landowners, manufacturers, and peasants–all of whom sought varying modes and degrees of control over Frances woodland resources and spaces. Examining key moments in the states attempt to manage the forest, the book pays close attention to local forms of response and resistance to interventions such as the Ordinance of 1669 and the Forest Code of 1827. Revealing the deeply political significance of environmental resources and concerns throughout a period of revolutionary upheaval, including shifts from monarchy to republic to empire, and back again, Forests in Revolutionary France is a book that reminds us of the connections and tensions between the histories of central authorities and everyday lives, between private and public interests, and between tradition and modernity in the discourses and practices of conservation, community, and property over two centuries. Examining the long and complex history that notions of preservation and degradation have had in France, as elsewhere, the book also contributes to our understanding of contemporary concerns over the uses and abuses of the forest in an era of increasing awareness of climate change and the need for more sustainable alternatives to existing/previous approaches to the natural environment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kieko Matteson’s Forests in Revolutionary France: Conservation, Community, and Conflict, 1669-1848 (Cambridge University Press, 2015) is an impressive study of the economic and political vitality of the forest, from the reign of Louis XIV through the middle of the nineteenth century. Focusing on the Franche-Comte region, the book explores the meanings and values of the forest to a range of stakeholders– the state, landowners, manufacturers, and peasants–all of whom sought varying modes and degrees of control over Frances woodland resources and spaces. Examining key moments in the states attempt to manage the forest, the book pays close attention to local forms of response and resistance to interventions such as the Ordinance of 1669 and the Forest Code of 1827. Revealing the deeply political significance of environmental resources and concerns throughout a period of revolutionary upheaval, including shifts from monarchy to republic to empire, and back again, Forests in Revolutionary France is a book that reminds us of the connections and tensions between the histories of central authorities and everyday lives, between private and public interests, and between tradition and modernity in the discourses and practices of conservation, community, and property over two centuries. Examining the long and complex history that notions of preservation and degradation have had in France, as elsewhere, the book also contributes to our understanding of contemporary concerns over the uses and abuses of the forest in an era of increasing awareness of climate change and the need for more sustainable alternatives to existing/previous approaches to the natural environment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kieko Matteson’s Forests in Revolutionary France: Conservation, Community, and Conflict, 1669-1848 (Cambridge University Press, 2015) is an impressive study of the economic and political vitality of the forest, from the reign of Louis XIV through the middle of the nineteenth century. Focusing on the Franche-Comte region, the book explores the meanings and values of the forest to a range of stakeholders– the state, landowners, manufacturers, and peasants–all of whom sought varying modes and degrees of control over Frances woodland resources and spaces. Examining key moments in the states attempt to manage the forest, the book pays close attention to local forms of response and resistance to interventions such as the Ordinance of 1669 and the Forest Code of 1827. Revealing the deeply political significance of environmental resources and concerns throughout a period of revolutionary upheaval, including shifts from monarchy to republic to empire, and back again, Forests in Revolutionary France is a book that reminds us of the connections and tensions between the histories of central authorities and everyday lives, between private and public interests, and between tradition and modernity in the discourses and practices of conservation, community, and property over two centuries. Examining the long and complex history that notions of preservation and degradation have had in France, as elsewhere, the book also contributes to our understanding of contemporary concerns over the uses and abuses of the forest in an era of increasing awareness of climate change and the need for more sustainable alternatives to existing/previous approaches to the natural environment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kieko Matteson’s Forests in Revolutionary France: Conservation, Community, and Conflict, 1669-1848 (Cambridge University Press, 2015) is an impressive study of the economic and political vitality of the forest, from the reign of Louis XIV through the middle of the nineteenth century. Focusing on the Franche-Comte region, the book explores the meanings and values of the forest to a range of stakeholders– the state, landowners, manufacturers, and peasants–all of whom sought varying modes and degrees of control over Frances woodland resources and spaces. Examining key moments in the states attempt to manage the forest, the book pays close attention to local forms of response and resistance to interventions such as the Ordinance of 1669 and the Forest Code of 1827. Revealing the deeply political significance of environmental resources and concerns throughout a period of revolutionary upheaval, including shifts from monarchy to republic to empire, and back again, Forests in Revolutionary France is a book that reminds us of the connections and tensions between the histories of central authorities and everyday lives, between private and public interests, and between tradition and modernity in the discourses and practices of conservation, community, and property over two centuries. Examining the long and complex history that notions of preservation and degradation have had in France, as elsewhere, the book also contributes to our understanding of contemporary concerns over the uses and abuses of the forest in an era of increasing awareness of climate change and the need for more sustainable alternatives to existing/previous approaches to the natural environment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Le Plus Grand Cabaret de Franche Comte - 17 Avril Interviews : The Blanker Republic Pop N Co
Le Plus Grand Cabaret de Franche Comte - 17 Avril Interviews : The Blanker Republic Pop N Co
Le Plus Grand Cabaret de Franche Comte - 17 Avril Interviews : The Blanker Republic Pop N Co
Le Plus Grand Cabaret de Franche Comte - 16 Avril Interviews de : Chloé M Julie Marsaud Elsa Pulse
Interviews de : Clémentine FANTAUZZI Astro Manon DACOSTA
Interviews de : Mickey Mitch & Angélo Florian Audoux Hélène Grenier
Interviews de : Sylvaine CHARRIER Jennifer SOARES Emilie & Louise
Mercredi 10 Avril : Amandine Guyon, Miss Franche-Comté est venue passer le bonjour au Micro du Charlie Show.
Mercredi 10 Avril : Amandine Guyon, Miss Franche-Comté est venue passer le bonjour au Micro du Charlie Show.
Mercredi 10 Avril : Amandine Guyon, Miss Franche-Comté est venue passer le bonjour au Micro du Charlie Show.