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L'éclairage public tel qu'on l'entend aujourd'hui date du 17e siècle, lors du règne de Louis XIV. Nicolas de la Reynie, lieutenant général de la police, souhaite alors renforcer les mesures de sécurité et... de surveillance policière. Car amener la lumière dans la rue, c'est y amener aussi la sécurité, ou le sentiment de sécurité, et c'est encore vrai aujourd'hui. Alors concrètement, comment du Moyen-Âge à l'époque moderne en est-on arriver à faire reculer les ombres de la nuit en ville ? Quelles étaient les procédures et les techniques ? Notre invité propose une autre histoire des Lumières dans un livre passionnant qui renvoie tout un chacun à sa peur du noir. Bibliographie : À la lanterne ! Une biographie d'un objet banal, pour une autre histoire des L(l)umières, Paris, XXVIIIe siècle, Benjamin BOTHEREAU (Brepols) Notes et ressources documentaires : Extrait du poème d'Adrien-Joseph de Valois d'Orville « Les nouvelles lanternes » (1746) : Le règne de la nuit désormais va finir, Des mortels renommés par leur sage industrie De leur climat sont prêts à te bannir. Vois les effets de leur génie. [...] Pour placer la lumière en un corps transparent, Avec un verre épais une lampe est formée. Dans son centre une mèche avec art enfermée Frappe un réverbère éclatant, Qui, d'abord la réfléchissant, Porte contre la Nuit sa splendeur enflammée. Globes brillants, astres nouveaux, Que tout Paris admire au milieu des ténèbres. Extrait d'un reportage de France 2 "Eclairage public : certaines communes rallument la lumière" diffusé le 7/12/2023 de C.Arnold, D.Sébastien, H.Strobel, J.-C.Martin, J.Susselin Extrait de la chanson "Lampadaire" (Paroles et musique : Anabel / Vincha Arrangements : Nino Vella Producteurs : Vincha, Nino Vella et MKL Editions : ROSSINANTE, SONY MUSIC PUBLISHING FRANCE, AM PRODUCTION, MEYA MUSIC On faisait comment avant, podcast original France Télévisions. Réalisation : Laetitia Harper Musique : Antonin Fajon
Cat lives vicariously through Kate and intercepts Reynie's letter in this discussion/review of Season 1, Episode 7 of The Mysterious Benedict Society on Disney+. Music Licensing: Song: Grand Waltz Dark Trio Allegro Artist: Kevin MacLeadLink to Song: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/7922-grand-dark-waltz-trio-allegroLink to FilmMusic Standard License: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/standard-license
The Mysterious Benedict Society cast and crew were all smiles when discussing this season of the show. We will see the characters in an entirely new environment this year as they travel the globe in their latest adventure. We can also expect to see new sets as the cast, who was previously filming in Canada, has relocated to Los Angeles for a new look. We spoke with Mystic Inscho (“Reynie Muldoon”), Marta Kessler (“Constance Contriare"), Seth Carr (“George “Sticky” Washington”), Emmy DeOliveira (“Kate Wetherall”), Gia Sandhu (“Ms. Perumal”), MaameYaa Baofo (“Rhonda Kazembe”), EPs & Creators Phil Hay and Matt Manfredi, and EPs & Showrunners Darren Swimmer and Todd Slavkin. The showrunners said to expect the unexpected as the orphans, who are reminded that they are family, are brought back together to help their friend. Mystic said he was happy to come back to play Reynie and had no trouble getting back into character, while Emmy DeOliveria said this season has some great moments, including some with her "dad," Ryan Hurst. Additionally, all of the EPs and Showrunners said this was a big season to take on, but they could not be more proud. Listen in to hear everyone's take on their latest adventure. Host: Monica Gleberman Editor: Corinna Caimi Social Media Graphic: Jojo -- Synopsis: This season, Reynie, Sticky, Kate, and Constance, the four gifted orphans recruited by the eccentric Mr. Benedict, embark on another mission to save the world from the nefarious plans of his twin brother Dr. L.D. Curtain. When the kids discover that Mr. Benedict and Number Two have been kidnapped, they must piece together the riddles and clues within a perilous scavenger hunt set by Mr. Benedict to foil Curtain's latest scheme. Relying on only their wits, intellect, and empathy, the charming group of misfits embarks on a globe-trotting adventure by air, land, sea, and pie truck, calling upon their special skills to solve the mysteries and rescue their lost comrades. Along the way, the kids experience the growing pains that come with being part of their new “found family” while remaining true to their unique selves. In the process, they discover what true happiness means. *Season two of “The Mysterious Benedict Society” will premiere on October 26th on Disney+ Don't forget to follow us on Twitter @SilenceonSet and Instagram @SilenceonSetPod
Pourquoi Paris doit beaucoup à Gabriel Nicolas de La Reynie ? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Échanges inter-lycéens franco-européens diffusés le 02/12/ 2021 sur la plateforme de visioconférence du Projet Europe, Éducation, École : https://projet-eee.eu/diffusion-en-direct-564/ Information : https://projet-eee.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/eee.21-22_Engagement_citoyen_des_jeune_Dominique_Reynie.pdf Site : https://projet-eee.eu Programme 2021-2022 : https://projet-eee.eu/programme-de-lannee-2021-2022-1820/ Cours en vidéo classés par thèmes : https://projet-eee.eu/cours-classes-par-themes/ E.E.E. sur Dailymotion : http://www.dailymotion.com/projeteee Podcast du Projet EEE : https://soundcloud.com/podcastprojeteee https://www.deezer.com/fr/show/634442 E.E.E. sur Facebook : http://www.facebook.com/Europe-Education…ole-203833816638
Échanges inter-lycéens franco-européens diffusés le 02/12/ 2021 sur la plateforme de visioconférence du Projet Europe, Éducation, École : https://projet-eee.eu/diffusion-en-direct-564/ Information : https://projet-eee.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/eee.21-22_Engagement_citoyen_des_jeune_Dominique_Reynie.pdf Site : https://projet-eee.eu Programme 2021-2022 : https://projet-eee.eu/programme-de-lannee-2021-2022-1820/ Cours en vidéo classés par thèmes : https://projet-eee.eu/cours-classes-par-themes/ E.E.E. sur Dailymotion : http://www.dailymotion.com/projeteee Podcast du Projet EEE : https://soundcloud.com/podcastprojeteee https://www.deezer.com/fr/show/634442 E.E.E. sur Facebook : http://www.facebook.com/Europe-Education…ole-203833816638
À la faveur d'une réforme ambitieuse de la police, menée à bien par Colbert, à la demande de Louis XIV, Gabriel Nicolas de La Reynie devient le premier lieutenant général de police. Dans cette fonction, qu'il assume durant trente ans, il prend des mesures dont les Parisiens actuels peuvent encore lui être redevables.La centralisation de la policeIssu d'une famille de la petite noblesse limousine, La Reynie naît en 1625. Devenu maître des requêtes au Conseil d'État, il est remarqué par Colbert, le tout-puissant ministre du Roi-Soleil.En 1667, il en fait le premier titulaire d'une nouvelle charge, la lieutenance générale de police. Jusque là, la police relevait de plusieurs services. Le lieutenant civil et le lieutenant criminel, s'estimant tous deux en charge de la police parisienne, se livraient une féroce guerre d'influence.Mais d'autres organismes avaient aussi leur mot à dire : les commissaires, chacun à la tête d'un quartier, le Parlement de Paris ou encore les juridictions ecclésiastiques.Profitant de circonstances favorables, la réforme initiée par Colbert, en 1667, centralise la gestion de la police parisienne, la confiant à un seul personnage, le lieutenant général de police.Une ville plus sûre et plus salubreAu XVIIe siècle, la "police" était entendue dans un sens beaucoup plus large qu'aujourd'hui et bien plus proche de son étymologie, qui signifiait "administration d'une ville".Aussi La Reynie prend-il bien sûr des mesures pour maintenir l'ordre. Il embauche des agents plus qualifiés, crée un réseau d'indicateurs et réforme le guet, cette milice chargée d'assurer la sécurité des Parisiens.De nos jours, il est surtout connu pour avoir mis fin à la célèbres cour des miracles. Des milliers de brigands y menaient en toute impunité une vie autonome, sous l'empire de leurs propres lois.Mais le lieutenant général de police a aussi voulu faire de Paris une ville plus salubre et plus agréable à vivre. Sous son impulsion, la cité, équipée de milliers de lanternes, devint déjà la "ville lumière". Il lutte aussi contre les incendies et les inondations et nettoie les rues de la boue et des immondices qui les empuantissaient. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In Episodes Three and Four of THE MYSTERIOUS BENEDICT, streaming on Disney Plus, the four children continue spying on The Institute for their mentor, the brilliant scientist Nicholas Benedict. They discover Benedict's long-lost twin brother runs the school they infiltrated. This revelation leads to great distress on Benedict's part. Meanwhile, Reynie and Sticky try to earn the right to become “messengers,” with more freedom to roam the island, while the two girls struggle in school. Also, the children learn that Benedict and his adult friends secretly watching the island are scheduled to have their memories erased.
This “week” we read The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey by Trenton Lee Stewart. We talk about the creepiness of the Ten Men, the quality of Reynie's character, the greatness of Stewart's action scenes, and how this book compares to the first. We also get a sequel to Sophie's “kill Mr. Curtain” fanfic take and hear Jacqueline's theory about the book's setting. Content Warnings: Kidnapping, running away from guardians, so so much of children in danger, severe injury, torture (both threat and actual), discussion of narcolepsy and “the old hag,” sleep-inducing drugs, threat of death, and discussion of mind control. Note: We recorded this episode in March but had to take a hiatus due to COVID curveballs and Sophie getting distracted by Camp NaNoWriMo (we'll talk more about it in our next episode). Also, we incorrectly refer to Reynie and Sticky's ages as eleven. They were eleven in the first book. Now they are twelve. Our Links Website: https://werethekidsalright.wixsite.com/podcast Twitter: @wtka_podcast Instagram: wtka_podcast TikTok: wtka_podcast Music Intro: I Wear Headphones by Silent Partner Outro: Good Vibes by MBB Music Intro: I Wear Headphones by Silent Partner Outro: Good Vibes by MBB
Reynie Rutledge is the President and CEO of First Security Bancorp, a bank that began in Searcy, AR, and now has locations throughout the state. Reynie is a recent inductee into the Arkansas Business Hall of fame. After graduating with a degree in industrial engineering, he returned to get an MBA from the Walton College of Business.
Cada uno en su casa 14:16 Alejandro Dolina, Patricio Barton, Gillespi Segmento Inicial Barton: "Nadie piensa en los clubes nudistas" 15:50 Segmento Dispositivo Las investigaciones de Gabriel Nicolas de la Reynie 1:17:46 "Gotas de veneno" ♫ (Jorge Casal) 1:30:51 Segmento Humorístico "Mamá, voy a donar sangre" 1:35:53 Sordo Gancé / Manuel Moreira 2:08:05 "Zamba del carnaval" ♫ (Cuchi Leguizamón)
At least of two Louis the Fourteenth’s mistresses, Madame de Montespan, are implicated in the Paris Poison Affair. The King orders his Lieutenant General of Police to keep the investigation quiet. But soon, the list of suspects grows to more than 400 people, leaving Nicolas de la Reynie with some very tough choices.
The web of poison plots in Paris grows. At least four noblewomen are accused of poisoning or attempting to poison their husbands. Meanwhile, Lieutenant General of Police Nicolas de la Reynie uncovers an unsettling plot against the King as part of the investigation.
Three years after the case of Madame de Brinvilliers, a noblewoman named Madame de Poulallion is accused of poisoning her husband so she could be with her lover. While investigating the case, Paris’ lieutenant general of police Nicolas de la Reynie uncovers two suspects who may have helped Poulallion… and at least three other women… take purposeful steps towards widowhood. From arsenic-laced frogs to “love potions,” Part Two on the Paris Poison Affair is not an episode you want to miss.
Holly Tucker, professor of French and professor of medicine, health and society, is familiar with that “overwhelmed” feeling at the library. For her, though, it happens at specialty collections in Paris while surrounded by tomes of 17th century French manuscripts. In the latest edition of The Zeppos Report, Vanderbilt University Chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos interviews Tucker about the complex infrastructure of her scholarship. “It’s a muddy mess, isn’t it?” Tucker cheerfully exclaimed. Tucker’s latest full-length work, City of Light, City of Poison: Murder, Magic, and the First Police Chief of Paris, was released earlier this year to critical acclaim. It ventures deeply into the records of police chief Nicolas de la Reynie as he works to clean up the streets of Paris and protect the legacy of King Louis XIV—the Sun King. In her conversation with Zeppos, Tucker punctuates the importance of bringing these historical documents to general audiences. “These are the types of stories about history that could draw readers from outside of our small group of scholars,” she said. Tucker, the 2012 recipient of the Chancellor’s Award for Research, also reflects upon the directions that her intellectual curiosity has taken her. She embraces the trans-institutional culture of learning at Vanderbilt and consistently seeks out opportunities to collaborate with various academic communities across the university. One such journey brought her back into the classroom as a student in the Master’s of Public Health program. “There are a lot of people who are a lot smarter than I am that have a lot of things to teach me,” she said. “I’m as much of a student as I am a teacher.” Tucker sat down with the chancellor in his office shortly after returning from her summer research location in the south of France. The interview took place on July 25, 2017. For a transcript of this podcast, please go to this URL: https://s3.amazonaws.com/vu-wp0/wp-content/uploads/sites/79/2017/10/24185243/Holly_Tucker_2017_07_28.docx The podcast is available on SoundCloud, Stitcher, Google Play, iTunes, YouTube and The Zeppos Report website.
Baker Family Ranch Home Near Franklin, Idaho Part II of an audio recording of the personal biography of Harold Evans Baker born 20 April 1896, Franklin, Idaho. Based on a document compiled and typewritten by his daughter, Marva May Baker, born 7 May 1932. Voiced by his grandson (and Marva’s son) Kirk E Strickland. Harold relates his happy experience as a newlywed, prosperous farmer, and new father as his wife, Alice Gilbert, gives birth to three of his children: a "robust" son, Orlin Harold Baker; another son, Donald Gilbert Baker; and a longed-for daughter, Melva Baker. Some of these births occur when his wife, Alice, and mother, Lucy Evans, quarrel for reasons he never comes to understand. He recounts working joyfully with his younger brother, John Reynold "Reynie" Baker and under a sharecropping arrangement with his father, Benjamin Charles Baker. After a period of prosperity, he cites disappointments and setbacks as farm commodity markets take a downturn forcing him to sell crops at a loss and divest of accumulated property including a home he built in Fairview, Idaho.