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  1. Adolphe Thiers nacque a Marsiglia il 15 aprile 1797 da una famiglia di commercianti, figlio di Pierre Thiers ( 1759 - 1843) e Marie-Madeleine Amic ( 1774 - 1852 ). Dopo aver frequentato il liceo nella città natale, studiò legge ad Aix-en-Provence e a ventitré anni divenne avvocato. Esercitò per poco la professione forense e nel 1821 si ...

  2. Louis Adolphe Thiers ( Marsella, 15 de abril de 1797 - Saint-Germain-en-Laye, 3 de septiembre de 1877) fue un historiador y político francés. Fue repetidas veces primer ministro bajo el reinado de Luis-Felipe de Francia. Después de la caída del Segundo Imperio, fue nombrado presidente provisional de la Tercera República Francesa, ordenando ...

  3. A Proclamation drawn up by Thiers 29 July, 1830, directed the attention of the people to the Duc d'Orléans who became King Louis-Philippe. Thiers became a member of the French Academy in 1834 and between 1830 and 1840 was several times minister under the July Monarchy. When the long Guizot ministry freed him from political occupations he ...

  4. THIERS, LOUIS-ADOLPHE (1797–1877), one of the founders of the Third Republic in France. Adolphe Thiers was born in Marseilles on 15 April 1797. He overcame birth outside wedlock, desertion by his father, relative poverty, and a stature of just five feet and two inches with his ambition, intelligence, and industry.

  5. Louis Adolphe Thiers naît à Marseille le 15 avril 1797, dans les derniers temps de la Révolution. Il est l'enfant naturel d'un aventurier, héritier fantasque de bourgeois parvenus. Devenu opportunément veuf, il légitime son fils et lui donne son nom. Il épouse aussi sa maîtresse un mois après la naissance d'Adolphe.

  6. Louis Adolphe Thiers från "Hemvännen" 1877. Marie Joseph Louis Adolphe Thiers , född 16 april 1797 i Marseille , död 3 september 1877 , var en fransk historiker och statsman . Han var Frankrikes president 1871–1873.

  7. 14 April 1797. Adolphe Marie Joseph Louis Thiers was born in Marseille. After completing his studies at a secondary school in Marseille and then a university in Aix-en-Provence, where he obtained a degree in Law, he became a lawyer. 1821. He moved to Paris where he tried his hand at journalism in the columns of the newspaper, Le Constitutionnel.