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  1. 18. Jan. 2021 · La belle Curchod. Comment Suzanne Necker, née Curchod, (1737–1794), mère de Madame de Staël et connue pour sa beauté, a arrangé les moindres détails de son enterrement par peur d'être enterrée trop tôt. Frédéric Rossi. Historien, directeur des éditions Infolio

  2. 8. Mai 2009 · This paper explores the problematic relationship between feminine propriety and public female ambition by examining the ways in which the well‐known salonnière and philanthropist, Suzanne Curchod Necker, deployed the principles of normative femininity – womanly propriety founded upon the values of modesty, sensibility, charity and above all, domesticity – as a masquerade, not only to ...

  3. NECKER, SUZANNE, Was descended, on the maternal side, from an ancient family in Provence, who had taken refuge in Switzerland on the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. She was born at Grassy, her father, M. Curchod, being the evangelical minister in that little village. He was a very learned man, and trained his daughter with great care, even ...

  4. 18. März 2013 · The Salon of Madame Necker (Suzanne Curchod 1737-1794, mother of writer Madame de Staël), the wife of Jacques Necker, the Irish-Genevan banker, and former Finance Minister, was one of the most famous, and here were to be found nearly all the celebrities of the time: Madame de Staël, la Duchesse de Lauzun, la Comtesse de Brienne, the talented ...

  5. 21. Mai 2021 · Germaine wurde in der Blütezeit der Aufklärung als Tochter von Jacques Necker (1732–1804), dem Generaldirektor der Finanzen von König Ludwig XVI., und Suzanne Curchod (1737–1794) geboren. Curchods Salons gehörten zu den gefragtesten und schillerndsten im Frankreich des 18. Jahrhunderts. Als Schweizer Protestanten im katholischen Frankreich waren Jacques und Suzanne bestrebt, ihrer ...

  6. Media in category "Suzanne Curchod" The following 8 files are in this category, out of 8 total. Suzanne Curchod, by Jean-Etienne Liotard.jpg 1,500 × 1,226; 1.34 MB

  7. Suzanne Curchod (1737–94) was living at Lausanne when she agreed to marry the young Edward Gibbon, but the engagement was broken off. Employed as companion to the then fiancée of Jacques Necker (1732–1804), later the finance minister of Louis XVI, she married him in 1764. Their only daughter, Anne Louise Germaine, is better known as Madame ...