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  1. Juliette, Lady Huxley ( née Marie Juliette Baillot; 6 December 1896 – 28 September 1994) was a Swiss-French sculptor and writer. She provided lifelong support to her husband, British naturalist Sir Julian Huxley. [1]

  2. Swiss-born sculptor and writer who was married to Julian Huxley. Name variations: Lady Huxley. Born Marie Juliette Baillot on December 6, 1896, in Auvernier, Switzerland; died in 1994; only daughter and one of two children of Alphonse Baillot (a building solicitor) and Mélanie Antonia (Ortlieb) Baillot; attended École Supérieure des Jeunes ...

  3. Abstract: Journals, scrapbooks, sketches, and photographs by and about Julian and Juliette Huxley, covering family life; travels on behalf of UNESCO and for other research and personal purposes to Africa, Australia, and Europe; awards and honors; and academic and creative writing.

  4. 7. Nov. 2010 · A lmost exactly 50 years ago the Observer published – on 13 November 1960 – the first of three extraordinarily influential articles by Julian Huxley that led to the founding of the World Wildlife...

  5. Lady Juliette Marie Baillot-Huxley begann den Bericht über ihr Leben mit einem Zitat von T. S. Eliot: „Each generation must translate for itself“ (Jede Generation muss [die großen Werke] selbst übersetzen) (J. Huxley 1986, S. 1).

  6. Julian Sorell Huxley graduated from Oxford and accepted a position at the Rice Institute, and by 1913 had become an Assistant Professor of Biology. He left Rice in 1916 to serve in World War I, and after held academic positions until 1929.

  7. Juliette (née Baillot), Lady Huxley (1896-1994), Sculptor and writer; wife of Sir Julian Sorell Huxley. Sitter in 34 portraits