Null THE DAUPHIN'S WRITING ASSIGNMENT CORRECTED BY HIS FATHER KING LOUIS XVI.
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THE DAUPHIN'S WRITING ASSIGNMENT CORRECTED BY HIS FATHER KING LOUIS XVI. LOUIS-CHARLES, Prince of France, Duke of Normandy (1785-1795). Handwriting assignment of the young Dauphin of France, written during his captivity in the Temple prison, bearing annotations and corrections in the hand of his father King Louis XVI (in bold type), 4 pages, folio. Minor edge wear, but overall good condition. Text on reform: "[...] spread throughout France. In the same year, a number of anxious minds ventured propositions on indulgences, which the Faculty of Theology in Paris condemned. In 1521 appeared the Sorbonne's famous censure against Luther himself, who, having first taken this respectable body as arbitrator in his disputes with the Court of Rome, then poured out his insults against the Judges, whom his faint praise had not been able to corrupt. The glare of this censure, as is usually the case, awakened public attention to opinions that had perhaps been forgotten, or at least neglected: many were seduced by the appeal they presented. As early as 1528, they were supported by the clergy, the nobility and even the common people. In the years that followed, the faculty was occupied only with censuring preachers and authors who, sometimes under equivocal and obscure propositions, insinuated false and dangerous meanings; soon more daring, presented openly the forests of Bohemia and Hungary. Their numbers, swollen by the sectaries expelled from the Catholic states, increased in proportion to the attacks made on the privileges of these proud and warlike peoples: it took perfidious politics, treachery and cowardly assassinations to bring them under the yoke they feared. Heresy, triumphant in so many places, made only slight progress in Polonia, where there were no parties with an interest in spreading it: a few examples of severity were enough to intimidate it and almost make it disappear; but the lure of a crown made it sovereign in Prussia. This country belonged to the Teutonic Order: the Grand Master, Ambert of Brandenburg, threw off the yoke of his vows to marry, and make the scepter hereditary in his family. Most of his knights imitated him, passing on to their posterity, by way of inheritance, the commanderies, of which they were merely the trustees. The faction that had called the fierce Christian from Denmark to Sweden [...]". Provenance: collection of Jean-Baptiste Gomin (1757-1841), given on his death by his widow to Viscount Alcide-Hyacinthe du Bois de Beauchesne (1800-1873), kept by descent before being offered for sale on March 3, 2015, under no. 173 by the Coutau-Bégarie firm, then today by the purchaser at the time. Exhibition: this document was presented at the "Louis XVII" exhibition organized by the Musée Lambinet at the Hôtel de Ville de Versailles from May to July 1989.

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THE DAUPHIN'S WRITING ASSIGNMENT CORRECTED BY HIS FATHER KING LOUIS XVI. LOUIS-CHARLES, Prince of France, Duke of Normandy (1785-1795). Handwriting assignment of the young Dauphin of France, written during his captivity in the Temple prison, bearing annotations and corrections in the hand of his father King Louis XVI (in bold type), 4 pages, folio. Minor edge wear, but overall good condition. Text on reform: "[...] spread throughout France. In the same year, a number of anxious minds ventured propositions on indulgences, which the Faculty of Theology in Paris condemned. In 1521 appeared the Sorbonne's famous censure against Luther himself, who, having first taken this respectable body as arbitrator in his disputes with the Court of Rome, then poured out his insults against the Judges, whom his faint praise had not been able to corrupt. The glare of this censure, as is usually the case, awakened public attention to opinions that had perhaps been forgotten, or at least neglected: many were seduced by the appeal they presented. As early as 1528, they were supported by the clergy, the nobility and even the common people. In the years that followed, the faculty was occupied only with censuring preachers and authors who, sometimes under equivocal and obscure propositions, insinuated false and dangerous meanings; soon more daring, presented openly the forests of Bohemia and Hungary. Their numbers, swollen by the sectaries expelled from the Catholic states, increased in proportion to the attacks made on the privileges of these proud and warlike peoples: it took perfidious politics, treachery and cowardly assassinations to bring them under the yoke they feared. Heresy, triumphant in so many places, made only slight progress in Polonia, where there were no parties with an interest in spreading it: a few examples of severity were enough to intimidate it and almost make it disappear; but the lure of a crown made it sovereign in Prussia. This country belonged to the Teutonic Order: the Grand Master, Ambert of Brandenburg, threw off the yoke of his vows to marry, and make the scepter hereditary in his family. Most of his knights imitated him, passing on to their posterity, by way of inheritance, the commanderies, of which they were merely the trustees. The faction that had called the fierce Christian from Denmark to Sweden [...]". Provenance: collection of Jean-Baptiste Gomin (1757-1841), given on his death by his widow to Viscount Alcide-Hyacinthe du Bois de Beauchesne (1800-1873), kept by descent before being offered for sale on March 3, 2015, under no. 173 by the Coutau-Bégarie firm, then today by the purchaser at the time. Exhibition: this document was presented at the "Louis XVII" exhibition organized by the Musée Lambinet at the Hôtel de Ville de Versailles from May to July 1989.

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SOMME (80) / Family archives of Albert DAUPHIN (Amiens 1827 - Argoeuves 1898, lawyer and President of the Amiens Bar, First President of the Amiens Court of Appeal, Mayor of Amiens from 1868 to 1873, Prefect of the Somme in 1871, then General Councillor of Amiens, President of the Somme General Council, briefly Deputy of the Somme but Senator for 12 years, also Minister of Finance for 6 months in 1887, a street in Amiens bears his name): these papers concern the Caumartin and Maressal families on his mother's side, and de Sachy on his father's / Some 18th-century documents (8) refer to Jean Sachy, Seigneur d'Omécourt (his father was the first Alderman of Amiens), whose confirmation of nobility is recorded on parchment in Amiens in 1698 (extract from the registers), as well as the Bultel and Lepaige families (inventory dated October 3, 1758, following the death of Antoine Lepaige, bourgeois of Amiens, former police commissioner, who had died a few days earlier, on Sept. 28, in Amiens at the Maison des Pères de l'Observatoire, where he had retired, and from which we have his daughter's renunciation of the estate - Most of these archives belong to the 1823 estate of Jean François Philibert Maressal (Albert Dauphin's maternal great-grandfather), a large landowner in the Amiens region, including his will (period copy), various deeds of succession (copies), important farm accounts (10 large notebooks), 3 large account books from 1820 for his house (with receipts and letters pinned to the wall) and for miscellaneous holdings (logging), followed by numerous deeds of division between the heirs - a large file concerning the Maressal estate concerns Grévin Aîné, an important figure in Amiens (author of the Amiens town plan and street numbering), with over 20 autograph letters signed, relating to the Domaine de Bertaucourt (a former abbey that was purchased as a native property), which Grévin had to survey and appraise - it also deals with the estate of Jean-Henri Dauphin, Albert's father - a fine and coherent set of documents.