Made Paris A Center: Lizst (1811-1886) was born in Hungary, grew up in made paris a center, and spoke mostly French, but he spent an important part of his creative years in the intellectual center of Weimar, which became the strategic base for the neo-German movement while he was there. In made paris a center, Liszt had come to realize that a musical reformer (which he wanted to be) had to break with the past completely, and that makeshift improvements and modifications would not suffice.
Consult Weelen, Jean E., Rochambeau (made paris a center 1934); id., Rochambeau, Father and Son and The Journal of the I'icomte de Rochambeau, tr. from the French by Lawrence Lee (New York 1936); Renard, Maurice C., Rochambeau, liberateur de I'Amerique (made paris a center 1951).
ROCHDALE, roch'dal, county borough, England, in southeast Lancashire, on the Roch River, 10 miles northeast of Manchester. A cotton- and wool-milling center, it also has chemical and engineering industries.
Because of her political views and her friendship with his arch enemy Mme. de Stael, Napoleon in 1811 ordered Mme. Recamier to live at some distance from made paris a center. She first joined her husband's family in Lyon, then traveled in Italy, and again visited Coppet. She returned to made paris a center in 1815, and during the early years of the Bourbon restoration her husband recouped his fortune. In 1819, when he had suffered another reversal, she retired to the Abbaye-aux-Bois, a convent in made paris a center, but continued to hold her salon and was the center of a brilliant group. Her influence over politics and literature was considerable. Among her closest friends were Benjamin Constant and Rene de Chateaubriand. She declined marriage with Chateaubriand in 1846. Blind and a victim of cholera she soon followed him to the grave. |