Thursday, January 17, 2013

Le luttes de Jean Valjean by chad hunter

Le luttes de Jean Valjean
 
 
 
Jean Valjean is the protagonists of Victor Hugo's 1862 story called Les Misérables. Hugo depicts the character's nineteen year long struggle to lead a normal life after serving a prison sentence for stealing bread to feed his starving family during a time of economic depression. Valjean, while on the run, meets a woman named Fantine who became a prostitute to take care of her daughter. She becomes very ill and before she dies he promises her that he will take care of her daughter. Throughout the story a Police Inspector named Javert repeatedly encounters Valjean and attempts to return him to prison. After eight years of being on the run, Valjean becomes a mayor and then changes his name to Monsieur Madeleine. The story ends with Javert killing himself and Jean Valjean dying as an almost saint. I definitely think Javerts death was influenced by Valjean because Javert could not handle the mercy that Valjean showed to him.
 
 
Jean Valjean's overall character overview was that he was a good and a bad character. This is because in the beginning he was a criminal and hated the world because he thought the world owed him something. He then turns into a good character when he is on the run and becomes humble, giving, and sincere. This was a very important thing to notice in the novel because the whole thing is based around how he changed from bad to good.
 
This is a picture of Javert (left) and JeanValjean (right) when Valjean was on the run and at the time the mayor.
 

Wednesday, October 31, 2012


 
Camembert
Délicieux Fromage
 
 
 
Camembert cheese was first originated in Normandy by Marie Herel. The cheese comes from unpasterized cow milk that is fermented for months to make its hard crumbly texture. Camembert gets its charistic flavor from the amonia, succinic acid, and salt in it. This gives the cheese a very bland and sometimes bitter taste. The cheese also has a very distinct smell that sometimes also smells like ammonia. Many people like to serve the cheese warm to go with apple slices, dried appricots, and crusty baguettes.
 
The orange shaded area is Normandy wich is where Camembert originated
 
 
 
These are some examples of what can go with the cheese
 
 
Je nai pas comme fromage beaucoup. J'ai comme le fromage sur des sandwichs. Camembert n'a pas bon gout. Camembert aussi sent mauvais. Je voudrais brie fromage le plus.
 
Sources:

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Culture Project 5



Alexandre Gustave Eiffel

: Magician of Iron



Gustave was born December 15, 1832, in Dijon, in the Côte-d'Or department of France. He was the first child of Alexandra and Catherine Eiffel. Eiffel was not a studious child, and thought his classes at the Lycée Royal in Dijon boring and a waste of time, although in his last two years, influenced by his teachers for history and literature, he began to study seriously, so that he managed to gain his baccalauréats in humanities and science. An important part in his education was played by his uncle, Jean-Baptiste Mollerat, who had invented a process for distilling vinegar and had a large chemical works near Dijon, and one of his uncle's friends, the chemist Michel Perret. Both men spent a lot of time with the young Eiffel, teaching him about everything from chemistry and mining to theology and philosophy.



Eiffel went on to attend the Collège Sainte-Barbe in Paris, in order to prepare for the difficult entrance exams set by the most important engineering colleges in France. During his second year he chose to specialise in chemistry, and graduated 13th of the 80 candidates in 1855. This was the year that Paris hosted the first World's Fair, and Eiffel was bought a season ticket by his mother.



After a few months working as an unpaid assistant to his brother-in-law, who managed a foundry, Eiffel approached the railway engineer Charles Nepveu, who gave Eiffel his first paid job as his private secretary. However, shortly afterwards Nepveu's company went bankrupt, but Nepveu found Eiffel a job with the Compagnie des Chemins de Fer de l'Ouest, for whom Eiffel produced his first bridge design, a 22 m (72 ft) sheet iron bridge for the Saint Germaine railway. Some of Nepveu's businesses were then acquired by the Compagnie Belge de Matériels de Chemin de Fer: Nepvau was appointed the managing director of the two factories in Paris, and offered Eiffel a job as head of the research department. In 1857 Nepveu negociated a contract to build a railway bridge over the river Garrone at Bordeaux, connecting the Paris-Bordeax line to the lines running to Sète and Bayonne, which involved the construction of a 500 m (1,600 ft) iron girder bridge supported by six pairs of masonry piers on the river bed. These were constructed with the aid of compressed air caissons and hydraulic rams, both innovative techniques in French engineering of the time. Eiffel was initially given the responsibility of assembling the metalwork and eventually took over the management of the entire project from Nepvau, who resigned in March 1860. Following the completion of the project on schedule Eiffel was appointed as the principal engineer of the Compagnie Belge. His work had also gained the attention of several people who were later to give him work, including Stanslas de la Roche Toulay, who had prepared the design for the metalwork of the Bordeax bridge, Jean Baptiste Krantz and Wilhelm Nordling. Further promotion within the company followed, but the business began to decline, and in 1865 Eiffel, seeing no future there, resigned and set up as an independant consulting engineer. He was already working independantly on the construction of two railway stations, at Toulouse and Agen, and in 1866 he was given a contract to oversee the construction of 33 locomotives for the Egypttian government, a profitable but undemanding job in the course of which he visited Egypt, where he visited the Suez Canal which was being constructed by Ferdinand de Lesseps. At the same time he was employed by Jean-Baptiste Kranz to assist him in the design of the exhibition hall for the Exposition Universelle which was to be held in 1867. Eiffel's principal job was to draw up the arch girders of the Galerie des Machines. In order to carry out this work, Eiffel and Henri Treca, the director of the Conservertoire des Arts et Metiers, conducted valuable research on the structural properties of cast iron, definitively establishing the modulus of elasticity applicable to compound castings.
His first important commission was for two viaducts for the railway line between Lyons and Bordeaux, and the company also began to undertake work in other countries, including the church of San Marcos in Arica, Chile, which was an all-metal prefabricated building, manufactured in France and shipped to South America in pieces to be assembled on site. In 1875 Eiffel et Cie were given two important contracts, one for a new terminus for the line from Vienna at Budapest and the other for a bridge over the river Douro in Portugal. The station in Budapest was an innovative design. The usual pattern for building a railway terminus was to conceal the metal structure behind an elaborate façade: Eiffel's design for Budapest used the metal structure as the centrepiece of the building, flanked on either side by conventional stone and brick-clad structures housing administrative offices.


File:Gustave Eiffel signature.svg
What was it like to live in France when your person did? What was going on socially, culturally, politically, etc.? How was your person affected by their time period and how did they in turn affect everyone else?
Name a Few ways that your person changed history. How did his or her thoughts and actions affect the way other people thought fifty or one hundred years years later?
The structures that Eiffel designed had great social, economical, and political impacts on the world. These structures included bridges, the Eiffel Tower, and the Statue of Liberty.
The Eiffel Tower had a huge impact on France. The tower was the focal point of the International Exposition in 1889 and drew millions of people to Paris. Nearly two million people visited the Eiffel Tower in 1889 alone. The tower quickly became a tourist attraction and brought large amounts of money into France's economy.
 
French Paragraph
Je m'appelle Alexander Gustave Eiffel. Mon anniversaire est Decembre 15, 1832. Je suis francais.  Je suis age de 91 ans. J'ai fait le Eiffel Tower. J'ai aussi fait Statue of Liberty. J'aime engineering et chemistry. 



Napoleon Bonaparte
Emporer of the french



Background

Napoleon is one of the most famous military and political leaders of History. Napoleon was born on 15th August 1769 at Ajaccio on the island of Corsica. His father was a lawyer who had no involvment in aristocracy and wasnt wealthy at all. At the age of 25 Napoleon was promoted to Brigadier-General in December 1793 shortly after his performance at the siege of Toulon. This was the begining of his military career. Through out his life he continued to climb in the rankings of the military, until Prussian lands were annexed which then gave him control of Europe making him emperor in 1805.



People's everday life during Napoleon

 People's life during Napoleon reign was dependendant on who you were and your political rank. The wealthy ofcourse were always dressed to impress and the poor were always pushed under the mat. Napoleon did not agree with this considering he did not grow up in a wealthy family. Politics during this time werent orginized and were all based on the wealthy and the important.



Impact on History

Napoleon worked out unofficial as well as official agreements with some of the most powerful groups in France. He established a series of codes, known as the Napoleonic Codes, which provided that all citizens were equal before the law. It also protected peasants, many of whom had received lands seized from the Catholic Church and the nobility. These new codes or laws really set a new generation or form of government laws that still exist today.

"Je m'appelle Napoleon Bonaparte. J'adore la france. J'aime les military. Ma Famille n'avez pas Euros. J'adore ma famille. Je suis emperor de france."





Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Louis Pasteur: A Cow's Best Friend


Louis Pasture was born on December 27 1822 to the family of a poor tanner in Dole, France. He grew up very poor but gained degrees in Letters and Mathematics and Sciences all before entering the elite college of Ecole Normale Superieure. He became a physics and Chemistry professor before meeting Marie Laurent who he married. Continuing with his studies of chemistry and science he discovered many breakthroughs about health and disease. Louis Pasture reduced puerperal fever and he created the first vaccines for rabies and anthrax. These discoveries were small compared to his germ theory of disease and idea of fermentation which are still studied today. He was an extremely smart and helpful microbiologist and chemist who helped todays knowledge about disease and medicines. Pasture died September 28 1895 of a series of strokes and his body still lies under the Institute Pasture in Paris in a beautiful vault which he well deserved.

Questions

A)During the life time of Louis Pasture, people were extremely curious and creative. Many new things were happening in the world and new sports, medicine, advances and entertainment were being founded. In France, Felix Faure was elected and things were good for everyone. Creativity drove the culture into something new that interested people into pushing farther into science and entertaining others. Louis Pasture was one of the many scientist and chemist of this time who made a huge impact on science and modern medicine and microbiology. He created many theories and medicines that advanced health and without his discoveries, doctors would not be able to keep people safe, and scientist would not be as educated. Louis Pasture affected France and this time period in an incredible way, by pushing himself through to understand and better his knowledge on Science creating a whole new look on medicine and experiment. Louis inspired people to explore and promoted the population with all of his new discoveries.

B) Louis Pasteur changed almost the entire course of human medicine, pasteurized milk may not seem to be much, but in reality it stopped the spread of numerous diseases, and his discovery of the germ theory provided the basis for scientists to provide cures, vaccines and remedies for an entire range of afflictions. Louis Pasteur can almost be considered one of the founders of modern medicine, and is responsible for the savings of millions of lives by now.


C) Je m'appelle Louis Pasteur. Je suis Francais, tres tres Francais. Je suis le inventeur de "pasteurization." Je nee au Dole, France. C'est vrai.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Jeanne d'Arc: Maid of Orleans

Jeanne d'Arc (Joan of Arc) was born in the little village of Domremy on January 6, around the year 1412. She had four siblings and was extremely committed to God. She was a national heroine of France who became a saint of the Roman Catholic Church. Simply a peasant girl, she saved France from defeat in one of the mournful periods of the Hundred Years' War with Great Britain. Her first great quest was to lead a French army against the English who destructed the city of Orleans. Because of the success, she is often known as the Maid of Orleans in honor.

 

Born a strong and healthy child, she grew up Catholic because of her deeply religious mother. By the age of 13, Joan began hearing the "voices of saints" as she believed. These voices told her to go to the King of France and help drive out the English. At about 17, she left to fulfill her mission. King Charles VII realized Joan's strange powers and by then, he was so desperate, he was willing to listen to the young girl who claimed to hear the voices of saints. Finally agreeing to give her a small army and a suit of armor, Joan set out in April of 1429 to rescue Orleans from the English. By the end of the battle of Orleans, 114 were dead and 40 were captured in her favor. During the battle, she was shot with an arrow. She modestly pulled it out and continued to lead. 

 


 
In September 1429, Joan was wounded in a minor battle near Paris. In May 1430, the English captured her at Compiegne. The English were determined to not give her up to the French, although important prisoners could not bring high ransoms. 

 

Seen as an "agent of the devil" by the English, Joan was imprisoned and tried her on charges of witchcraft and heresy. Despite the accusations and bullying, she insisted repeatedly that her visions and voices had come from God. But it was no use, a French clergy, sympathetic to the English sentenced her to death. Courageously, she was burned in front of a large crowd in Rouen on May 30, 1431. Her brave death led many to believe they had witnessed the martyrdom of a saint. Because of her charges, she was not given a Christian burial and her ashes were thrown into the Seine River. 

 

In 1455, Joan's family asked for a new trial to reconsider the charges against Joan. Pope Callistus III granted a hearing. In 1456, the pope pronounced Joan innocent. In 1909, Pope Pius X beatified her. Beatification is a preliminary step towards sainthood in the Roman Catholic Church. Pope Benedict XV declared Joan of Arc a saint in 1920. Her feast day, the day of her death, is May 30. 



Questions:

a. What was it like to live in France when your person did? What was going on socially, culturally, politically, etc.? How was your person affected by their time period and how did they in turn affect everyone else?

The war with England was going on at the time continuously. Socially, the Renaissance was just beginning in Italy and it continued throughout the 17th century. It was a period of art and ball gowns and wearing long dresses. However, she "cross dressed" and was seen as an outcast because she didn't wear dresses or stay at home. She was in the war and fighting and to the culture at the time, it was wrong. She affected everyone because she stood up for what she believed in and wasn't afraid to show it. She helped France get out of the "dark age".

b. Name a few ways that your person changed history. How did his or her thoughts and actions affect the way other people thought fifty or one hundred years later? Elaborate.

Joan of Arc chose to follow "the voices in her head", she really believed and she followed what she thought was right by going to the king.

c. Using the French skills that you have, write one paragraph from your person's perspective:

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Marie Antoinette: The Last Queen of France


Queen Marie Antoinette of France was born Archduchess Maria Antonia Josephina Johanna of Austria on November 2nd, 1755. She was twelfth child and ninth daughter of Emperor Francis I and Empress Maria Theresa of Austria. Underneath her "Queenly" serenity, the Empress was tough-as-nails and intent on cementing her country's alliances through the marriages of her sixteen children. Marie and favorite sister, Carolina, learned to be accomplished in sewing, music, and dancing, which Marie loved the most. However, within a few weeks of her fourteenth birthday, Marie would be thrust from this idyllic childhood into adulthood.
Marie Antoinette's mother, Empress Maria Theresa
Louis Auguste, the fifteen year-old Dauphin (King to-be) of France, was looking for a wife who would one day be his Queen. Though Austria's alliance with France was somewhat shaky, Empress Maria Theresa didn't give up. Nothing could patch things up better than a marriage that would produce the next King of France.
Marie's husband, King Louis XVI at age twenty-three

Preparations for the wedding began while the bride and groom were still hundreds of miles apart. Elaborate gowns were sent from France for the Marie's trousseau along with a portrait of Louis for her to admire. Though the Empress had forged the perfect match, she had worries. Marie was still a terrible speller and found the French language difficult to learn. She also had trouble memorizing all of the strict royal protocol of the French court. After she and Louis married, Marie would live in France, away from her friends and family. She would have to carve a whole new life out for herself as the Dauphine.The Empress worried that her sweet, naive daughter was unprepared for what was ahead of her.

Marie at age fourteen in the portrait she sent to Louis before their wedding.

On April 19th, 1769 Marie married Louis by-proxy in the Church of Augustine Friars in Vienna. Her brother Ferdinand stood in for the groom while the long Roman-Catholic nuptial mass was conducted. On May 7th, 1770, Marie was officially "handed over" to France. She met her husband Louis, who was tall, chubby, and awkward, but also kind and sweet. On May 16th they were married ceremoniously in the Chapel Royal of Versailles. The next few days were filled with extravagant fireworks shows, operas, and balls all thrown in the honor of the new Dauphin and Dauphine's marriage.

Madame Du Barry

Marie was simultaneously hated and adored at the court of Versailles. Many found her kind and unpretentious. Others spread nasty rumors out of jealousy. Her biggest rival was Madame Du Barry, King Louis XV's mistress. Believing she was rude, common, and power hungry, Marie refused to speak to Du Barry. This further increased her unpopularity among some courtiers. Finally, Marie gave in to avoid upsetting the King, saying as little to Du Barry as she could: "There are a lot of people at Versailles today."
Queen Marie Antoinette at Versailles

After that, Du Barry was no longer a threat. However, by 1774 there was still a major problem. Four years into the marriage, no announcement of Marie's pregnancy had been made. As the future Queen, it was Marie's duty to produce not only a male heir but many children. Instead, she confided to a close friend, her husband had not so much as held her hand on their wedding night. Then, on April 27th, 1774, King Louis XV died of smallpox. Marie was now Queen of France at nineteen and her husband was King Louis XVI at twenty. They would be the last to ever receive those titles.

Marie's mother was furious at her daughter's inability to produce an heir as Queen. She constantly criticized and ridiculed her daughter, even suggesting that she wasn't pretty enough to attract her husband. In reaction, Marie did what many teenage girls are famous for: she shopped. Fashionable gowns in 18th-century France were made of the finest silks with wide hips, lace, and bustles. Louis gave her "Petit Trianon" as a retreat where she could relax with friends and ignore protocol. News of this spending angered the French people. Life for the poor in France was becoming increasingly difficult as the country's financial problems deepened. Though many pointed blame solely at Louis XVI, the spending had been going on since his great-grandfather built the gilded palace of Versailles. Luckily, there was a light at the end of the tunnel. It was announced that the Queen was pregnant on May 16th, 1778.

Marie at Petit Trianon

On December 19th 1778, courtiers packed into the royal bedchamber and watched while Marie suffered through a horrible labor. When a daughter was born many didn't even suppress their groans of disappointment. The pressure to have a male was now even higher. Still, both Louis and Marie adored their daughter, who they named Marie-Therese. After a miscarriage and the death of her mother, Marie became pregnant again. On October 17th, 1780, a Dauphin was at last born. Just a few days before, the American Revolution had ended with the Americans and the French victorious. Louis Joseph Xavier Francois added to the patriotism of the French court and subjects.
The Queen with her children, Marie-Therese and Louis.

Unfortunately, this harmony between the classes didn't last long. Conditions for the French people became worse as France struggled to pay off debts from the American Revolution. The price of bread began to rise as well. Marie, meanwhile, was playing her favorite role: the mother of her children. She broke the long tradition of French Queens by nursing them herself and chose a close friend to be their nanny when her duties as Queen conflicted with their care.

By 1787 France was getting dangerously close to revolution. Radicals formed a group called the Third Estate which later became the National Assembly. They demanded a solution to the bread crisis and called for the rights of the poor to be protected. King Louis continued to be ineffective. Though he desperately called on countless advisers to put an end to his subjects' struggling and save the monarchy, it was too late. On July 14th, 1789 the thousands stormed the Bastille and Paris erupted with riots. La Déclaration des Droits de l'Homme et du Citoyen ("The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen")was soon adopted, beginning a constitutional monarchy of France. While she and the king were placed under a sort of house arrest in the Tuileries Palace, Marie desperately hoped that her brother would invade France and save her family. When France declared war on Austria in 1792, that hope was lost. Marie Antoinette was now an enemy of the Austrian people as well.

Marie and her children as a mob breaks into the Tuileries Palace

The family was soon imprisoned in the tower of the Temple on Marais. Outside the infamous September Massacres were occurring. 1,200 aristocrats, including Marie's close friend the Princesse de Lambelle, were murdered, their heads gruesomely affixed on pikes and marched through the city. On September 21st the end of the monarchy was officially declared. Louis was separated from Marie and the children and tried in court in December for acting against the First French Republic. Louis was found guilty and executed by the guillotine on January 21 1793. Marie was devastated by the death of her husband, with whom she had been through so much. Upon her relocation to the Concierge prison, her second son Louis-Charles was taken from his mother and given to a cobbler. Marie's son would be poisoned against his family and die from abuse and neglect two years later.
Marie Antoinette on her way to the guillotine

Marie Antoinette's trial lasted two days and began on October 14th. She was charged with ridiculous and humiliating crimes, including plotting to kill important political figures and having an inappropriate relationship with her own son. Though her courtroom demeanor was one of dignity, she emotionally denied abusing her son, winning sympathy from many of the women in the courtroom.

Sadly, sympathy did not save her. Marie was found guilty and sentenced to the same fate as her husband on October 16th. At 12:15 pm Marie Antoinette, the last Queen of France, was taken in a cart to the guillotine. Her last words were apparently an apology to her executioner for stepping on his foot: "Monsieur, je vous demande pardon. Je ne l'ai pas fait exprès," (Sir, I beg your pardon. I did not mean to do it).

J'habite dans un grand châteaux Versailles. Je porte vêtements de style. J'aime chanter et danser. Je fais toujours un pique-niques avec mes enfants. Ils aime jouer. Je faire souvent une promenade à pied. Il est amusant et gentil.
What was it like to live in France when your person did? What was going on socially, culturally, and politically? How was your person affected by their time period and how did they in turn affect everyone else?
Marie Antoinette lived in 18th-century France, a time when life was very different for those of different classes. The aristocracy lived in unlimited luxury and extravagance, while the poor often struggled to get by.Ever since the American Revolution in 1776, the French people had become increasingly weary of the French aristocracy. If all men were created equal as the Americans' Declaration of Independence said, why were so many of French peasants starving while the nobles feasted? At the same time,France was the center of fashion, the arts, and even science (the first hot air balloon flight was made in Paris on December 14th, 1783). Marie Antoinette was affected strongly by the social protocol that women followed in her time. While many of accuse her of not doing enough to help her people, Marie was not in a position which allowed her to go against her husband on any matters, much less political. She was taught to obey and support her husband in everything he did, no matter what he own feelings were. Never the less, her excessive spending further damaged France's financial situation and the French people's anger towards her public image, a major factor in the beginning of the French Revolution.


Name a few ways that your person changed history. How did his or her thoughts and actions affect they way other people thought fifty or one hundred years later?
Marie Antoinette was the last woman to ever hold the title of Queen of France. Her name became infamous, and so did her reign and her eventual death. She was rightly portrayed as frivolous and naive, but also unfairly made out to be haughty and uncaring towards her people. The phrase, "Let them eat cake" which she was said to have replied to an adviser when told that her people couldn't afford bread, was never said. Truthfully, it probably never even entered Marie's mind that her people were suffering as much as they were. Safely contained in the gilded gates of Versailles, the royal family lived in a completely different world than their subjects. The revolution that resulted from this ignorance struck fear in the hearts of other royals of Europe and began the French Republic.