Nothing, she wasn't involved in discovery.
Jeanne Therese Telles d'Acosta
The Dionne quintuplets were the first quintuplets to survive infancy. Their names were Yvonne Edouilda Marie Dionne, Annette Lillianne Marie Dionne, Cecile Marie Ã?milda Dionne, Emilie Marie Jeanne Dionne, Marie Reine Alma Dionne. As of 2014, two of them are still living.
Marie Antoinette, Queen of France.
The repeated tests done by scientists to discover or demonstrate something is called experiments.
when did the macassans come to Australia.
Other than salons, nothing
born june 26th 1699, died october 6th 1777
It was Marie-Therese Geoffrin. Here's a URL to porve it too: http://www.ihs.issaquah.wednet.edu/Teachers/petersen/European%20Studies/Textbook/Chapter%2022/The%20Enlightenment%20Spreads%2020%203.pdf
It was Marie-Therese Geoffrin.
Marie Thérèse Rodet Geoffrin died in 1777.
Marie Thérèse Rodet Geoffrin was born in 1699.
Madame Geoffrin ran the most influential salon in Paris during the Enlightenment. Her salon attracted prominent writers, philosophers, and artists, fostering intellectual and cultural discussions that influenced the period.
Well Madame Geoffrin was a part of the Age of Enlightenment, near the French Revolution. She was also a French Hostess, and patron of French Art. Therefore, we can come to the conclusion she lived in France. And one other fact is that she never really traveled abroad--except for her own vacation to Poland.
Marie-Therese Bourgeois Chouteau died in 1814.
Marie-Therese Bourgeois Chouteau was born in 1733.
Marie Therese Charlotte was the daughter of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI. She never had any cildren.
Marie-Therese Bonvin has written: '...a la lumiere des autres'