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Ulric de Fonvielle

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Occupation
  
Journalist Writer

Ulric de Fonvielle

Born
  
11 February 1833
Paris

Died
  
1 July 1911, Paris, France

Ulric de Fonvielle, brother of Wilfrid de Fonvielle, (11 February 1833, Paris – 1 juillet 1911, Paris) was an 19th-century French jornalist and writer.

Contents

Biography

After studying painting, he took part as a volunteer to the expedition of the Thousand in 1860 then, as a reporter, to the American civil war.

Chief editor of La Ligne Directe in Dieppe (1868), he actively participated to the campaign against the Empire led by La Marseillaise of Henri Rochefort. On January 10, 1870, he was chosen as a witness by their colleague Paschal Grousset for Victor Noir to attend the duel between Noir and Prince Pierre Bonaparte and accused the Pronce of attempted murder on his person after the death of Victor Noir: Assassin , dare to face me! You cowardly murdered my friend, assassin, assassin! To death ! He then got ten days in jail for insulting the Court

In April 1870, he was candidate to the Paris Commune

Works

  • 1861: Souvenirs d'une chemise rouge
  • 1865: Lincoln, 1806-1865
  • 1878: Populus, drama in five acts and huit tableaux, with Eugène Hubert
  • 1879: Le Puits du diable
  • References

    Ulric de Fonvielle Wikipedia