Louis Sigismond Isaac Halphen (4 February 1880, Paris – 7 October 1950, Paris) was a French medieval specialist and the author of many important books over a long career. He was noteworthy as the editor of a modern edition of the famous classic Einhard's "Vie de Charlemagne" (Paris, 1947), He was also known as being one of the general editors of the monumental series Peuples et civilisations.
Louis Halphen was born in Paris to mathematician Georges Henri Halphen. He married Germaine Weill, the daughter of Mathieu Weill, in 1910, with whom he had two children: Étienne and Geneviève.[1]
^Brasseur, Roland (7 January 2013). "Mathieu Weill". Les mathématiciens inhumés au cimetière du Montparnasse. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
Louis Sigismond Isaac Halphen (4 February 1880, Paris – 7 October 1950, Paris) was a French medieval specialist and the author of many important books...
Halphen is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Éric Halphen (born 1959), French judge Étienne Halphen (1911–1954), French mathematician...
Laura Napran, The Boydell Press, ISBN 9781843831204 Halphen, Louis (1926), "France: Louis VI and Louis VII (1108–1180)", in J.R. Tanner; C.W. Previté-Orton;...
Fernand Gustave Halphen (18 February 1872 – 16 May 1917) was a French Jewish composer. Fernand Halphen was the son of Georges Halphen, a diamond merchant...
first generation of German historians after 1871 to defend Charlemagne, LouisHalphen considered their efforts a failure. Hermann Gauch, Heinrich Himmler's...
them died in World War I. LouisHalphen (1880-1950) was a French historian specialized in medivial times; Charles Halphen (1885-1915), was deputy secretary...
Histoire (4 ed.). Paris: Le Seuil. pp. 256–257, 264, 273–274, 297. LouisHalphen, Les Barbares, Paris, 1936, p. 236; Étienne Gilson, La Philosophie au...
Historica, Scriptores Rerum Merovingicarum, I / 1, p. 72, translated by LouisHalphen (Paris, 1963, reprinted several times); another translation in Tessier...
attested by Eginhard, Life of Charlemagne, traduction et édition de LouisHalphen, Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 1994, p. 99 J. Favier, Charlemagne, 1999...
austrasiennes". Mélanges d'histoire du Moyen Âge dédiés à la mémoire de LouisHalphen. Paris. pp. 291–296.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher...
article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Halphen, Louis (1911), "Anjou", in Chisholm, Hugh (ed.), Encyclopædia Britannica, vol...
Power (Londong: Methuen), 102–3 n3. Scholars agreeing with Ullmann are LouisHalphen, S. Heldmann, E. Amann, W. Ohnsorge, and George Ostrogorsky. Ullmann...
(University of Chicago Press) Memory space (social science) Together with LouisHalphen and Robert Debré, Gaston Nora arranged for an integral translation of...
Bank Stern) Henriette Stern (1836–1905), married to Georges Halphen (1832–1906) Fernand Halphen (1872–1917), composer Jacques Stern (1839–1902), banker in...
Fernand Halphen's first military orchestra (August 1914 – December 1915), which performed for the troops and for the local populace. Halphen, who had...
Toulouse et de Barcelone pour le préponderance méridionale", Mélanges LouisHalphen (Paris, 1951): 313–22. Lewis, "The Guillems of Montpellier", 167 n.58...
married to Jules Halphen (1856–1928), son of Eugène Halphen Henri Isaac Halphen (1886–1962), married to Violet Crosbie (1890–?) Noémie Halphen (1888–1968)...
in any earlier source. "Chronica de gestis consulum Andegavorum", in LouisHalphen and René Poupardin, eds., Chronique des comtes d'Anjou et des seigneurs...
seigneurs d'Amboise, 1 volume, Paris (1913). Edited by French medievalists LouisHalphen (1880–1950) and René Poupardin (1874–1927). Collection of texts of the...
People in the 19th century 1915-30" George W. F. Hallgarten, historian LouisHalphen, French mediaevalist Theodore Stephen Hamerow, U.S. historian Marceli...