Gold Medal of the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, Knight of Légion d'honneur
Buildings
Carnegie library of Reims
Max Sainsaulieu (17 July 1870 – 21 February 1953) was a French architect. Author of numerous accomplishments in Reims and Soissons before the First World War (including the completion of the church of Sainte Clotilde, the church of Saint Benoît, and the house of Jacques Simon) he participated actively in the reconstruction of Reims in the immediate post-war period.[1]
^Bibliothèque de Reims. "Plus d'informations sur la bibliothèque Carnegie et son histoire" (in French). Archived from the original on 13 February 2009. Retrieved 3 April 2010.
MaxSainsaulieu (17 July 1870 – 21 February 1953) was a French architect. Author of numerous accomplishments in Reims and Soissons before the First World...
cellars of the Archbishop of Reims to be discovered by the architect MaxSainsaulieu on the 30 November 1915. It became an icon for the French wartime propaganda...
entrusted to French architect MaxSainsaulieu (1870–1953). Upon receipt of the order of construction in December 1920, Sainsaulieu undertook a study trip to...
he held until his retirement in 1908. His students there included MaxSainsaulieu, Louis Duthoit, and Adolphe Dervaux [fr]. In 1879, he was made a Knight...
Saint-Étienne cathedral in Toul. He was also a professor and had as students MaxSainsaulieu and Paul Vorin. A diocesan architect of Bourges, he joined the commission...
Sacks (died 1975), American sociologist and ethnomethodologist Renaud Sainsaulieu (1936–2002), French sociologist concerned with the sociology of organizations...