Philippe de La Canaye, sieur de Fresnes (1551–27 February 1610)[1][2] was a French jurist and diplomat.
^Jean-Chrétien-Ferdinand Hoefer (1857), Nouvelle Biographie Générale, vol. 8, Paris: Firmin Didot frères (published 1855), pp. 442–3
^François-Alexandre Aubert de La Chesnaye-Desbois (1863), Dictionnaire de la Noblesse, vol. 4 (3 ed.), Paris: Schlesinger frères (published 1864), pp. 649–50
Philippe de La Canaye, sieur de Fresnes (1551–27 February 1610) was a French jurist and diplomat. He was born in Paris, son of an advocate of the Parlement;...
Archived from the original on 17 July 2013. Retrieved 22 November 2012. PhilippeCanaye; sieur de Fresne (1897). Le voyage du Levant. Slatkine. pp. 33–34....
Jacques Bongars, the Catholic Jacques de Thou, and the Catholic convert PhilippeCanaye (sieur de Fresnes) endeavoured to get Casaubon invited to France. In...
troops; he was able to match the Spanish forces well enough, and had PhilippeCanaye propose to the Venetian Senate a plan of encouraging the Grisons to...
Polykarp Leyser the Elder, German theologian (b. 1552) February 27 – PhilippeCanaye, French diplomat (b. 1551) March 6 – Benedict Pereira, Spanish theologian...
Polykarp Leyser the Elder, German theologian (b. 1552) February 27 – PhilippeCanaye, French diplomat (b. 1551) March 6 – Benedict Pereira, Spanish theologian...
du Perron, de Thou, Pithou) and the Calvinists (du Plessis Mornay, PhilippeCanaye, Isaac Casaubon). In 1664, John Eudes preached for two months at Meaux...
January 1 – François Feuardent, theologian (born 1539) February 27 – PhilippeCanaye, diplomat (born 1551) May 14 – King Henry IV of France, assassinated...
the 16th century, including Voyage du Levant. Hauser had discovered PhilippeCanaye's hitherto unpublished account of his 1573 voyage to Constantinople...
largest workshops there, which made the fortunes of the families Gobelin, Canaye and Le Peultre, were dyeing six hundred thousand pieces of cloth a year...
largest workshops there, which made the fortunes of the families Gobelin, Canaye and Le Peultre, were dyeing six hundred thousand pieces of cloth a year...
year, and made the fortunes of some Paris families, including Gobelin, Canaye and Peultre. However, production fell to one hundred thousand by the end...