Escape Time - Le Manoir des sœurs Aubépine
ESCAPE TIME est le plus grand jeu d'évasion grandeur nature de Tours (37).
Découvrez l'une de nos salles de jeu qui s'étend sur plus de 80 m² : le Manoir hanté des sœurs Aubépine .
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Téléphone : 07.68.41.23.54
Email : contact@escapetime.fr
Escape Time - Silver Express
Vincent Lenoir a donné rendez-vous aux agents d'Escape Time en 1890 dans un prestigieux train américain : le Silver Express. Le moment de la rencontre a enfin sonné mais peut-être est-ce un piège ?…
Escape Time est une des meilleures enseignes françaises d'escape game, jeu d'évasion grandeur nature. L'escape game est une activité ludique pour tous, particuliers ou entreprises, qui propose aux équipes de résoudre en coopération la solution aux énigmes du lieux dans lequel ils se trouvent pour en sortir en moins de 60 minutes.
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Tél : 07 68 41 23 54
Email : contact@escapetime.fr
Toutes les scènes ont été tournées dans les locaux d'Escape Time.
Escape Time - Escape Circus
Aidez l'agence à trouver le complice de l'agent Alpha qui se cache parmi les membres d'une troupe de cirque en 1932.
Escape Time est une des meilleures enseignes françaises d'escape game, jeu d'évasion grandeur nature. L'escape game est une activité ludique pour tous, particuliers ou entreprises, qui propose aux équipes de résoudre en coopération la solution aux énigmes du lieux dans lequel ils se trouvent pour en sortir en moins de 60 minutes.
Site web :
Facebook :
Contact : Tél : 09 84 44 41 81
Email : contact@escapetime.fr
Toutes les scènes ont été tournées dans les locaux d'Escape Time Tours.
Escape Time - Reportage France 3
ESCAPETIME à Tours (37), l'un des plus grands escape game de France, a été élu meilleur jeu d'évasion de la région Centre.
Escape Time - Bunker Siberia
Lors d'une mission en 1966 un groupe d'agents se retrouve piégé dans un bunker en Sibérie. Une autre équipe dans le présent va tenter de rétablir les communications pour les sauver.
Escape Time est une des meilleures enseignes françaises d'escape game, jeu d'évasion grandeur nature. L'escape game est une activité ludique pour tous, particuliers ou entreprises, qui propose aux équipes de résoudre en coopération la solution aux énigmes du lieux dans lequel ils se trouvent pour en sortir en moins de 60 minutes.
Site web :
Facebook :
Contact :
Tél : 07 68 41 23 54
Email : contact@escapetime.fr
Toutes les scènes ont été tournées dans les locaux d'Escape Time.
Helping at La Renaissance Bar
This week we've been giving back to the local community and donating our time and some of the equipment at the Chateau to help the new owners get a bar in our village opened on time having been closed and left to ruin for years
Spring Competition!
It's competition time!
Spring is in the air, the sun is shining and we're feeling happy at the Chateau so it's time to share the love.
We're giving away a 2 night stay this season at the Chateau as our prize *.
To enter simply subscribe to our YouTube channel (link below) and share this post on your Facebook wall before 1pm Wednesday 3rd April and we will announce the winners live later that day.
Good luck!
*(the stay is for 2 nights in a double room for up to 2 people, dates subject to availability)
#208 Driving in France
Driving between Foix and Ax-les-Thermes in the south of France.
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Jekyll Wood au Roger's Café Belfort
Timeline of the French Revolution | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Timeline of the French Revolution
00:00:05 1 1788 – The royal treasury is empty; Prelude to the Revolution
00:01:29 2 1789 – The Revolution Begins; the Estates-General and the Constituent Assembly
00:06:29 2.1 July 14 – The Siege and Surrender of the Bastille
00:09:47 2.2 August 27 – Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen
00:11:27 2.3 October 6 – Women's March on Versailles
00:13:50 3 1790 – the Rise of the Political Clubs
00:16:59 3.1 July 14 – iFête de la Fédération/i
00:20:10 4 1791 – The unsuccessful flight of the Royal Family from Paris
00:22:29 4.1 June 20–21 – The Royal Family flees Paris
00:27:23 5 1792 – War and the overthrow of the monarchy
00:32:40 5.1 August 10 – Storming of the Tuileries; Downfall of the King
00:34:52 5.2 September 2–7 – Massacres in Paris prisons
00:35:42 5.3 September 20 – French victory at Valmy; Debut of the Convention
00:38:03 6 December 10, 1792-January 21, 1793 – Trial and Execution of Louis XVI
00:39:37 7 1793 – France at war against Europe; The Jacobins seize power; The Terror begins
00:40:27 7.1 Uprising in the Vendée
00:42:14 7.2 April 6 – Committee on Public Safety takes control of government
00:44:06 7.3 May 31-June 2 – The Jacobin Coup d'État
00:46:04 7.4 July 13 – Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat by Charlotte Corday
00:47:57 7.5 September 17 – The Reign of Terror begins
00:49:47 7.6 October 16 – The execution of Marie-Antoinette
00:52:34 8 1794 – The fury of the Terror, the Cult of the Supreme Being, and the Downfall of Robespierre
00:55:14 8.1 March 30 – The arrest and trial of Danton and Desmoulins
00:58:23 8.2 June 8 – Festival of the Supreme Being; Acceleration of the Terror
01:00:34 8.3 July 26–28 – Arrest and execution of Robespierre; End of the Terror
01:04:46 9 1795 – The Directory Replaces the Convention
01:08:21 9.1 May 20–24 – Last Paris uprising by the Jacobins and isans-culottes/i
01:10:00 9.2 June 25-July 27 – Renewed uprisings in the Vendée and a royalist invasion of Brittany
01:11:44 9.3 August 22-September 23 – The new Constitution is approved: the Directory takes power
01:12:28 9.4 October 5 – A whiff of grapeshot: General Bonaparte suppresses a royalist rebellion in Paris
01:14:13 10 1796 – Napoleon's campaign in Italy; Defeat of the royalists in the Vendée; a failed uprising in Paris
01:20:00 11 1797 – Bonaparte chases the Austrians from Italy; a republican coup d'état against the royalists in Paris
01:25:06 11.1 September 4 – A republican coup d'état against the royalists
01:26:43 12 1798 – New republics in Switzerland and Italy; an election annulled; Bonaparte invades Egypt
01:32:41 13 1799 – France at War in Italy and Germany; Bonaparte returns from Egypt; the Consulate seizes power; End of the Revolution
01:36:40 13.1 Conflicts between the Directory and the Legislature (June 1799)
01:41:16 13.2 Bonaparte returns to France (October 9, 1799)
01:43:02 13.3 The Coup d'État of November 9–10
01:46:02 14 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
The following is a timeline of the French Revolution.
Charles de Gaulle | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:06:10 1 Early life
00:06:20 1.1 Childhood and origins
00:08:22 1.2 Education and intellectual influences
00:11:46 2 Early career
00:11:55 2.1 Officer cadet and lieutenant
00:16:33 2.2 First World War
00:16:43 2.2.1 Combat
00:20:16 2.2.2 Prisoner
00:22:37 2.3 Between the wars
00:22:46 2.3.1 Early 1920s: Poland and staff college
00:25:30 2.3.2 Mid-1920s: ghostwriter for Pétain
00:28:15 2.3.3 Late-1920s: Trier and Beirut
00:31:34 2.3.4 1930s: staff officer
00:33:56 2.3.5 Early 1930s: proponent of armoured warfare
00:38:05 2.3.6 Late-1930s: tank regiment
00:40:44 3 Second World War: the Fall of France
00:40:56 3.1 Early war
00:43:20 3.2 The Battle of France: division commander
00:47:51 3.3 The Battle of France: government minister
00:50:56 3.4 The Battle of France: Briare and Tours
00:55:16 3.5 The Battle of France: Franco-British Union
00:57:27 3.6 Flight with Edward Spears
00:58:58 4 Second World War: leader of the Free French in exile
00:59:11 4.1 Appeal from London
01:03:50 4.2 Leader of the Free French
01:10:56 4.3 De Gaulle and Pétain: rival visions of France
01:17:33 4.4 De Gaulle's relations with the iAnglo-Saxons/i
01:23:48 4.5 Plane sabotage
01:24:51 4.6 Algiers
01:26:31 4.7 Preparations for D-Day
01:32:30 4.8 Return to France
01:41:59 5 1944–1946: Provisional Government of Liberated France
01:46:03 5.1 Curbing the Communist Resistance
01:47:44 5.2 The Provisional Government of the French Republic
01:51:12 5.3 Tour of major cities
01:53:11 5.4 The legal purges (Épuration légale)
01:58:28 5.5 Winter of 1944
02:02:08 5.6 Visit to the Soviet Union
02:06:24 5.7 Strasbourg
02:08:36 5.8 The Yalta Conference
02:10:27 5.9 President Truman
02:13:09 5.10 Victory in Europe
02:16:02 5.11 Confrontation in Syria and Lebanon
02:18:34 5.12 The Potsdam Conference
02:19:27 5.13 New elections and resignation
02:23:53 6 1946–1958: Out of power
02:28:27 6.1 1958: Collapse of the Fourth Republic
02:33:20 7 1958–1962: Founding of the Fifth Republic
02:36:45 7.1 Algeria
02:39:52 7.2 Assassination attempts
02:40:51 7.3 Direct presidential elections
02:42:20 8 1962–1968: Politics of grandeur
02:43:00 8.1 Thirty glorious years
02:46:05 8.2 Fourth nuclear power
02:50:45 8.3 NATO
02:56:21 8.4 European Economic Community (EEC)
03:05:23 8.5 Recognition of the People's Republic of China
03:08:13 8.6 Visit to Latin America
03:09:25 8.7 US dollar crisis
03:11:20 9 Second term
03:13:09 9.1 Empty Chair Crisis
03:14:26 9.2 Six-Day War
03:17:25 9.3 Nigerian Civil War
03:19:11 9.4 iVive le Québec libre!/i
03:21:12 9.5 Official visit to Poland
03:22:05 9.6 May 1968
03:25:36 10 Later life
03:25:46 10.1 Retirement
03:27:24 10.2 Personal life
03:29:31 10.3 Death
03:33:22 11 Legacy
03:33:31 11.1 Reputation
03:36:10 11.2 Relationships with other political leaders
03:46:55 12 Honours and awards
03:47:05 12.1 French
03:47:41 12.2 Foreign
03:51:17 12.3 Medals
03:52:13 12.4 Memorials
03:52:44 13 Works
03:52:53 13.1 French editions
03:55:06 13.2 English translations
03:57:30 14 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
Listen on Google Assistant through Extra Audio:
Other Wikipedia audio articles at:
Upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
Speaking Rate: 0.7478624904957046
Voice name: en-GB-Wavenet-A
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Charles André Joseph Marie de Gaulle (; French pronunciation: [ʃaʁl də ɡol] (listen); 22 November 1890 – 9 November 1970) was a French army officer and statesman who led the French Resistance against Nazi Germany in World War II and chaired the Provisional Government of the French Republic from 1944 to 1946 in order to establish democracy in France. In 1958, he came out of retirement when appointed President of the Council of Ministers by President René Coty. He was asked to rewrite the Constitution of France and founded the Fifth Republic after approval by referendum. He was elected President of France later that year, a position he was reelected to in 1965 and held until his resignation in 1969. He was ...
Auchan stunt Bydgoszcz 29-30.08.2009
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