Pages that link to "Item:Q266229"
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The following pages link to Lionel Laborie, ‘Marion, Elie (1678–1713)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, April 2016 (Q266229):
Displayed 19 items.
- The Philadelphians of Baldwin's garden find in Elie Marion the returned prophet Elias, 1707 (Q266041) (← links)
- Elie Marion and Richard Roach celebrate love feasts together in private (Q266232) (← links)
- Elie Marion and Richard Roach perform alleged miracles (Q266233) (← links)
- Elie Marion begins to prophesy messages from God, January 1703 (Q266234) (← links)
- Elie Marion condemns Jean Cavalier's surrender in May 1704 during the Camisard rising as a betrayal of the French Protestant cause (Q266235) (← links)
- Elie Marion delivers apocalyptic predictions of the fall of Rome, London, after 16 September 1706 (Q266236) (← links)
- Elie Marion flees to Lausanne, August 1705 (Q266237) (← links)
- Elie Marion is forced to negotiate a first truce with Marshall Claude Louis Hector de Villars after the Camisards' defeat (Q266239) (← links)
- Elie Marion meets David Flotard, agent to the marquis de Miremont, in Lausanne, summer 1705 (Q266240) (← links)
- Elie Marion negotiates a second truce in the Camisard rising, July 1705 (Q266241) (← links)
- Elie Marion returns from Geneva to Alès, March 1705 (Q266242) (← links)
- Elie Marion returns to the Cévennes, early July 1702 (Q266243) (← links)
- Elie Marion stays with a band of Camisards in Geneva, November 1704-February 1705 (Q266244) (← links)
- Elie Marion studies law in Toulouse, 1698-1701 (Q266245) (← links)
- Elie Marion trains as a clerk for a notary in Nîmes, between October 1695 and July 1698 (Q266246) (← links)
- Elie Marion's brothers Pierre and Antoine start to prophesy or to participate in ecstatic utterances, Cévennes, early 1702 (Q266247) (← links)
- The Camisards accuse the ministers of the French-speaking churches in London of deserting their flock after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes (Q266249) (← links)
- The Camisards and the Philadelphian Society celebrate the Act of Union as a symbol of peace and reconciliation between protestant nations and denominations (Q266250) (← links)
- Ministers of French-speaking churches in London condemn Elie Marion, Durand Fage and Jean Cavalier as impostors, January 1707 (Q266251) (← links)