Jacques-François de Villiers
0 sources
Jacques-François de Villiers
Summary
Jacques-François de Villiers is a human[1]. His place of birth was Saint-Maixent[2]. He was born on June 5, 1727[3]. He died on January 1, 1794[4]. He worked as a linguist[5], translator[6], encyclopédistes[7], and physician[8].
Key Facts
- Jacques-François de Villiers was born in Saint-Maixent[2].
- Jacques-François de Villiers was born on June 5, 1727[3].
- Jacques-François de Villiers died on January 1, 1794[4].
- Jacques-François de Villiers held citizenship in France[9].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's professions included linguist[5].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's professions included translator[6].
- Jacques-François de Villiers worked as an encyclopédistes[7].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's professions included physician[8].
- Jacques-François de Villiers is recorded as male[10].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's instance of is recorded as human[11].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's family name is recorded as Q16642225[12].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's given name is recorded as Jacques[13].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as French[14].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's name in native language is recorded as {'lang': 'fr', 'text': 'Jacques-François de Villiers'}[15].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's writing language is recorded as French[16].
- Jacques-François de Villiers's copyright status as a creator is recorded as copyrights on works have expired[17].
Body
Origins and Family
Born in Saint-Maixent[2], Jacques-François de Villiers… he was born on June 5, 1727[3].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include linguist[5], translator[6], encyclopédistes[7], and physician[8].
Death and Burial
Jacques-François de Villiers died on January 1, 1794[4].
FAQs
Where was Jacques-François de Villiers born?
Jacques-François de Villiers's place of birth was Saint-Maixent[2].
What did Jacques-François de Villiers do for work?
Jacques-François de Villiers worked as linguist[5], translator[6], encyclopédistes[7], and physician[8].