The King, growing more and more suspicious, nominated Chancellor Séguier to preside over the Chamber.
From this we learn that Séguier and Du Drac left Paris on Saturday, Oct.
XII TRÉGUIER This old cathedral city, at the junction of two small streamlets, a short distance from the sea, lies perhaps a dozen miles away from the nearest railway.
She could remember what Tréguier and Lannion were before the Revolution, and she would describe what the different houses were like, and who lived in them.
In the year 1838, I was fortunate enough to win all the prizes in my class at the Tréguier College.
The vast monastic edifices of Tréguier were once more peopled, and the former seminary served for the establishment of an ecclesiastical college, very highly esteemed throughout the province.
There were very few boarders at the Tréguier College just then.
The monasteries were called in the Breton dialect pabu after the monks (papae), and in this way the monastery of Tréguier was known as Pabu Tual.
This was just the rule laid down and observed by my masters at Tréguier and St. Sulpice: Victum vestitum, board and lodging and just enough money to buy a new cassock once a year.
The last of the bishops of Tréguier left one evening by a back door leading into the wood behind his palace and fled to England.
Upon Maunday Thursday the children of Tréguier were taken there to see the bells go off to Rome.
The Carlists of Tréguier went about declaring that the new order of things would not last, and that the rightful king would soon return.
Such things were always happening, and the godly persons of Tréguier were very proud of the pontifical reign of their patron saint.
Eustache, and in 1630 Chancellor Séguier built a chapel therein at his own expense.
Tréguier when Tugdual settled there was undoubtedly an ancient fortress, standing in the fork between two rivers.
What is of special interest to the visitor is the fact that Tréguier cathedral belongs almost wholly to the Middle Pointed or Geometrical period, which is not abundantly represented in Brittany.
Pol de Léon and Tréguier have the finest, but these are of a French type, whereas the village churches possess a stamp peculiar to Brittany, where spared.
Séguier was captured, maimed, and burnt alive; but others took his place.
On a Sunday in July, 1702, a wild mystic preacher, named Séguier went down with a band of about fifty armed men to release the prisoners.
Its fine spires rival those of St. Pol de Léon and Tréguier in the north.
On the nineteenth of May a procession sets out from the Tréguier cathedral for this shrine, to render homage to the patron of the men of law.
The town hall encloses a library of some thirty-four thousand volumes, among them a copy of the first dictionary in the Breton tongue, published at Tréguier in 1499.
Tréguier has much the same attractions as Lannion, though its population is but half as large.
The history of Tréguier was very lively, from the time of the Norman invasion of Brittany down through the troublous days of the Revolution.
Pierre Séguier founded a library which became one of the sights of Paris.
Here he gained the friendship of Pierre Séguier and the elegant Nicolas Rigault, and of Jérome Bignon, the first of a long dynasty of librarians.
The road from the pont is very good, and the country fertile and lovely as we ascended the hill, and the Guier wound far below in its wild ravine.
Tréguier is one of the four bishoprics that formed the ancient divisions of Brittany.
And that was exactly what Chancellor Séguier had done in the Fronde.
Séguier sternly repressed any leanings in his favor; he even reproved some of the judges for returning the salutation of the prisoner, as he entered the court-room.
Séguier asserted more than once, "This is clearly treason.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "guier" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.