The Hadamard family hailed from Koblenz, and spread to Metz and then settled, in the early nineteenth century, in Paris. David Hadamard, Lucie's father, was a diamond merchant in Paris. The couple organized many receptions. In one of them, Lucie met Alfred Dreyfus, a classmate of her cousin Paul Hadamard. The couple became engaged during the winter of 1889-1890. They were married in Paris on 18 April 1891, celebrated at the Grand Synagogue of Paris, on the 21st by the Chief Rabbi of France, Zadoc Kahn who stood with the Dreyfusards afterwards. The couple moved near the Champs-Élysées, at Rue François-Ier. They went on a honeymoon trip to Italy and then to Switzerland, before returning by making a stop in Mulhouse. The couple had two children, Pierre-Léon (1891-1946) and Jeanne (1893-1981). Lucie was interested in literature, played the piano and kept reading her favorite historian: Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges.
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The Hadamard family hailed from Koblenz, and spread to Metz and then settled, in the early nineteenth century, in Paris. David Hadamard, Lucie's father, was a diamond merchant in Paris. The couple organized many receptions. In one of them, Lucie met Alfred Dreyfus, a classmate of her cousin Paul Hadamard. The couple became engaged during the winter of 1889-1890. They were married in Paris on 18 April 1891, celebrated at the Grand Synagogue of Paris, on the 21st by the Chief Rabbi of France, Zadoc Kahn who stood with the Dreyfusards afterwards. The couple moved near the Champs-Élysées, at Rue François-Ier. They went on a honeymoon trip to Italy and then to Switzerland, before returning by making a stop in Mulhouse. The couple had two children, Pierre-Léon (1891-1946) and Jeanne (1893-1981). Lucie was interested in literature, played the piano and kept reading her favorite historian: Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges.
© Copyright Wikipédia authors - This article is under licence CC BY-SA 3.0