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  1. Anne-Antoinette Diderot (née Champion; 22 February 1710 – 10 April 1796) was the wife of the pioneer encyclopedist Denis Diderot and the mother of his only surviving child, Marie-Angélique Diderot (1753–1824).

  2. Denis Diderot y Anne-Antoinette Champion tuvieron una hija, Angelique Diderot (quien luego adoptó el apellido Vandeul), siempre muy querida por el escritor. Cuando falleció la hermana monja de Diderot, la opinión de este sobre la religión se vio afectada.

  3. Born in 1713 in Langres, a middling cathedral town in central France about 300 kilometers southeast of Paris, Diderot began life with very little pointing him toward his future as a world renowned writer and intellectual.

  4. Anne-Antoinette Diderot (* 22. Februar 1710 in La Ferté-Bernard Département Sarthe als Anne-Antoinette Champion; † 10. April 1796 in Paris) war seit dem 6. November 1743 die einzige Ehefrau des französischen Enzyklopädisten und Philosophen Denis Diderot sowie Mutter seiner einzigen lebenden Tochter, der Marie-Angélique Diderot ...

  5. En 1743 se casó con la costurera Anne-Antoinette Champion. No obstante el matrimonio no fue feliz y durante su vida Diderot tuvo diversas amantes. En particular mantuvo una relación de muchos años con Sophie Volland.

  6. La Religieuse (also called The Nun or Memoirs of a Nun) is an 18th-century French novel by Denis Diderot. Completed in about 1780, it was first published by Friedrich Melchior Grimm in 1792 (eight years after Diderot's death) in his Correspondance littéraire in Saxony, and subsequently in 1796 in France.

  7. On the interpretation of Nature (or Thoughts on the interpretation of Nature, French: Pensees sur l'interpretation de la nature) is a 1754 book written by Denis Diderot. In this work Diderot expounds on his views about nature, evolution, materialism, mathematics, and experimental science.