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- ...raced their ring. The world’s oldest extant circus building, Paris’s [[Cirque d’Hiver]], where [[Jules Léotard]] originated the flying trapeze in 1859 ...began when the French equestrian [[Jacques Tourniaire]] built the ''Cirque Olympique'', Russia’s first circus, in 1827 near the Fontanka canal, on the spot wh23 KB (3,698 words) - 03:15, 14 August 2025
- ==Cirque Napoléon, Cirque National, Cirque d'Hiver== ...opens onto the Boulevard du Temple through the small Place Pasdeloup: The Cirque d’Hiver is therefore quite noticeable, practically "on the Boulevards."47 KB (7,517 words) - 19:56, 12 October 2025
- ...circuses were flourishing then—like the famous [[Cirque Molier]] in Paris—and these were also the times when another sports enthusiast, the Bar ...perform successfully all over Europe and finally with the popular circus [[Cirque Pinder|Pinder]], with which they toured the French provinces from 1905 to1929 KB (4,789 words) - 19:24, 20 August 2025
- ===Guerra’s Cirque Olympique=== ...company recently, choosing the name (fashionable at the time) of ''Cirque Olympique'', which had a French flavor, perfectly suitable for that mostly French-spe33 KB (5,324 words) - 02:05, 7 September 2025
- Astley opened Paris's first circus, the ''Amphithéâtre Anglois'', in 1782. That same year, h ...ts own building in Dresden, Krone in Münich, Hagenbeck in Stellingen, and Paris alone maintained four permanent circuses. This, of course, created a demand32 KB (4,908 words) - 21:56, 14 October 2023
- ...The building, designed by the architect Smaragd Shustov and named ''Cirque Olympique'', was located near the Fontanka canal, practically where St. Petersburg’ ...s before, in 1847, by the newly created [[Russia%27s_First_National_Circus|Cirque de la Compagnie des Théâtres Impériaux]] (in short, the Imperial Circus)35 KB (5,657 words) - 19:55, 25 January 2024
- ...another great equestrian master, at the [[Cirque Olympique (Paris)|Cirque Olympique]]. ...Belgian confectioner Jean-Joseph Roux, who had a shop on the Rue Royale in Paris and with whom she had three daughters, Alexandrine, Hortense Charlotte, kno18 KB (2,798 words) - 17:58, 4 September 2025
- ...it was sometimes referred to as a "bonbonniere"), but in time, the Nouveau Cirque’s limited capacity made it difficult to manage. It began to lose its prom ...use whose rich and often glorious life had lasted forty years, the Nouveau Cirque finally called it quits.131 KB (21,551 words) - 20:32, 20 August 2025
- ===From Circo Romano to Cirque Olympique=== ...Cavalli'', followed by ''Circo Romano'', before adopting the name ''Cirque Olympique'', a name with a Parisian bouquet that was then so fashionable that even La22 KB (3,464 words) - 19:35, 7 August 2025
- {{Languages|Cirque Medrano (Paris)}} ...l de Paris et dans l'histoire du cirque. Depuis ses débuts sous le nom de Cirque Fernando en 1873 jusqu’à la fin de la direction de Jérôme Medrano en 1157 KB (26,221 words) - 20:27, 30 January 2025
- {{Languages|Nouveau Cirque (Paris)}} ...ançaise—et même d'Europe. Pendant de nombreuses années, ce fut le cirque de prédilection de la haute société. Sa taille relativement petite lui c144 KB (23,685 words) - 19:11, 4 June 2025
- ...ly settled (he died in Calcutta). André returned to France and worked in Paris for the [[The Franconi Dynasty|Franconis]]. Stephan married his cousin, the ...ated and choreographed by Marie's father, Filippo Taglioni, in 1832 at the Paris Opera, after he had become its Ballet Master. It was the first time, too, t25 KB (3,989 words) - 18:47, 23 September 2025