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Catherine Hübscher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French aristocrat (1753–1835)
For works based on her life and other holders of this nickname, seeMadame Sans-Gêne (disambiguation).

Catherine Lefebvre re-directs here. For the curler, seeCatherine Lefebvre (curler)
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Catherine Hubscher, Maréchale Lefebvre Duchesse de Dantzig, known as "Madame Sans-Gêne (1753-1835), anonymous artist, c 1810.

Catherine Hübscher (Goldbach-Altenbach, 2 February 1753 – 1835)[citation needed], also known by the nameMaréchale Lefebvre, was a French aristocrat, wife toFrançois Joseph Lefebvre,Marshal of the Empire and Duke de Dantzig.[1]

She lived with her husband and children atChâteau de Combault from 1802.[2]

Hübscher's life and name were the subject of the1893 playMadame Sans-Gêne, byVictorien Sardou andÉmile Moreau. The play was also adapted asan opera, in 1915, andseveral times for film.[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Watson's Weekly Art Journal. 1895.
  2. ^"Catherine Hübscher". la Société d'Histoire de Villeparisis. Retrieved17 August 2025.
  3. ^Abel, Richard (1994).The Ciné Goes to Town: French Cinema, 1896-1914. University of California Press. pp. 312–313.ISBN 9780520079359.
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