Re: Mazarine
in reply to a message by Mikah
It reminds me of Jules Cardinal Mazarin (Giulio Raimondo Mazzarino; 1602-1661), the semi-infamous Italian-French minister of France from 1642 onwards.Mazarin's famous in his own right, but he's possibly even more famous for his three Mancini nieces: Ortensia (Hortense), Maria (Marie), and Olimpia (Olympe) were all mistresses of Louis XIV of France, and Ortensia also became the lover of Charles II of England.So... semi-infamous French politicians and not-especially-outstanding royal mistresses. No, sorry, Mazarine does not endear itself as a female given name!

Miranda
Image hosting by PhotobucketProud adopter of 15 punctuation marks; see my profile for their names.
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Mazarine  ·  Mikah  ·  5/8/2006, 1:13 PM
Re: Mazarine  ·  BrittneyD  ·  5/9/2006, 4:28 PM
Re: Mazarine  ·  youngmum_14  ·  5/9/2006, 3:02 AM
Margarine, mazarin, marzipan . . .  ·  Chrisell  ·  5/8/2006, 10:55 PM
A "mazarin" is a pastry  ·  Ylva  ·  5/8/2006, 4:20 PM
Re: Mazarine  ·  Miranda  ·  5/8/2006, 2:02 PM
Re: Mazarine  ·  amy  ·  5/8/2006, 1:31 PM
Re: Mazarine  ·  KISSY  ·  5/8/2006, 1:19 PM
Same here. (m)  ·  Array  ·  5/8/2006, 1:39 PM
lol, agree. nt  ·  Ora  ·  5/8/2006, 4:23 PM
I agree. nt  ·  Andrew  ·  5/8/2006, 3:33 PM
Ditto the margarine n/t  ·  delaney04  ·  5/8/2006, 2:58 PM
exactly /nt  ·  Lillian  ·  5/8/2006, 2:04 PM
Ditto (m)  ·  Miss Julia Keelan  ·  5/8/2006, 1:29 PM