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The cercle de l'Union interalliée, also known as the Cercle interallié, is a private social and dining club established in 1917 at No. 33 rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré in Paris, France. The club's second president was Ferdinand Foch, Marshal of France. It adjoins the British Embassy and an annex of the embassy of Japan. The club includes royalty and political figures among its international members. ==History== The Union Interalliée was founded in 1917, at the time of the official American entry into World War I. This was after the voluntary aviators from the Lafayette Escadrille had come to France to increase the number of those who were fighting for the same cause on French soil. The founders of the Union Interalliée (the Count of Beaumont, Paul Dupuy, the Count J. de Bryas, Arthur Meyer, MJ of Sillac) suggested establishing a place of welcome providing moral and material resources to the officers and personalities of the Allied nations, in order to develop the allied life that had just begun. Thanks to the support they received from several statesmen, ambassadors and field marshals and the assistance from new collaborators (Count of Andigne, Bardac, du Breuil Saint-Germain, André Citroën, L. Dumontet, the Count of Fels, who created, along with the former, the directing committee, chaired by Vice Admiral Fournier), they founded the Union Interalliée in one of the most beautiful mansions in Paris, the ''hotel Henri de Rothschild'', which had been generously offered to them. In 1920, the club, having set up a real estate company, acquired the building for the equivalent of today's € 1,067,143. The war having ended, the need for the Union Interalliée was apparent to everybody, as it was more necessary than ever to maintain harmony between the people who had fought together. The work that had begun in 1917 received an official consecration in 1920 when the public authorities recognized its importance in diplomatic relations between the allied nations.〔()〕 On 1 June 1920, Marshal Foch became the second president of the Cercle. In 2004, Chilean-born American interior designer Juan Pablo Molyneux designed the interiors of the clubhouse.〔Joshua Levine, (Interior Designer Juan Pablo Molyneux: The Patron Saint of Lost Arts ), ''The Wall Street Journal'', June 16, 2014〕〔Charlotte Cowles, (ARCHITECT OF DREAMS: JUAN PABLO MOLYNEUX: Designer Juan Pablo Molyneux creates his own castle in Manhattan. ), ''Harpers Bazaar'', January 27, 2015〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Cercle de l'Union interalliée」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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