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・ Pierre Puget
・ Pierre Nicolas Camille Jacquelin du Val
・ Pierre Nicolas d'Incarville
・ Pierre Nicolas Gerdy
・ Pierre Nicole
・ Pierre Nihant
・ Pierre Nijs
・ Pierre Niney
・ Pierre Njanka
・ Pierre Nkurunziza
・ Pierre Nlate
・ Pierre Nogaret de La Valette
・ Pierre Nolf
・ Pierre Nommesch
・ Pierre Nora
Pierre Nord
・ Pierre Nord Alexis
・ Pierre Nothomb
・ Pierre Notting
・ Pierre Nzila
・ Pierre Nzé
・ Pierre O'Connell
・ Pierre Oba
・ Pierre Ochs
・ Pierre Ochs (skier)
・ Pierre of the Plains
・ Pierre of the Plains (1914 film)
・ Pierre Offerman
・ Pierre Olivaint
・ Pierre Ollivier


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Pierre Nord : ウィキペディア英語版
Pierre Nord

Pierre Nord, real name André Léon Brouillard (15 April 1900 – 13 December 1985), was a French writer, spy and resistance member.
==Early life==
Brouillard was born in Le Cateau-Cambrésis, Nord. He participated in the First World War as a resistance fighter and in 1916 was arrested by the Germans at Saint-Quentin, Aisne, condemned to death and later pardoned.
He was educated at Saint-Cyr (1920-1922), Ecole de Guerre (Superior War School) (1932-1934), and Ecole libre des sciences politiques (Free School of Political Science). As an armoured troops' officer, he took part in the campaign against Rif rebels in Morocco and there earned the distinction of knight of the Légion d'honneur.
In 1939, Brouillard was appointed chief of intelligence of the 9th and 10th Armies. During the German invasion of 1940, he was again captured, escaped and became commander of one of the most active units of the French resistance. He ended the Second World War as a colonel and was awarded numerous military decorations.
Brouillard published his first espionage novel, ''Double crime sur la ligne Maginot'' (Double Crime on the Maginot Line) in 1936, under the pseudonym of Pierre Nord. The tense and complicated plot revolved around the hunt for a murderous German spy who operated in one of the forts in the Maginot Line. The spy, masquerading as a lieutenant in the French army, was neutralized by an ingenious trap set by the Deuxième Bureau' operative Captain Pierre Ardant. (Curiously, the chief protagonists of Nord's novels almost invariably bear the first name of Pierre). The ''Double crime'' was followed by ''Terre d'angoisse'' (Land of Anguish) 1937, which described the struggle between the German and French secret services during the First World War. The hero of the story, under the alias of Lieutenant Heim (portrayed by actor Gabriel Gabrio in the 1939 film adaptation) penetrated the Kaiser's army.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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