|
|
Web Search Results
Mata Hari: Mysterious, exotic, seductive ... For at least two generations following World War I, the very mention of Mata Hari evoked thoughts of mysterious, ...
Alas, the French get another bee in their berets about Mata Hari, again put there by the British who apparently were worried about her dealings with German officials at The Hague. She is tried for ...
Mata Hari was the stage name of Margaretha Geertruida "Grietje" Zelle (August 7, 1876, Leeuwarden – October 15, 1917, Vincennes), a Dutch exotic dancer and courtesan who was executed by firing squad for espionage during World War I.
Mata Hari was the stage name Dutch-born Margaretha Zelle took when she became one of Paris' most popular exotic dancers on the eve of World War I. Although details of her past are sketchy, it is ...
Mata Hari is tried and sentenced to death, but is permitted a few final precious moments with Novarro, allowing him to go on believing that he is in a military hospital rather than a prison cell, and ...
Mata Hari was sentenced to death. It was cold on Monday, 15 October 1917. The eye of the day started shining at eleven minutes past six.
←Newspapers Death Comes to Mata Hari by Henry G. Wales ... International News Service, October 19 1917: concerning the death of the spy Mata Hari
Mata Hari - an exotic dancer who was accused, convicted and executed as a double agent during World War I. ... Mata Hari (* August 7, 1876; † October 15, ...
"I cheated death." So begins the sensual, accomplished novel, Signed, Mata Hari, and so this historical figure did. Ninety years after the French executed her as a World War I spy, the exotic dancer ...
The end came for Mata Hari early in the morning of October 15, 1917. She had not been informed in advance of the date of her execution because, when France had the death penalty, it was considered ...
|
Narrow Your Search
Expand Your Search
|