Alexander Saint-Just: Difference between revisions

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| honorific_prefix  = Professor
| honorific_prefix  = Professor
| name              = Alexander Saint-Just
| name              = Alexander Saint-Just
| image              = Alexander Saint-Just.png
| image              = Alexander_Saint-Just_Portrait.png
| caption            = Alexander Saint-Just
| caption            = Alexander Saint-Just
| birth_date        = 1779
| birth_date        = 1779
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| signature_alt      = Alexander Saint-Just Signature
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[[Alexander Saint-Just]] is a Hiraethian Zord politician and a professor since 1824. He graduated the Royal Institution of Law in 1804 with a degree in constitutional law. He began working as a journalist for The Crown paper in Novoz but was later discharged for a number of statements he made that were considered anti-Betanian. Since 1824, he has been working as a law professor in The Continental Bureau of Education.
[[Alexander Saint-Just]] (born in 1779) is a Hiraethian Zord politician and a professor since 1824. He graduated the Royal Institution of Law in 1804 with a degree in constitutional law. He began working as a journalist for The Crown paper in Novoz but was later discharged for a number of statements he made that were considered anti-Betanian. Since 1824, he has been working as a law professor in The Continental Bureau of Education.

Latest revision as of 22:39, 5 April 2022

Professor

Alexander Saint-Just
Alexander Saint-Just Portrait.png
Alexander Saint-Just
Born1779
Straubiz, Zabelia
NationalityHiraeth
EducationThe Royal Institution of Law
OccupationLaw Professor
Years active1824 - Present
EmployerThe Continental Bureau of Education
Height177 cm (5 ft 10 in)
TitleProfessor
Signature
Alexander Saint-Just Signature

Alexander Saint-Just (born in 1779) is a Hiraethian Zord politician and a professor since 1824. He graduated the Royal Institution of Law in 1804 with a degree in constitutional law. He began working as a journalist for The Crown paper in Novoz but was later discharged for a number of statements he made that were considered anti-Betanian. Since 1824, he has been working as a law professor in The Continental Bureau of Education.