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Les Misérables

Les Misérables (translated variously from French as The Miserable Ones, The Wretched,
The Poor Ones, The Wretched Poor, The Victims) (1862) is a novel by French author Victor
Hugo, and among the best-known novels of the 19th century. It follows the lives and
interactions of several French characters over a twenty year period in the early 19th century
that includes the Napoleonic wars and subsequent decades. Principally focusing on the
struggles of the protagonist—ex-convict Jean Valjean—who seeks to redeem himself, the
novel also examines the impact of Valjean's actions for the sake of social commentary. It
examines the nature of good, evil, and the law, in a sweeping story that expounds upon the
history of France, architecture of Paris, politics, moral philosophy, law, justice, religion, and
the types and nature of romantic and familial love. Hugo was inspired by the real-life
criminal/policeman François Eugène Vidocq, and split his personalities into the two main
characters in his novel. Les Misérables is known to many through its numerous stage and
screen adaptations, of which the most famous is the stage musical of the same name,
commonly known as "Les Mis" or "Les Miz" (pronounced /leɪ mɪz/).

• Jean Valjean (aka Monsieur Madeleine): A poor man who steals bread for his starving
sister and nieces. He is convicted, and upon being released from prison nineteen
years later, is given a yellow ticket which identifies him as an ex-convict. After having
his life turned around by the Bishop, he destroys his ticket and assumes a new
identity. He becomes a Mayor named M. Madeleine. He adopts and raises Fantine's
daughter, Cosette. He dies at an old age.
• Bishop Myriel (aka Monseigneur Bienvenue; Bishop of Digne): A kindly old priest who
is promoted to bishop by a chance encounter with Napoleon. He convinces Valjean to
change his ways, after Valjean steals some silver from him.
• Javert: An obsessive police inspector who continuously hunts, tracks down, and loses
Valjean. He goes undercover behind the barricade, but is unmasked. Valjean has the
chance to kill him, but lets Javert go. Later Javert allows Valjean to escape. Unable to
accept that a felon has shown him mercy, and that he in turn allowed that convict to
go free, Javert commits suicide by jumping into the River Seine.
• Fantine: A worker in Mayor Madeleine's factory, she is unjustly fired by a foreman.
Since she has no husband and must care for her daughter, Cosette, she begins
working as a prostitute. She pays the Thénardiers owners of an inn, to care for
Cosette. She later dies of tuberculosis.
• Eponine: Thenardiers' daughter, She is obsessed with Marius and extremely jealous
of Cosette.
• Cosette: The daughter of Fantine, she is raised by Jean Valjean after her mother dies.
She falls in love with Marius Pontmercy, and marries him at the end of the novel.
• Marius Pontmercy: An aristocrat who joins the revolutionary ABC students after
discovering his father was a Bonapartist, later falling in love with Cosette.
• Thénardiers: An innkeeper and his wife. They raise Cosette in her first years.
• Gavroche:"Gamin de Paris" and takes part in the revolution
• Enjolras, leader of the revolutionary students
San Agustin Church, Manila

San Agustín Church, built between 1587 and 1606, is


one of the oldest churches in the Philippines, and the only
building left intact after the destruction of Intramuros
during the Battle of Manila (1945). The present structure
is actually the third to stand on the site and has survived
seven major earthquakes, as well as the wars in Manila.
The church remains under the care of the Augustinians
who founded it.

The San Agustín Church lies inside the walled city of


Intramuros located in the capital city Manila, Philippines.
It is the first European stone church to be built in the
Philippines designed in Spanish architectural structure.
The church also houses the legacies of the Spanish
conquistadors, Miguel López de Legazpi, Juan de Salcedo
and Martín de Goiti who are buried and laid to rest in a
tomb, underneath the church.

The church has 14 side chapels and a trompe-l'oeil


ceiling. Up in the choir loft are the hand-carved 17th-
century seats of molave, a beautiful tropical hardwood.
Adjacent to the church is a small museum run by the
Augustinian order, featuring antique vestments, colonial
furniture, and religious paintings and icons.

Together with three other ancient churches in the


country, it was designated as part of the World Heritage
Site "Baroque Churches of the Philippines" in 1993.
Submitted by:
Ruby Ana Bernardo
Estrelita Vargas

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