Henri Félix Camille Beaulieu (known as Henri Beylie; 30 November 1870 – 1944) was a French accountant, naturist, anti-militarist, anarchist and then communist. He wrote many articles in radical journals. In his later years he was active in the Committee of Social Defence (CDS), an organization that helped political prisoners and exiles.
Henri Félix Camille Beaulieu was born in Paris on 30 November 1870. His parents were Charles Beaulieu and Jeanne Beylie. a seamstress.
At a young age, he was a non-commissioned officer in the African Battalions, but was dismissed for "collective revolt and protest".
On returning to the metropolis, he mixed in libertarian circles in Montmartre and began to publish articles in La Revue Libertaire (1893–94).
After anarchists staged several attacks in Paris in 1893, there was a wave of arrests.
In January 1894, Beylie, Henri Gauche and Henri Guerin were arrested questioned by a judge.
Gauche and Guerin were the editors of La revue libertaire (Paris, December 1893 – February 1894).
The three briefly took refuge in Brussels, Belgium.
After his return to France, Henri Beaulieu worked as a plumber for the Northern Railway, then in 1895, he became a bank employee.
He participated in "naturist" libertarian groups led by Henri Zisly and Jules Bariol in Paris.
Between July 1894 and February 1898 Beaulieu, Émile Gravelle and Henri Zisly published four numbers of L'État Naturel which advocated naturism, vegetarianism and veganism.
Between 1895 and 1898 the three men published the monthly La Nouvelle Humanité, which proclaimed that humans would be released from slavery through a healthy diet and outdoors living.
Writing under the pseudonym Henri Beylie, he contributed to various other libertarian publications.
He was in contact with the paper Tribune Libre published in Charleroi, Pennsylvania by French miners who had emigrated to the US.
On 10 September 1898, Beylie married Clémentine Bontoux and found work as an accountant.
The naturist group was dissolved in 1898, and he joined the fight to defend Alfred Dreyfus.
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Lorsque les zones de confluence de deux cours d’eau ont une morphologie proche de l’état naturel, la connectivité des cours d’eau est maximale. La présente "che explique comment l’élargissement local des embouchures accroît la diversité des habitats et la connectivité longitudinale des cours d’eau. Ces mesures sont souvent peu onéreuses car elles ne sont mises en oeuvre que localement.