Difference between revisions of "Hercule Poirot"

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[[File:Detective 3.jpg|Hercule Poirot|thumb]]
 
[[File:Detective 3.jpg|Hercule Poirot|thumb]]
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{{hatnote|For other uses, see [[Poirot]].}}
 
{{main|e1=[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hercule_Poirot Hercule Poirot]}}
 
{{main|e1=[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hercule_Poirot Hercule Poirot]}}
  
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== Allusions ==
 
== Allusions ==
 
* A "[[Café Poirot]]" is located below the [[Mouri Detective Agency]].
 
* A "[[Café Poirot]]" is located below the [[Mouri Detective Agency]].
*In [[The Forgotten Cell Phone]], Café Poirot's owner, [[Café Poirot Master]], and its waitress [[Azusa Enomoto]] appear.
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*In [[The Forgotten Cell Phone]], Café Poirot's owner, [[Café Poirot Master]] is a fan of Hercules Poirot.
 
*[[Rei Furuya]] also works at Café Poirot.
 
*[[Rei Furuya]] also works at Café Poirot.
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*In [[The Jet-Black Mystery Train| The Jet-Black Mystery Train (Part 1)]] Kogoro (8B) introduces himself to the group after adjusting his mustache into the style of Hercule Poirot.
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*[[Taii]] name comes from the Japanese word for Captain which the owner of Cafe Poirot gave him. It was in honor of Capt. Arthur Hastings the loyal companion of Detective Hercules Poirot, whom the Cafe Poirot was named after.
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*In [[The Fourteenth Target]] Chateau Petrus in Kohei Sawaki collection is the wine Poirot drank in the Agatha Christie book "Death On The Nile."
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Latest revision as of 07:05, 7 May 2023

Hercule Poirot

Hercule Poirot is a fictional Belgian detective created by famed novelist Agatha Christie. Set from the Roaring Twenties to the Post-War period, Poirot remains one of the most recognizable detectives created by Christie. His stories are often narrated by his close friend Capt. Arthur Hastings.

He was the featured detective of Volume 3 of the Detective Conan manga.

About

Impeccably neat to a fault and constantly sensitive to his mannerisms and actions, Poirot carries himself in a regal and dignified manner constantly, often to the consternation of his associates. Though at first utilized almost exclusively by the British government, Poirot soon became his own private detective after the Great War.

Along with being a clue-oriented detective, Poirot also relied on his own personal forensic psychology, using his oratory to convince witnesses and suspects to give up information on any motives or flaws that would result in a case being solved.

Allusions

See also

References