57 résultats pour "brunswick"
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New Brunswick - Geography.
Grand Lake, the largest lake in New Brunswick, is in the lowlands, east of Fredericton. Most other lakes are located in the northern and southwestern parts of NewBrunswick. D Climate New Brunswick has a continental climate that is moderated by maritime influences in the coastal areas. As a result, coastal regions are slightly warmer in the winter andslightly cooler in the summer than are interior regions. Annual temperature variations are large, with the January mean usually at least 25 to 28°C...
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Nouveau-Brunswick
/ Jérôme PETION de VILLENEUVE
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New Brunswick - Canadian History.
Grand Lake, the largest lake in New Brunswick, is in the lowlands, east of Fredericton. Most other lakes are located in the northern and southwestern parts of NewBrunswick. D Climate New Brunswick has a continental climate that is moderated by maritime influences in the coastal areas. As a result, coastal regions are slightly warmer in the winter andslightly cooler in the summer than are interior regions. Annual temperature variations are large, with the January mean usually at least 25 to 28°C...
- Nouveau-Brunswick.
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Le manifeste de Brunswick
Le manifeste de Brunswick Une funeste «gaffe» 25 juillet 1792 En wilt 1792, au moment oil l'Autriche et la Prusse coalisees s'appretent a enva- hir la France, parvient, a Paris, un «ma- nifeste* signe par Charles-Ferdinand- Guillaume, duc de Brunswick, generalis- sime des armies aloes, et redige au quartier general de Coblence, le 25 juil- let 1792. Ce manifeste, veritable decla- ration de guerre qui suscitera en France l'indignation generale, tire ses origines des tractations secretes de Ia cou...
- Brunswick.
- Brunswick, famille de
- Brunswick (État de) (en all.
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- Brunswick (ville).
- Brunswick (région historique)
- Saint-Jean (Nouveau-Brunswick).
- Le manifeste de Brunswick
- Saint John (city, New Brunswick) - Geography.
- Saint John (city, New Brunswick) - geography.
- Brunswick (Ferdinand, duc de), 1735-1806, né à Wolfenbüttel, général allemand.
- Le manifeste de Brunswick Une funeste «gaffe».
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- Le manifeste de Brunswick: Une funeste «gaffe».
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leur suzerain, comme Ferrand comte de Flandre, ou Renaud comte de Boulogne, et surtout un personnage
autrement important : Otton de Brunswick, Otton IV, empereur du Saint Empire, c'est-à-dire celui qu'on appelle,
dans les manuels dont on parle, « l'empereur d'Allemagne ».
appuyée denombreux alliés,dontlesAnglais. Auxiiie, elle était seule. Ainsi,pouruncœur tricolore, Bouvines formait unesorte desommet delagloire nationale, unWaterloo quenous aurions gagné. L’art delaguerre auMoyen Âge Et alors ? Toutcelaest-il faux, toutcelaest-il inventé ? Non,biensûr,tout celaest aussi vrai, toutcelaest à peu près vrai sil’on accepte detout relire avecdeslunettes d’ilya cinquante oucent ans.Ettout celaressemble aussi àune vraie manipulation, sitant estqu’on accepte dechanger en...
- Brunswick (en all.
- Brunswick, Karl II
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RÉGION DU CANADA: Nouveau-BRuNswick
Nouveau-Brunswick 123 sauf dans la région de la rivière Saint-Jean, grosse productrice de pommes de terre. L'élevage et les produits laitiers représentent 60 Ofo des revenus agricoles, lesquels n'entrent que pour 5 Ofo dans le revenu total de la province. 4 Le Nouveau-Brunswick bénéficie des bancs de pêche de l'Atlantique et 6 Ofo de la population travaille à la pêche et aux conserveries de poissons, particulièrement de la morue et de la s...
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Ethnic Groups in Canada - Canadian History.
Ontario and the Atlantic provinces (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Prince Edward Island). Most of the Irish live in rural areas of NovaScotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Ontario, and Québec. The Welsh are by far the smallest group among the British Canadians, and they have also settled inthe Atlantic provinces and Ontario. B Culture The language spoken by British Canadians is mostly English, but some Welsh speak their own Celtic language and some Scots, Gae...
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Fredericton - geography.
VI HISTORY The indigenous people known as the Maliseet used the site of Fredericton as a campsite and burial ground before Europeans discovered the area. In the 17th century theybecame partners with the French in the fur trade. Pierre de Joibert, a Frenchman, received several land grants along the St. John River in 1676, but the first importantsettlement in the area was not completed until 1692. Joseph Robineau de Villebon and other settlers built Fort St. Joseph, also known as Fort Nashwaak, a...
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John Macdonald.
dissolution of the existing Union. The Atlantic colonies, which consisted of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland, were considering the question of their own union andplanned to meet at Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, on September 1, 1864. Macdonald saw his opportunity and secured an invitation for the Canadians to attend.The delegates of the Atlantic colonies put off their own discussion until they had heard the Canadians. Macdonald spoke of the advantages in...
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John Macdonald - Canadian History.
dissolution of the existing Union. The Atlantic colonies, which consisted of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland, were considering the question of their own union andplanned to meet at Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, on September 1, 1864. Macdonald saw his opportunity and secured an invitation for the Canadians to attend.The delegates of the Atlantic colonies put off their own discussion until they had heard the Canadians. Macdonald spoke of the advantages in...
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John Macdonald - Canadian History.
dissolution of the existing Union. The Atlantic colonies, which consisted of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland, were considering the question of their own union andplanned to meet at Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, on September 1, 1864. Macdonald saw his opportunity and secured an invitation for the Canadians to attend.The delegates of the Atlantic colonies put off their own discussion until they had heard the Canadians. Macdonald spoke of the advantages in...
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Confederation of Canada - Canadian History.
Québec conference seemed in many ways to give Macdonald the centralized union he wanted. The federal government would control banking, finance, defense,transportation, and commerce among the provinces. It would also have far greater powers of taxation than the provincial governments would have. In private,Macdonald predicted that the central government would be so strong that it would soon swallow up the provinces completely. Yet the Québec resolutions were vague or contradictory enough to give...
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New Brunswick - Facts and Figures.
Infant mortality rate 4 deaths per 1,000 live births (2005 estimate) Health-care expenditure per capita 3,865 Canadian dollars (2004 estimate) Adult population with high school diploma 84 percent (2001 estimate) GOVERNMENTProvincial governmentPremier Shawn Graham Legislature Legislative Assembly 55 members National representationMembers of the Canadian Senate 9 Members of the Canadian House of Commons 10 ECONOMYGross domestic product (GDP, in Canadiandollars) C$25 billion (2006)...
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Fredericton - Geography.
As a provincial center for government, forestry, military activities, and agriculture, Fredericton grew from 4400 residents in 1848 to 7117 by 1901. Telegraph lines wereestablished in 1851, telephones in 1888, and radio broadcasts in 1923. Early newspapers included the New Brunswick Reporter (1844-1902) and the Maritime Farmer (1879-1905). After 1850 Fredericton flourished as an industrial town. Sawmills, shipyards, tanneries, boot and shoe factories, carriage shops, iron foundries, brickyard...
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Canada.
Six general landform regions are distinguishable in Canada: the Appalachian Region, the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands, the Canadian Shield, the Great Plains,the Canadian Cordillera, and the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. B1 Appalachian Region and Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands Eastern Canada consists of the Appalachian Region and the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands. The Appalachian Region embraces Newfoundland Island, NovaScotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and the G...
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Canada - country.
Six general landform regions are distinguishable in Canada: the Appalachian Region, the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands, the Canadian Shield, the Great Plains,the Canadian Cordillera, and the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. B1 Appalachian Region and Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands Eastern Canada consists of the Appalachian Region and the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands. The Appalachian Region embraces Newfoundland Island, NovaScotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and the G...
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Canada - Canadian History.
Six general landform regions are distinguishable in Canada: the Appalachian Region, the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands, the Canadian Shield, the Great Plains,the Canadian Cordillera, and the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. B1 Appalachian Region and Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands Eastern Canada consists of the Appalachian Region and the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands. The Appalachian Region embraces Newfoundland Island, NovaScotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and the G...
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- MAITRE DU MONOGRAMME DE BRUNSWICK (Jan VAN AMSTEL) : Le Sacrifice d'Abraham (analyse du tableau).
- Maillet Antonine, née en 1929 à Bouctouche (Nouveau-Brunswick), écrivain canadien d'expression française.
- Gotthold Ephraim Lessing 1729-1781 Né en Saxe, Lessing mourut à Brunswick.
- Grotewohl O tto , 1894-1964, né à Brunswick, homme politique allemand.
- Brunswick (duché de), ancien État allemand issu d'une division des possessions du guelfe Henri le Lion (1180).
- Spohr Louis, 1784-1859, né à Brunswick, violoniste, chef d'orchestre et compositeur allemand.
- Gauss Carl Friedrich, 1777-1855, né à Brunswick, mathématicien, physicien et astronome allemand.
- Dedekind Richard, 1831-1916, né à Brunswick, mathématicien allemand, fondateur de la théorie des idéaux et de la géométrie algébrique.
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- Manifeste de Brunswick Manifeste publié le 25 juillet 1792 au nom de l'empereur et du roi de Prusse pour mettre en garde les soldats et la population françaises contre toute atteinte à la sûreté de la famille royale française.
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Benjamin Constant
par Claude-Edmonde Magny
A vingt et un ans, Constant écrit à Mme de Charrière qu'il a quittée quinze
jours avant pour retourner à Brunswick, après avoir évoqué les détails
domestiques de leurs dernières journées : " Nous étions heureux,- du moins
moi.
par Claude-Edmonde Magny
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New Jersey - geography.
C Soils Broadly defined, all of New Jersey’s soils are podzolic soils; that is, they are acidic and contain fairly high amounts of iron oxides. The soils in northern New Jersey areirregular in quality and contain rock fragments and small stones deposited by the continental glaciers of the last Ice Age. The soils of the inner coastal plain, unaffectedby glaciation, are the richest in the state, while those of the outer coastal plain are generally infertile. The newer soil classification system d...
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New Jersey - USA History.
C Soils Broadly defined, all of New Jersey’s soils are podzolic soils; that is, they are acidic and contain fairly high amounts of iron oxides. The soils in northern New Jersey areirregular in quality and contain rock fragments and small stones deposited by the continental glaciers of the last Ice Age. The soils of the inner coastal plain, unaffectedby glaciation, are the richest in the state, while those of the outer coastal plain are generally infertile. The newer soil classification system d...
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Canadian Literature
I
INTRODUCTION
Canadian Literature, literature of the peoples of Canada.
William Henry DrummondPoet William Henry Drummond described the lives of French Canadian farmers, loggers, and rural workers in verse thatreflected their mix of French and English speech. He gained recognition in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.Library of Congress In the early 19th century, most Canadian poetry imitated earlier British poetry. Poets Oliver Goldsmith (grandnephew of the Anglo-Irish writer of the same name),Charles Sangster, Charles Mair, and Levi Adams exemplified literary...
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Prince Edward Island - Geography.
hectares (109 acres) each. In 2006 there were 1,700 farms, of which the average size was 148 hectares (366 acres). In 2005 the total farm cash receipts were C$510million. The most important agricultural products in terms of value include potatoes, milk and cream, cattle and calves, hogs, tobacco, vegetables, eggs, hens andchickens, and furs. For the most part the island’s agriculture is diversified, rather than specialized, because of the lack of a large urban industrial population within easy r...
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Prince Edward Island - Canadian History.
hectares (109 acres) each. In 2006 there were 1,700 farms, of which the average size was 148 hectares (366 acres). In 2005 the total farm cash receipts were C$510million. The most important agricultural products in terms of value include potatoes, milk and cream, cattle and calves, hogs, tobacco, vegetables, eggs, hens andchickens, and furs. For the most part the island’s agriculture is diversified, rather than specialized, because of the lack of a large urban industrial population within easy r...
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Louis XVI
cents délégués de la noblesse, trois cents du clergé, et six cents délégués du Tiers Etat. Le Tiers Etat, qui a obtenu une représenta tion double, demande le vote par tête, qui en est la conséquence logique. Le roi ayant refu sé, le Tiers Etat rassemblé dans la salle du Jeu de Paume, le 20 juin 1789, fait le serment de ne pas se séparer jusqu'à ce que la Consti- tution soit établie et affermie sur des fonde ments solides. Les événeme...
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Canadian Pacific Railway - Canadian History.
roads constructed inland from the lakeshore. However, this changed with the outbreak in Saskatchewan of the Northwest Rebellion by Louis Riel and his supportersagainst the authority of the Canadian government in March 1885. Despite the fact that the railway was not completed, a contingent of troops was able to reachWinnipeg from Montréal in only seven days, much faster than they could have gone overland, and get from there to Saskatchewan in time to successfully put down therebellion. This actio...
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Kanada - geographie.
der Gebirge gedeihen dichte Wälder mit Tannen, Fichten und Zedern, während in der intramontanen Plateauregion Kiefer die Hauptbaumgattung ist. Der Gürtel des borealenNadelwaldes erstreckt sich in einem weiten Bogen von Neufundland bis ins nördliche Alaska und hat eine Breite von nahezu 1 000 Kilometern. Diese Vegetationseinheitumfasst vorwiegend Fichten, Tannen und Kiefern. Nach Norden geht der Nadelwald in die Waldtundra über, ein Gebiet mit lichteren Baumbeständen. Auf dem nördlichenFestland u...