9 résultats pour "duplessis"
- Duplessis, Jean, sieur d'Ossonville Duplessis, Jean, sieur d'Ossonville (fin XVIe-1635), voyageur français et un des premiers colonisateurs de la Guadeloupe.
- Duplessis, Maurice
- Bèze, Théodore de Brisson, Barnabé Duplessis-Mornay
- DUPLESSIS-MORNAY, Philippe de Mornay, seigneur du Plessis-Marly, dit (1549-1623) Huguenot, ce juriste qui échappe au massacre de la Saint Barthélemy devient le conseiller de Henri de Navarre.
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W. L. Mackenzie King.
I
INTRODUCTION
W. L. Mackenzie King (1874-1950), tenth prime
V SECOND TERM AS PRIME MINISTER By the election of 1925 most of the rifts in the Liberal Party were healed. Little had been achieved by King's government except for some tariff reduction and thereorganization of Canadian railroads, but no mistakes had been made. The real issue of the election was the personalities of the party leaders, King and the brilliant butarrogant Conservative, Arthur Meighen. The Conservatives swept English-speaking Canada, and they won 116 seats. The Liberals won 101, a...
- DUPLESSIS-MORNAY, Philippe de Mornay, seigneur du Plessis-Marly, dit (1549-1623) Huguenot, ce juriste qui échappe au massacre de la Saint Barthélemy devient le conseiller de Henri de Navarre.
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French Canadian Nationalism - Canadian History.
The revolution ended in independence for the Americans, who named their new country the United States of America. In the aftermath, thousands of people who hadopposed the American Revolution migrated from what was now the United States to British North America. These people, known as the United Empire Loyalists, settledin the Maritimes, where they greatly increased the British majority over the Acadians, and in Québec. Some settled near francophone communities around Montréal andin the Eastern T...
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Louis Stephen St.
St. Laurent brought to office a new concept of government. His broad, all-national view firmly rejected Québec's traditional isolationism. He made his decisions with coolimpartiality, giving first consideration to the welfare of Canada as a whole. St. Laurent's foreign policy involved Canada in world politics. He supported the UN, fully endorsing the initiatives proposed by Pearson, his representative there. St.Laurent actively sponsored and subsequently cooperated with the North Atlantic Treaty...
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Louis Stephen St.
St. Laurent brought to office a new concept of government. His broad, all-national view firmly rejected Québec's traditional isolationism. He made his decisions with coolimpartiality, giving first consideration to the welfare of Canada as a whole. St. Laurent's foreign policy involved Canada in world politics. He supported the UN, fully endorsing the initiatives proposed by Pearson, his representative there. St.Laurent actively sponsored and subsequently cooperated with the North Atlantic Treaty...