Langlade Island
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Langlade Island
Langlade may refer to: Places * Langlade, Wisconsin, a town, United States * Langlade (community), Wisconsin, an unincorporated community, United States * Langlade County, Wisconsin, United States * Langlade, Gard, a commune in the Gard département of France * Langlade Island, in French Atlantic archipelago of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon People * François Langlade, French catholic priest * Augustin Langlade, a French fur-trader * Charles Michel de Langlade, a French/Ottawa fur-trader who fought in the French and Indian War * Colette Langlade, a French politician; former MP * Sieur de Langlade, Jean-Louis-Ignace de La Serre Jean-Louis-Ignace de La Serre, sieur de Langlade, was an 18th-century French novelist and playwright born in Cahors in 1662 and died 30 September 1756. Royal censor, he authored a biography of Molière. He was wrongly attributed some works by Ma ... {{disambig Occitan-language surnames ...
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Langlade, Wisconsin
Langlade is a town (Wisconsin), town in Langlade County, Wisconsin, Langlade County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 473 at the 2010 census. The unincorporated communities of Choate, Wisconsin, Choate, Freeman, Langlade County, Wisconsin, Freeman, Lily, Wisconsin, Lily, and Pickerel, Wisconsin, Pickerel are located within the town. Geography Langlade is in eastern Langlade County and is bordered to the north by Forest County, Wisconsin, Forest County. The community of Lily is close to the geographic center of the town, on the east side of the Wolf River (Fox River tributary), Wolf River, where it is joined from the northeast by the Lily River. State highways Wisconsin Highway 52, 52 and Wisconsin Highway 55, 55 cross in Lily, WI-52 leading northeast to Wabeno, Wisconsin, Wabeno and southwest to Antigo, Wisconsin, Antigo, the Langlade county seat, while WI-55 leads north to Crandon, Wisconsin, Crandon and southeast to Shawano, Wisconsin, Shawano. The community of Pi ...
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Langlade (community), Wisconsin
Langlade is an unincorporated community located in the town of Wolf River in Langlade County, Wisconsin, United States. It is located at the intersection of Wisconsin Highway 55 and Wisconsin Highway 64. The Langlade post office was established in June 1873 by its first postmaster, Charles H. Lazelere. The community is named for Charles Michel de Langlade Charles Michel Mouet de Langlade (9 May 1729 – after 26 July 1801)''Dictionnaire Généalogique Tanguay'' was a Great Lakes fur trader and war chief who was important in protecting French territory in North America. His mother was Ottawa and hi ..., who established a trading post in the 1740s. References Unincorporated communities in Langlade County, Wisconsin Unincorporated communities in Wisconsin {{LangladeCountyWI-geo-stub ...
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Langlade County, Wisconsin
Langlade County is a county located in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. As of the 2020 census, the population was 19,491. Its county seat is Antigo. History Langlade County was created on March 3, 1879, as New County. It was renamed Langlade County, in honor of Charles de Langlade, on February 20, 1880, and fully organized on February 19, 1881. The county's original borders extended northward from the top of Shawano County up to the Michigan state line. Between 1881 and 1885, the borders of Langlade County changed as nearby Lincoln and Shawano counties added or gave up area. Langlade lost its northernmost area along the Michigan border to Forest County when it was created in 1885. Geography According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of , of which is land and (1.9%) is water. The highest point in the county is at the foot of the Basswood Lookout Tower west of Summit Lake (elev:1857') Adjacent counties * Oneida County - northwest * Forest County - northe ...
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Langlade, Gard
Langlade (; oc, L'Anglada) is a commune and a village in the Gard department in southern France located some southwest of Nîmes. The village is situated in an area of low hills and plains known as the Vaunage and has existed since at least 1125. It was built near to a Roman road and had a small church at its centre. In the 17th century a staging point was set up on the Roman road nearby and later a station was built in the village on the railway line connecting Nîmes to Roquefort. The station closed in 1987. Much of the local area is devoted to the cultivation of grapes. From a hamlet with fewer than 400 inhabitants in the 1960s, the village has grown considerably, so that by 2008 it had 1,993 inhabitants. History First mentioned in 1125 as Anglata (meaning "angle" or "corner"), its early inhabitants appear to have been attracted by the plain just below the nearby Roman road between Nîmes and Sommières (the Via Domitia) where there were opportunities for growing cereals ...
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Langlade Island
Langlade may refer to: Places * Langlade, Wisconsin, a town, United States * Langlade (community), Wisconsin, an unincorporated community, United States * Langlade County, Wisconsin, United States * Langlade, Gard, a commune in the Gard département of France * Langlade Island, in French Atlantic archipelago of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon People * François Langlade, French catholic priest * Augustin Langlade, a French fur-trader * Charles Michel de Langlade, a French/Ottawa fur-trader who fought in the French and Indian War * Colette Langlade, a French politician; former MP * Sieur de Langlade, Jean-Louis-Ignace de La Serre Jean-Louis-Ignace de La Serre, sieur de Langlade, was an 18th-century French novelist and playwright born in Cahors in 1662 and died 30 September 1756. Royal censor, he authored a biography of Molière. He was wrongly attributed some works by Ma ... {{disambig Occitan-language surnames ...
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François Langlade
François de Langlade du Chayla (c. 1647 – 24 July 1702) was the French Catholic Abbé of Chaila (or Chayla), Archpriest of the Cevennes and Inspector of Missions of the Cevennes. His brutal repression of French (Protestant) Huguenots by means of torture caused his assassination and sparked the War of the Camisards. A missionary in his youth in Siam (modern Thailand), he there suffered near-martyrdom at the hands of Buddhists, was left for dead, but survived and returned to France. His house in Le Pont-de-Montvert served as a prison for Protestants who were tortured.Pierre-Jean Ruff, 2008. ''Le temple du Rouve, lieu de mémoire des Camisards''. Editions Lacour-Ollé, NîmeThe first Camisards and freedom of conscience As Robert Louis Stevenson said, Chayla "...closed the hands of his prisoners upon live coal, and plucked out the hairs of their beards, to convince them that they were deceived in their eligious beliefs" P. H. Stanhope in his Reign of Queen Anne (v. 1, p. 104-105) ...
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Augustin Langlade
Augustin Mouet, sieur de Langlade, (with a number of name variations) (1703 – 1771), was born in Trois-Rivières, Quebec. He was the son of Pierre Mouet, sieur de Moras. Augustin obtained a fur trading license at Michilimackinac in 1728. That year he married Domitilde, a widow with six children, who was the daughter of an Odawa chief and the sister to another. This strengthened his standing in the area. He was largely responsible for the establishment of the fur trading outpost that became Green Bay, Wisconsin. In 1728 he also fought in the Fox Wars together with François-Marie Le Marchand de Lignery. Augustin was a Canadian fur trader in that region. His son, Charles Michel de Langlade, was also involved in fur trading, and was a leader in the French and Indian Wars The French and Indian Wars were a series of conflicts that occurred in North America between 1688 and 1763, some of which indirectly were related to the European dynastic wars. The title ''French and In ...
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Charles Michel De Langlade
Charles Michel Mouet de Langlade (9 May 1729 – after 26 July 1801)''Dictionnaire Généalogique Tanguay'' was a Great Lakes fur trader and war chief who was important in protecting French territory in North America. His mother was Ottawa and his father a French Canadian fur trader. Fluent in Ottawa and French, Langlade later led First Nations forces in warfare in the region. Given the shifting political realities of the time, he and his followers were at various times allied with the French, British and, lastly, Americans. Leading French and Indian forces, in 1752 he destroyed Pickawillany, a Miami village and British trading post in present-day Ohio, where the British and French were competing for control of the lucrative fur trade. During the subsequent Seven Years' War, he helped defend Fort Duquesne (Pittsburgh) against the British. The French appointed Langlade as second in command at Fort Michilimackinac and a captain in the Indian Department of French Canada. After the d ...
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Colette Langlade
Colette Langlade (born 20 June 1956) was a member of the National Assembly of France. She represented Dordogne's 3rd constituency from 2008 to 2017, and is a member of the Socialiste, radical, citoyen et divers gauche The Socialists and affiliated group (french: groupe Socialistes et apparentés ) is a parliamentary group in the National Assembly including representatives of the Socialist Party (PS). History The first socialist parliamentary group emerge .... Biography Parliamentary activity Summary of mandates References 1956 births Living people Socialist Party (France) politicians Women members of the National Assembly (France) Deputies of the 14th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic 21st-century French women politicians {{France-politician-Socialist-stub ...
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Jean-Louis-Ignace De La Serre
Jean-Louis-Ignace de La Serre, sieur de Langlade, was an 18th-century French novelist and playwright born in Cahors in 1662 and died 30 September 1756. Royal censor, he authored a biography of Molière. He was wrongly attributed some works by Marguerite de Lussan. Works Librettos *1706: ''Polyxène et Pirrhus'' by Pascal Collasse *1710: '' Diomède'' by Toussaint Bertin de la Doué *1723: '' Pirithoüs'' by Jean-Joseph Mouret *1726: '' Pirame et Thisbé'' by François Francoeur and François Rebel *1735: ''Scanderberg'' by François Francoeur and François Rebel *1741: ''Nitétis'' by Charles-Louis Mion Other *1727: ''Hippalque, prince scythe'' *1728: ''Amosis, prince égyptien'' *1734: ''Mémoire sur la vie et les ouvrages de Molière'', in ''Œuvres'' de Molière, in-4°, tome VII Bibliography * Cardinal Georges Grente Georges-François-Xavier-Marie Grente (5 May 1872 – 5 May 1959) was a French Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of ...
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