- François
Capois (or François Cappoix; 1766 –
October 8, 1806,
nicknamed Capois-La-Mort, also Cappoix-la-Mort,
meaning "
Capois-Death") was a
Haitian officer...
-
clambered past
their dead, singing.
Capois'
horse was shot,
faltered and fell,
tossing Capois off his saddle.
Capois picked himself up, drew his sword;...
- lead them to Fort
Capois, a
major Cacos stronghold. As the
Marines forded the
Grande Rivière du Nord in
total darkness near Fort
Capois, they were ambushed...
-
placing the
possessor or
possessive pronoun after the item possessed. In the
Capois dialect of
northern Haiti, a or an is
placed before the
possessive pronoun...
- Louverture Jean-Jacques
Dessalines Henri Christophe Alexandre Pétion François
Capois John
Duckworth John
Loring 1791–1793
Viscount de Blanchelande Léger-Félicité...
- pauses,
since the 1790s. In this last
battle for independence,
rebel leader Capois La Mort
survived all the
French bullets that
nearly killed him. His horse...
-
being suspected of
taking part in a
revolt led by
Colonel François
Capois (
Capois-la-Mort), he, his family, and some of the
soldiers were
arrested by...
-
drove more
Haitians to
resist the French. On 18
November 1803, François
Capois defeated Rochambeau's army in the
Battle of Vertières.
Dessalines proclaimed...
-
Geffrard won over the judges, who
preferred it to "L'Artibonitienne" by
Capois diplomat Louis Edouard Pouget. The
anthem was
premiered at an
October 1903...
-
Americas at
Limonade in 1492.
Limonade is also the city in
which François
Capois, a
renowned hero of the
Haitian Revolution, died. In 2012, a new university...