- Bussière-
Poitevine (French pronunciation: [bysjɛʁ pwatvin]; Occitan: Bussiera) is a
former commune in the Haute-Vienne
department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine...
-
Poitou (UK: /ˈpwʌtuː/ PWUH-too, US: /pwɑːˈtuː/ pwah-TOO, French: [pwatu]; Latin: Pictaviensis, Pictavia; Poitevin: Poetou) was a
province of west-central...
- 30
October 2019. Levy,
Audrey (21
April 2015). "Destins de femmes: Ces
Poitevines plus ou
moins célèbres
auront marqué l'Histoire". Le
Point (in French)...
- The
Poitevin mule or French: mule
Poitevine is a type of
large mule from the
former province of
Poitou in
western central France. It is the
product of...
- The
Poitou goat (French: Chèvre
Poitevine) is a
dairy goat
breed from
western France. With a
history dating back to 1800, the
breed is
named for the Poitou...
- 1405, the
expedition led by the
Norman noble Jean de
Bethencourt and the
Poitevine Gadifer de la
Salle conquered the
Canarian islands of Lanzarote, Fuerteventura...
-
their equivalences] (in French). Le
Cybergroupe Généalogique de
Charente Poitevine. 2011.
Archived from the
original on July 20, 2011.
Retrieved February...
- The
langues d'oïl (/dɔɪ(l)/ doy(l), US also /dɔːˈiːl/ daw-EEL, French: [lɑ̃ɡ dɔjl]) are a
dialect continuum that
includes standard French and its closest...
-
France TV info. Feb 27, 2015 [1] Levy, Audrey.
Destins de femmes: Ces
Poitevines plus ou
moins célèbres
auront marqué l'Histoire. Le Point. Apr 21, 2015...
-
Middle Ages.
Inhabitants of
Poitiers are
referred to as
Poitevins or
Poitevines,
although this
denomination can be used for
anyone from the
Poitou province...