8 résultats pour "kivi"
- Kivi, Aleksis - écrivain.
- Kivi (Aleksis Stenvall.
- LEA Aleksis Kivi (résumé)
- CORDONNIERS DE LA LANDE (Les) (résumé & analyse) Alexis Kivi
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finlandaise, littérature.
1886 ; les Enfants du guignon — Kovan onnen lapsia, 1888). L’œuvre d’Arvid Järnefelt (1861-1932) est placée quant à elle sous la figure tutélaire de Léon Tolstoï, avec lequel il partage la haine du matérialisme, une certaine exaltation de la nature, et une critique sociale ( les Fils de la terre — Maaemon Lapsia, 1905). Le naturalisme littéraire est représenté par les œuvres des romanciers Joel Lehtonen (1881-1934) et Toivo Pekkanen (1902-1957). Le premier se détache progressivement du roma...
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Native American Architecture
I
INTRODUCTION
Native American Architecture, traditional architecture of the peoples of who lived in North America before Europeans arrived.
Mound Builders who resided in the area.John Elk III/Bruce Coleman, Inc. Another mound building culture, named Hopewell, also appears to have originated in Ohio but expanded west to Iowa, Kansas, and Oklahoma, south to Louisiana,Mississippi, and Alabama, east to Georgia and the Appalachian Mountains, and north to Wisconsin, Michigan, and lower Ontario in Canada. The Hopewell culture lastedfrom about 200 BC to 400 AD. Hopewell people built large, linear mounds to create enclosures in geometrical...
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Native Americans of North America.
addition to smallpox and measles, explorers and colonists brought a host of other diseases: bubonic plague, cholera, typhoid fever, scarlet fever, pleurisy, mumps,diphtheria, pneumonia, whooping cough, malaria, yellow fever, and various sexually transmitted infections. Despite the undisputed devastation wreaked on Indian populations after European contact, native populations showed enormous regional variability in their response todisease exposure. Some peoples survived and, in some cases, even...
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Native Americans of North America - Canadian History.
addition to smallpox and measles, explorers and colonists brought a host of other diseases: bubonic plague, cholera, typhoid fever, scarlet fever, pleurisy, mumps,diphtheria, pneumonia, whooping cough, malaria, yellow fever, and various sexually transmitted infections. Despite the undisputed devastation wreaked on Indian populations after European contact, native populations showed enormous regional variability in their response todisease exposure. Some peoples survived and, in some cases, even...