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Llista de les banderes del Canadà; Usage on de.wikipedia.org Liste kanadischer Flaggen; Usage on es.wikipedia.org Francocanadienses; Usuario:Michelsimard; Usage on fa.wikipedia.org فرانسوی-کانادایی; Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Canadiens français; Franco-Manitobains; Amérique francophone; Drapeau du Québec; Liste de drapeaux ...
The Festival du Voyageur, held annually since 1970 in Saint-Boniface, is a major celebration in the Franco-Manitoban community. [17] Cinémental is an annual French-language film festival, staged at the Centre culturel Franco-Manitobain in Winnipeg. [18]
The national flag of Canada (at left) being flown with the flags of the 10 Canadian provinces and 3 territories. The Department of Canadian Heritage lays out protocol guidelines for the display of flags, including an order of precedence; these instructions are only conventional, however, and are generally intended to show respect for what are considered important symbols of the state or ...
Château de la Motte-Glain, at La Chapelle-Glain; Château de l'Oiselinière, at Gorges; Château de la Pinelais, at Saint-Père-en-Retz; Château de Pornic, at Pornic; Château de Ranrouët, at Herbignac (castle) Château de la Seilleraye, at Carquefou; See also List of châteaux in the Pays-de-la-Loire
Several prominent Canadian films were produced in Manitoba, including For Angela (1993); The Saddest Music in the World (2003); The Stone Angel (2007), based on the 1964 book of the same name; My Winnipeg (2007); and Foodland (2010). Guy Maddin, the writer and director of My Winnipeg, is a prominent Manitoban screenwriter and film director. [43]
Regional tartans of Canada are represented by all Canada's provinces and territories having a regional tartan, as do many other regional divisions in Canada.Tartans were first brought to Canada by Scottish settlers; the first province to adopt one officially was Nova Scotia in 1956 (when registered at the Court of the Lord Lyon; adopted by law in 1963), and the most recent province was Ontario ...
This first of six Monuments de la francophonie d'Ottawa is dedicated to the subject of education. The flag is 5 x 10 m and was raised on a 27 m pole. In 2010, the Ontario government designated September 25 as Franco-Ontarian Day. [7] The date was chosen as it represented the anniversary of the flag.
Gaétan Gervais, CM (August 10, 1944 – October 20, 2018) [1] [2] was a Canadian author, historian and university professor, most noted as a prominent figure in Franco-Ontarian culture. With a group of university students at Laurentian University, he designed the Franco-Ontarian flag, [3] and was a founding member of the Franco-Ontarian ...