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"Madame" Marie Aioe Dorion Venier Toupin (ca. 1786 – September 5, 1850) was the only female member of an overland expedition sent by Pacific Fur Company to the Pacific Northwest in 1810. Like her first husband, Pierre Dorion Jr., she was Métis. Her mother was of the Iowa people and her father was French Canadian. [1]
Mara Venier (born 1950), Italian actress and television presenter; Marco Venier, Lord of Cerigo (died 1311), Lord of Cerigo; Marco Venier, Marquess of Cerigo; Marie Dorion Venier Toupin (ca. 1786–1850), explorer, the only female member of the Pacific Fur Company to the Pacific Northwest in 1810; Marie Venier (c.1590–1627), French actress
Felix A. Toupin (1886–1965), American lawyer and politician; Fernand Toupin (1930–2009), Canadian painter; Jack Toupin (1910–1987), Canadian ice hockey player; Jacques Toupin or Jacques Jansen (1913–2002), French opera singer; Marie Aioe Dorion Venier Toupin (c. 1786–1850), member of Pacific Northwest expedition
Vaudreuil-Dorion (French pronunciation: [vodʁœj dɔʁjɔ̃]) is a suburb of Greater Montreal, in the Montérégie region of southwestern Quebec, Canada. The result of the merger of two towns, Vaudreuil and Dorion, it is located in the Vaudreuil-Soulanges Regional County Municipality .
Since the RCM formation on 14 April 1982, the division of the county into "Vaudreuil" and "Soulanges" is still salient. The "Vaudreuil" area (consisting of the municipalities of Vaudreuil-Dorion, Saint-Lazare, Hudson, L'Île-Perrot, and others) is closer to Montreal. It is more suburban, populous, and economically and ethnically diverse.
The Double Shuffle was a political episode in the Province of Canada in 1858. It began on July 28, 1858, when the coalition government of John A. Macdonald (Liberal-Conservative) and George-Étienne Cartier was defeated on a confidence vote in the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada, concerning the location of the seat of government for the province.
Pietro Venier (died 8 May 1372) who was the Governor of Cerigo; Antonio Venier (circa 1330 - 23 November 1400) who was Doge of Venice from October 1382 until his death. Andrea Venier (fl. 15th century) a provveditore of Venetian Albania; Lorenzo Venier, a Dominican friar, was appointed Archbishop of Zadar, Croatia, on 19 Jan 1428 and was ...
Francesco Venier (1489 – 2 June 1556) was the Doge of Venice from 1554 to his death in 1556. [1] Venier was the son of Giovanni Venier and Maria Loredan.