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  2. Lemieux (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemieux_(surname)

    Lemieux is a French surname originating from Normandy and it has been traced from Rouen in the 1600s to earlier origins on the Cotentin peninsula. [1] According to the website "Les familles Lemieux d'Amerique" ("The Lemieux families of America") the North American Lemieux are descended from two half-brothers, Pierre and Gabriel, who emigrated from Rouen, France, to Quebec in 1643. [2]

  3. Shadbelly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadbelly

    European royalty wore the coat for formal occasions and portraits as well as for riding horseback. The Amish and Quakers wore the shadbelly to church functions. The earliest recorded use of a shadbelly-type coat is in early Christianity, when Chaldean Christian priests wore coats representing the body of a fish. [dubious – discuss]

  4. Riding coat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riding_coat

    The Manchu "horse jacket" (magua) was a dark blue riding coat worn by Manchurian horsemen before becoming a staple item of menswear across the Qing Empire. It subsequently developed into the Burmese Taikpon and the Chinese Tangzhuang .

  5. Riding habit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riding_habit

    Elisabeth of Bavaria, Empress of Austria, in a riding habit, 1884. A riding habit is women's clothing for horseback riding. Since the mid-17th century, a formal habit for riding sidesaddle usually consisted of: A tailored jacket with a long skirt (sometimes called a petticoat) to match; A tailored shirt or chemisette

  6. Driza-Bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driza-Bone

    Driza-Bone riding coats were worn by the stockmen and stockwomen at the Opening Ceremony of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.Also, the 2000 Olympic Band members wore Driza-Bone coats specially made for them as band musicians, in which the sleeves were made completely differently from the sleeves of the traditional Driza-Bone riding coats worn by the riders.

  7. Mackintosh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mackintosh

    Production of rubberised coats soon spread across the UK. All kinds of coats were produced with rubberized material, including riding coats and coats supplied to the British Army, British railways, and UK police forces. Early coats had problems with poor smell, stiffness, and a tendency to melt in hot weather.

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