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Pages in category "Alsatian-Jewish culture in the United States" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Schertz (/ ʃ ɜːr t s / shurts) is a city in Guadalupe, Bexar, and Comal counties in the U.S. state of Texas, within the San Antonio–New Braunfels metropolitan area. The population was 42,002 at the 2020 census, up from 31,465 at the 2010 census. Schertz was settled by Alsatian emigrants in the 1800s. [4]
Alsace (/ æ l ˈ s æ s /, [5] US also / æ l ˈ s eɪ s, ˈ æ l s æ s /; [6] [7] French: ⓘ) [8] is a cultural region and a territorial collectivity in the Grand Est administrative region of northeastern France, on the west bank of the upper Rhine, next to Germany and Switzerland.
The largest Swiss Amish settlement is located in Adams County, Indiana, near Berne with a total Amish population of 8,595 people in 2017. [13] The Amish settlement in Daviess County, Indiana with a total Amish population of 4,855 people in 2017 was originally settled mostly by Swiss Amish but switched to Pennsylvania German language over time.
Coat of arms of Alsace, representing Haut-Rhin and Bas-Rhin.. The Alsace independence movement (French: Mouvement autonomiste alsacien; Alsatian: D'Elsässischa Salbschtstandikaitbewegùng; German: Elsässische autonome Bewegung) is a cultural, ideological and political regionalist movement for greater autonomy or outright independence of Alsace.
The Musée alsacien (Alsatian museum) is a museum in Strasbourg in the Bas-Rhin department of France.It opened on 11 May 1907, [1] and is dedicated to all aspects of (mostly rural) daily life in pre-industrial and early industrial Alsace.
Lucy, the goose, is a permanent wild resident Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2023, at Rescue Release Repeat wildlife rescue group on Pine Road in South Bend. Rachelle Marshman says she arrived at the rehab ...
In the Middle Ages, what was then Alsace was divided into two districts, called Nordgau (“Nordgowe”, Unterelsass) and Südgau (“Suntgowe”, Sundgau, Oberelsass). The border roughly corresponded to that which was established in 297, when the Roman province of Germania Superior was divided into Maxima Sequanorum in the south and Germania Prima in the north.