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 ⇄Suchrichtung
 Übersetzung für 'Ecossaise' von Englisch nach Deutsch
écossaiseEkossaise {f}
écossaiseEcossaise {f}
écossaiseHopser {m} [Tanz]
3 Übersetzungen
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 ⇄ 
Übersetzung für 'Ecossaise' von Englisch nach Deutsch

écossaise
Ekossaise {f}

Ecossaise {f}

Hopser {m} [Tanz]
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Anwendungsbeispiele Englisch
  • The « Grande Loge Générale Ecossaise » elected Prince Louis Bonaparte as its first Grand Master.
  • The first lodge of "Le Droit Humain" was founded in Brussels in 1911, after a long period of incubation during which eminent members of the "Maçonnerie Mixte Ecossaise de France" worked patiently to convince the Progressives to accept a masonry working in a world without frontiers.
  • The "Garde Écossaise" survived until the end of the Bourbon monarchy as the senior or Scottish Company of the "Gardes du Corps" (Body Guards). There were four companies of Body Guards and a detachment of them accompanied the French King wherever he went, posted guards on his sleeping place and even escorted his food from kitchen to table.
  • Robert Moray returned to France by 1643 and was captured at Tuttlingen in November of that year. Upon his release, and upon the death of James Campbell, 1st Earl of Irvine, Moray took over command of the Garde Écossaise.
  • He served as colonel of the Garde Écossaise in France, on his death in 1645 and was succeeded by Sir Robert Moray.

  • The Écossaise (in French, "Scottish") is a musical form and a type of contradanse in a Scottish style – a Scottish country dance at least in name – that was popular in France and Great Britain at the end of the 18th century and at the beginning of the 19th. Despite the Écossaise mimicking a Scottish country dance, it is actually French in origin. The écossaise was usually danced in 2/4 time in two lines, with men facing the women. As the dance is executed, couples progress to the head of the line.
  • From 1828 to 1840 he republished the complete works of Voltaire and wrote several "Avertissements" particularly for "l'Écossaise", theatre play written in 1760 (1829), but also for the "Le Dictionnaire philosophique", "La Henriade", "l'Essai sur les mœurs" and "L'esprit des nations", etc.
  • Ninian Cockburn (died 6 May 1579) was a Scottish soldier and officer of the Garde Écossaise, a company which guarded the French king. He had an ambiguous role in political relations between Scotland, France and England during the war of the Rough Wooing and the Scottish Reformation.
  • James IV (r. 1488–1513) had at least 5 illegitimate children with his mistresses, including Alexander Stewart, Archbishop of St Andrews, James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray and Lady Janet Stewart, "la Belle Écossaise".
  • He was educated at King's College, Aberdeen, and earned youthful military experience in France, where his father commanded of the Garde Écossaise. Unusually for a younger son, James Gordon also inherited a peerage, becoming 2nd Viscount Aboyne in 1636.

  • Emeriau was a Freemason, member of four lodges: the "Mère Loge Écossaise", the lodge "Paix et Parfaite Union" in Toulon, "Amitié à l'Épreuve" and "Amis Fidèles de Saint Napoléon" in Marseille.
  • The oldest of the regiments of the Maison du Roi was the Garde Écossaise, formed in 1440, and traced its ultimate origins to the Scots forces brought to France in 1419 by John Stewart, Earl of Buchan, to fight against the English in the Hundred Years' War.
  • Bernard Stewart, 4th Seigneur d'Aubigny (French: Bérault Stuart) (c. 1452 – 15 June 1508) was a French soldier, commander of the "Garde Écossaise", and diplomat belonging to the Scottish family of Stewart of Darnley.
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Enthält Übersetzungen von der TU Chemnitz sowie aus Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (nur Englisch/Deutsch).
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