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  1. Alsacia —en francés Alsace — (—pronunciación: /al.zas/ —; en latín: Alsatia; en alsaciano: ’s Elsàss; en alemán: Elsass) es una región cultural, histórica y administrativa del nordeste de Francia, en la frontera con Alemania y Suiza. Ubicada entre las montañas de los Vosgos y el río Rin, se encuentra en la región de Renania ...

  2. Duchy of Alsace. The Duchy of Alsace ( Latin: Ducatus Alsacensi, Ducatum Elisatium; German: Herzogtum Elsaß) was a large political subdivision of the Frankish Empire during the last century and a half of Merovingian rule. It corresponded to the territory of Alsace and was carved out of southern Austrasia in the last decade of the reign of ...

  3. Alsace. Alsace ( Alsatian and Alemannic German: Elsàss, pre-1996 German: Elsaß) was an administrative region of France. It is now part of the administrative region of Grand Est. Alsace was on the eastern border of France. It was on the west bank of the Upper Rhine, next to Germany and Switzerland. The departments in Alsace were Bas-Rhin and ...

  4. Alsace. -class battleship. The Alsace class was a pair of fast battleships planned by the French Navy in the late 1930s in response to German plans to build two H-class battleships after the Second London Naval Treaty collapsed. The Alsace design was based on variants of the Richelieu class, and three proposals were submitted by the design staff.

  5. fr.wikipedia.org › wiki › AlsaceAlsace — Wikipédia

    Alsace est une région historique et culturelle du nord-est de la France, réputée pour son patrimoine, sa gastronomie et ses vins. Découvrez son histoire, sa géographie et ses traditions sur Wikipédia.

  6. Bergheim ( French pronunciation: [bɛʁɡaim] ⓘ) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. [3] It is a completely fortified town and has a late-medieval church, as well as surviving towers and walls. The entire population was wiped out by two wars and the plague in the 17th-18th centuries.

  7. In 2006, the EPRAL formed with the EPCAAL the Union of Protestant Churches of Alsace and Lorraine. This is no united body, but it provides common decision making structure and single body of pastors. [1] However, the two churches maintain their own organisation. [2] The EPRAL is member of the Protestant Federation of France and of the World ...