Walloons (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Walloons" in English language version.

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ancestry.com

archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com

archive.org

  • Charles White, The Belgic Revolution of 1830, Whittaker, London, 1835, p. 308, see also, pp. 5, 45, 266, 307 where the same word as in French - Wallons - was used Oxford University's copy
  • Histoire de France. Chamerot. 1861. Retrieved 22 July 2014 – via Internet Archive. Jules Michelet + hIstoire de France.

archive.today

ardenne-wallonne.fr

  • "L'association" [The Association]. Ardenne Wallonne (in French). Retrieved 10 June 2016.

ardenne-wallonne.org

authorama.com

  • George Edmundson The History of Holland Cambridge at the University Press, 1922, pp. 389-404 The History of Holland

bnf.fr

gallica2.bnf.fr

  • Le pays wallon comprenait la plus grande partie de ce qui forme aujourd'hui la Belgique,la Flandre occidentale et orientale, dites ensemble Flandre wallonne, la province de Namur, le Hainaut, le pays de Liège, le Limbourg et même le Luxembourg in Dictionnaire Bescherelle Paris, 1856, Vol II, p. 1664 Bescherelle, Vol II, 1856, Paris, p. 1664

books.google.com

census.gov

factfinder.census.gov

cia.gov

  • "The World Factbook". cia.gov. 12 January 2022.

cleo-ulg.be

dglive.be

ehs.org.uk

google.com

migrationinformation.org

mo.be

sibiweb.de

  • Konrad Gündisch Without a doubt, among the settlers were not only Germans, be they Teutonici from Southern Germany or Saxons from Middle and Northern Germany but also Romanic people from the western regions of the then German Empire. One of the earliest documents on Transylvanian Saxons points at Flandrenses who had at least two independent settler groups. These came from an economically highly developed region of the empire, where during the 11th and 12th centuries shortage of land was overcome through intensive planning and building of dike systems. Cities were developed through the textile industry and trade. Many knights of the first crusade came from here. It is undisputed that Flandrenses played an important role in the German East-Migration. Latins, settlers of Romanic-Walloon origin, were also represented. For example, Johannes Latinus, who arrived as knight but also as one of the first Transylvanian merchants; Gräf Gyan from Salzburg who frightened the bishop of Weißenburg; and Magister Gocelinus, who presented Michelsberg to the Cistercian abbey Kerz. Also to be mentioned is the name of the town Walldorf (villa Latina, "Wallonendorf", town of Walloons) and villa Barbant or Barbantina, a name which brings to mind Brabant in Belgium. Based on the described and often contradictory research results, answers to the question of the origin of Transylvanian Saxons cannot be considered as final. An incontestable clarification cannot be expected since it is probable that the colonists of different religions and ethnic background came in small groups from all regions of the then empire and grew, once in Transylvania, into a group with its own distinct identity, with German language and culture. In any event, their number was negligibly small and has been estimated at 520 families, approximately 2600 persons. in Siebenbürgen und die Siebenbürger Sachsen, Taschenbuch - 304 Seiten (1998) Langen-Müller, München.; ISBN 3-7844-2685-9. English translation The History of Transylvania and the Transylvanian Saxons Archived 7 July 2004 at the Wayback Machine

sssry.fi

statcan.gc.ca

www12.statcan.gc.ca

theguardian.com

ugent.be

flwi.ugent.be

uwgb.edu

vallonit.fi

  • "VALLONIHISTORIA". vallonit.fi (in Finnish). 15 April 2019. Retrieved 26 January 2023.

wbi.be

  • From 1 January 2009, "Wallonia-Brussels International (WBI) "will further enhance the visibility of Wallonia-Brussels international activities, both in Belgium and abroad. WBI will pool all of the international relations work of the French Community, the Walloon Region and the French Community Commission of the Brussels-Capital Region. Wallonia-Brussels International Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine

web.archive.org

  • From 1 January 2009, "Wallonia-Brussels International (WBI) "will further enhance the visibility of Wallonia-Brussels international activities, both in Belgium and abroad. WBI will pool all of the international relations work of the French Community, the Walloon Region and the French Community Commission of the Brussels-Capital Region. Wallonia-Brussels International Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Centre d'étude de l'opinion". Cleo-ulg.be. Archived from the original on 19 December 2014. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
  • John W. Rooney Jr., Profil du combattant de 1830 dans Revue belge d'histoire contemporaine, T. 12, 1981, p.487 Profil du combattant de 1830 Archived 10 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • "1852: Emigration of the farmers from Brabant and Hesbaye". Uwgb.edu. Archived from the original on 2 January 2009. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
  • Konrad Gündisch Without a doubt, among the settlers were not only Germans, be they Teutonici from Southern Germany or Saxons from Middle and Northern Germany but also Romanic people from the western regions of the then German Empire. One of the earliest documents on Transylvanian Saxons points at Flandrenses who had at least two independent settler groups. These came from an economically highly developed region of the empire, where during the 11th and 12th centuries shortage of land was overcome through intensive planning and building of dike systems. Cities were developed through the textile industry and trade. Many knights of the first crusade came from here. It is undisputed that Flandrenses played an important role in the German East-Migration. Latins, settlers of Romanic-Walloon origin, were also represented. For example, Johannes Latinus, who arrived as knight but also as one of the first Transylvanian merchants; Gräf Gyan from Salzburg who frightened the bishop of Weißenburg; and Magister Gocelinus, who presented Michelsberg to the Cistercian abbey Kerz. Also to be mentioned is the name of the town Walldorf (villa Latina, "Wallonendorf", town of Walloons) and villa Barbant or Barbantina, a name which brings to mind Brabant in Belgium. Based on the described and often contradictory research results, answers to the question of the origin of Transylvanian Saxons cannot be considered as final. An incontestable clarification cannot be expected since it is probable that the colonists of different religions and ethnic background came in small groups from all regions of the then empire and grew, once in Transylvania, into a group with its own distinct identity, with German language and culture. In any event, their number was negligibly small and has been estimated at 520 families, approximately 2600 persons. in Siebenbürgen und die Siebenbürger Sachsen, Taschenbuch - 304 Seiten (1998) Langen-Müller, München.; ISBN 3-7844-2685-9. English translation The History of Transylvania and the Transylvanian Saxons Archived 7 July 2004 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Swedish Economic History and the 'New Atlantic Economy', Paper, presented at the "Economic History Society Annual Conference". University of Reading. 31 March – 2 April 2006. Archived from the original on 25 September 2006. Retrieved 30 August 2013.

wikisource.org

en.wikisource.org