请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 List of National Historic Sites of Canada in Manitoba
释义

  1. National Historic Sites

  2. See also

  3. References

{{GeoGroup}}

This is a list of National Historic Sites ({{lang-fr|Lieux historiques nationaux du Canada}}) in the province of Manitoba. There are 57 National Historic Sites designated in Manitoba, of which 9 are administered by Parks Canada (identified below by the beaver icon ).[1][2]

Numerous National Historic Events also occurred across Manitoba, and are identified at places associated with them, using the same style of federal plaque which marks National Historic Sites. Several National Historic Persons are commemorated throughout the province in the same way. The markers do not indicate which designation—a Site, Event, or Person—a subject has been given.

This list uses names designated by the national Historic Sites and Monuments Board, which may differ from other names for these sites.

National Historic Sites

Site[1]Date(s)DesignatedLocationDescriptionImage
Battle of Seven Oaks [3] 1816 (battle) 1920{{coord>49|55|55|N|97|7|16|W|region:CA|name=Battle of Seven Oaks}} The site of a violent conflict between a group of Métis led by Cuthbert Grant and a party of Red River settlers led by Governor Robert Semple
BCATP Hangar No. 1 [4] 1941 (completed) 2001{{coord>49|54|16|N|99|56|39|W|region:CA|name=BCATP Hangar No. 1}} A well-preserved example of a British Commonwealth Air Training Plan hangar from the Second World War, still in its original location
Brockinton [5][6] 800 CE (c.) 1973{{coord>49|8|51|N|101|1|47|W|region:CA|name=Brockinton}} An archaeological site with evidence of three distinct cultures: a bison kill and butchering pound circa 800 CE, a Duck Bay culture occupation about 1100-1350 CE, and the first excavated evidence in Canada of the Williams culture from about 1600 CE
Camp Hughes [7][8] 1909 (established) 2011{{coord>49|53|1.47|N|99|33|4.82|W|region:CA|name=Camp Hughes}} More than 38,000 Canadians trained at this camp during the First World War, many of whom fought at the Battle of Vimy Ridge in April 1917
Canadian Pacific Railway Station (Winnipeg) [9] 1906 (completed) 1982{{coord>49|54|17|N|97|7|54|W|region:CA|name=Canadian Pacific Railway Station (Winnipeg)}} A four-storey former railway station; its landmark Beaux-Arts design and elaborate Tyndall stone detailing reflect the early 20th century growth and importance of both the Canadian Pacific Railway and Winnipeg as Western Canada's transportation hub
Churchill Rocket Research Range [10] 1956 (established) 1988{{coord>58|44|3|N|93|49|13|W|region:CA|name=Churchill Rocket Research Range}} A former facility for the launching, tracking and retrieval of rockets; long Canada’s foremost upper atmosphere research centre
Confederation Building [11] 1912 (completed) 1976{{coord>49|53|55|N|97|8|19|W|region:CA|name=Confederation Building}} A 10-storey office building; a good example of an early Sullivan-inspired skyscraper; part of the Early Skyscrapers in Winnipeg NHSC
Dalnavert [12] 1895 (completed) 1990{{coord>49|53|9|N|97|8|31|W|region:CA|name=Dalnavert}} A red-brick house with a large wooden verandah, originally built for Hugh John Macdonald; a good example of the Queen Anne Revival style in Canada
Dominion Exhibition Display Building II [13] 1913 (completed) 1999{{coord>49|49|53|N|99|57|27|W|region:CA|name=Dominion Exhibition Display Building II}} A wooden exhibition building; the only known surviving building constructed for the Dominion Exhibition held annually from 1879-1913
Early Skyscrapers in Winnipeg [14] 1912-18 (period of construction) 1981{{coord>49|53|49|N|97|8|18|W|region:CA|name=Early Skyscrapers in Winnipeg}} A group of three tall commercial buildings (Union Trust Tower, the Confederation Building, and the Bank of Hamilton building) within the Exchange District, reflective of the Chicago School; the group typifies Winnipeg’s early skyscrapers, which marked the beginning of Winnipeg's modern urban core
Exchange District [15] 1880 (established) 1996{{coord>49|53|53|N|97|8|9|W|region:CA|name=Exchange District}} A dense, turn-of-the-century warehousing and business centre, comprising about 150 buildings; contains a number of architecturally significant buildings illustrating Winnipeg’s key role as a gateway to Western Canada between 1880 and 1913
First Homestead in Western Canada [16] 1872 (completed) 1945{{coord>50|3|45|N|98|17|8|W|region:CA|name=First Homestead in Western Canada}} The site of the first homestead in Western Canada, established under the federal government’s new survey system
Former Union Bank Building / Annex [17] 1904 (completed) 1996{{coord>49|53|56|N|97|8|22|W|region:CA|name=Former Union Bank Building / Annex}} A 10-storey tower with a single-storey annex; the first skyscraper in Western Canada, representative of the key role played by finance in the expansion of the west
Fort Dauphin [18] 1741 (established) 1943{{coord>51|39|18|N|99|55|19|W|region:CA|name=Fort Dauphin}} The site of a fort built by Pierre Gaultier de La Vérendrye in the fall of 1741 at the request of the Cree and Assiniboine peoples
Fort Dufferin [19] 1872 (established) 1937{{coord>49|1|50|N|97|12|7|W|region:CA|name=Fort Dufferin}} Buildings used as the main camp for the North American Boundary Commission in 1872, and then used by the North-West Mounted Police in preparing for the "March West" in 1875; representative of Canada’s assertion of sovereignty over Manitoba and the North-West Territories in the 1870s
Fort Garry Hotel [20] 1913 (completed) 1981{{coord>49|53|16|N|97|8|12|W|region:CA|name=Fort Garry Hotel}} One of a series of Château-style hotels built by Canadian railway companies in the early 20th century to encourage tourists to travel the country's transcontinental routes
Fort La Reine [21] 1738 (established) 1925{{coord>49|57|4|N|98|19|38|W|region:CA|name=Fort La Reine}} The former site of a French fort on the north bank of the Assiniboine River; used as a base for further exploration of the Canadian Prairies, it was the most important of the posts established by Pierre Gaultier de La Vérendrye
Forts Rouge, Garry, and Gibraltar [22] 1738 (Rouge established), 1807 (Gibraltar est.), 1821 (Garry est.) 1924{{coord>49|53|16.49|N|97|8|7.21|W|region:CA|name=Fort Garry (Forts Rouge, Garry, and Gibraltar)}}
{{coord|49|53|57.6|N|97|7|32.58|W|region:CA|name=Fort Gibraltar (Forts Rouge, Garry, and Gibraltar)}}
The sites of three fur trade forts once located near the forks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers (the north gate of Fort Garry II is the only surviving above-ground remains); representative of the three phases of the fur trade
Grey Nuns' Convent [23] 1851 (completed) 1958{{coord>49|53|16|N|97|7|23|W|region:CA|name=Grey Nuns' Convent}} A convent built for the Grey Nuns and the first mission house of its kind in Western Canada; an outstanding example of Red River frame construction, and the oldest convent in use on the Canadian Prairies at the time of its designation
Holy Trinity Anglican Church [24] 1884 (completed) 1990{{coord>49|53|33|N|97|8|32|W|region:CA|name=Holy Trinity Anglican Church}} A noted example of Victorian High Gothic architecture in Canada; a landmark church in central Winnipeg which has witnessed the evolution of the area from open prairie to commercial core
Inglis Grain Elevators [25] 1922 to 1941 (period of construction) 1995{{coord>50|56|38|N|101|14|57|W|region:CA|name=Inglis Grain Elevators}} A row of five wooden elevators lined up parallel to the railway tracks; rare surviving prairie icons from the "golden age of grain"
Linear Mounds [26] 900 CE (c.) 1973{{coord>49|6|57|N|101|1|4|W|region:CA|name=Linear Mounds}} A site containing some of the best-preserved tumuli belonging to the Devil's Lake-Sourisford Burial Complex
Lower Fort Garry [27] 1830 (established) 1950{{coord>50|6|44|N|96|55|55|W|region:CA|name=Linear Mounds}} A Hudson’s Bay Company fort comprising a number of restored and reconstructed buildings within and outside its stone walls; a major supply centre for the fur trade in Western Canada and the location of the signing of Treaty 1
Maison Gabrielle-Roy [28] 1905 (completed) 2008{{coord>49|53|24.68|N|97|6|39.73|W|region:CA|name=Maison Gabrielle-Roy}}2|1|2}}-storey wood-frame house where Gabrielle Roy was born and lived for almost 30 years; the house inspired Roy's writing and she described and idealized it in several of her works
Manitoba Theatre Centre [29] 1970 (completed) 2009{{coord>49|53|55|N|97|8|12|W|region:CA|name=Manitoba Theatre Centre}} An excellent example of small-scale Brutalist architecture in Canada and an exceptional theatre design; associated with the Manitoba Theatre Centre group, noted as a model regional theatre by the Canada Council for the Arts
Metropolitan Theatre [30] 1919 (completed) 1991{{coord>49|53|35|N|97|8|34|W|region:CA|name=Metropolitan Theatre}} A movie palace designed by C. Howard Crane; representative of the cultural impact of movie theatres in the 1920, and of the battle between the Allen and Famous Players chains for film-distribution supremacy in Canada
Miami Railway Station (Canadian Northern)[31] 1905 (completed) 1976{{coord>49|22|11|N|98|14|38|W|region:CA|name=Miami Railway Station (Canadian Northern)}} A wooden railway station located in a rural community; a rare surviving example of a Canadian Northern Railway station
Miss Davis' School Residence / Twin Oaks [32] 1866 (c.) (completed) 1962{{coord>50|3|22|N|96|59|17|W|region:CA|name=Miss Davis' School Residence / Twin Oaks}} A two-storey limestone structure on one of the original river lots, built to house a school to educate the daughters of settlers and Hudson's Bay Company officials: a noted example of mid 19th-century Red River architecture
Neepawa Court House / Beautiful Plains County Court Building [33] 1884 (completed) 1981{{coord>50|13|44|N|99|27|54|W|region:CA|name=Neepawa Court House / Beautiful Plains County Court Building)}} A two-storey buff brick building, the construction of which in the late 19th century secured Neepawa's place as the most prominent town in the district; representative of civic buildings of the period that were built to serve a number of public uses, in this case being the county and municipal offices, a courthouse, police station and theatre
Neubergthal Street Village [34] 1876 (established) 1989{{coord>49|4|28|N|97|28|57|W|region:CA|name=Neubergthal Street Village}} A living illustration of a Mennonite village on the Canadian Prairies, with the community's communal and self-sufficient values reflected in its development and architectural forms
Norway House [35] 1825 (established) 1932{{coord>53|59|23|N|97|49|2|W|region:CA|name=Norway House}} The remnants of a former Hudson’s Bay Company fort near the banks of the Nelson River; the company's principal inland depot for the fur trade and the site where Treaty 5 was signed in 1875
Pantages Playhouse Theatre [36] 1914 (completed) 1985{{coord>49|53|56|N|97|8|16|W|region:CA|name=Pantages Playhouse Theatre}} A former vaudeville theatre; one of the finest theatres built in Canada in this period for live theatrical performances
Portage la Prairie Public Building [37] 1898 (completed) 1983{{coord>49|58|21|N|98|17|11|W|region:CA|name=Portage la Prairie Public Building}} Constructed as the town's post office, customs house and inland revenue office, now the city hall; representative of small urban post offices by Thomas Fuller
Prince of Wales Fort (Fort Churchill) [38] 1731 (established) 1920{{coord>58|47|49.86|N|94|12|47.57|W|region:CA|name=Prince of Wales Fort}} A fur-trade fortress built by the Hudson’s Bay Company on the tundra; illustrative of the rivalry between the British and French for control of Hudson Bay
Ralph Connor House [39] 1914 (completed) 2009{{coord>49|52|38.43|N|97|9|33.32|W|region:CA|name=Ralph Connor House}} A brick and stone house built for the Reverend Charles Gordon, who in this residence wrote best-selling Christian adventure novels under the pen name of Ralph Connor
Red River Floodway [40] 1968 (completed) 2000{{coord>50|5|24|N|96|56|3|W|region:CA|name=Red River Floodway}} Winnipeg is located on a floodplain at the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine Rivers, and the floodway diverts excess waters harmlessly around the city; an outstanding engineering achievement both in terms of function and impact
Riding Mountain Park East Gate Registration Complex [41] 1936 (completed) 1992{{coord>50|40|58|N|99|33|20|W|region:CA|name=Riding Mountain Park East Gate Registration Complex}} Three log buildings (the Whirlpool Warden’s Residence, the East Gate Entrance Building, and the Gatekeeper’s Cottage) at the eastern entrance to the park; a nationally significant example of 1930s rustic design in Canada’s National Parks
Riel House [42] 1881 (completed) 1976{{coord>49|49|9|N|97|8|10|W|region:CA|name=Riel House}} A squared log house set on the east side of the Red River, where Louis Riel was laid in state after his execution in 1885; representative of Métis river lots, a form of prairie settlement
Roslyn Court Apartments [43] 1909 (completed) 1991{{coord>49|52|50|N|97|8|49|W|region:CA|name=Roslyn Court Apartments}} A five-storey red brick apartment building; a noted example of the Queen Anne Revival style and turn-of-the-century apartment design
Sea Horse Gully Remains [44] 1969{{coord>58|45|58|N|94|15|46|W|region:CA|name=Sea Horse Gully Remains}} Large Dorset and pre-Dorset site
Souris-Assiniboine Posts [45] 1793 (establishment) 1927{{coord>49|35|58|N|99|41|2|W|region:CA|name=Souris-Assiniboine Posts}} A major supply centre for the fur trade located at the confluence of the Souris and Assiniboine Rivers, where the Hudson's Bay, North West, and XY companies built at least seven forts between 1793 and 1824
St. Andrew's Anglican Church [46] 1849 (completed) 1970{{coord>50|4|0|N|96|58|35|W|region:CA|name=St. Andrew's Anglican Church}} The oldest surviving stone church in Western Canada which once served as a centre of Anglican missionary activity in Rupert's Land; the earliest example of Gothic Revival architecture in the West
St. Andrew's Rectory [47] 1854 (originally completed) 1962{{coord>50|3|59|N|96|58|39|W|region:CA|name=St. Andrew's Rectory}} A two-storey, stone house, first built as a residence for the Anglican parish priest; illustrative of Hudson's Bay Company architecture, which adapted building techniques from Scotland to the Canadian frontier
St. Andrews Caméré Curtain Bridge Dam [48] 1910 (completed) 1990{{coord>50|5|4|N|96|56|23|W|region:CA|name=St. Andrews Caméré Curtain Bridge Dam}}270|m|ft|adj=mid|-long}} bridge-dam spanning the Red River; largest movable dam of its type ever constructed, and possibly the only surviving dam of its type in the world
St. Boniface City Hall [49] 1905 (completed) 1984{{coord>49|53|34|N|97|7|14|W|region:CA|name=St. Boniface City Hall}} An outstanding example of a town hall in Western Canada
St. Boniface Hospital Nurses' Residence [50] 1928 (completed) 1997{{coord>49|53|3|N|97|7|27|W|region:CA|name=St. Boniface Hospital Nurses' Residence}} A five-storey brick building originally built as a nursing school and residence; constructed in a period of growing recognition of nursing as a profession and it continues to commemorate the contribution of nurses to medicine and the role of women as health care professionals
St. Michael's Ukrainian Greek Orthodox Church [51] 1899 (completed) 1987{{coord>49|4|18|N|96|44|26|W|region:CA|name=St. Michael's Ukrainian Greek Orthodox Church}} A Byzantine-style wooden church built by the first group of immigrants to Canada from Bukovina; representative of early Ukrainian ecclesiastical architecture in Canada, and commemorative of the cultural heritage and skilled craftsmanship the first Ukrainians brought to their new country
The Forks [52] 4000 BCE (c.) 1974{{coord>49|53|12|N|97|7|42|W|region:CA|name=The Forks}} A recreational and commercial gathering place at a river junction that historically has served as an important transportation point; a cultural landscape that bears witness to six thousand years of human activity, including being used as a meeting place, fishing camp, trading place and settlement
Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception [53] 1938 (completed) 1996{{coord>50|0|14|N|96|46|22|W|region:CA|name=Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception}} A Kievan-style Ukrainian church whose domes present a distinctive silhouette on the surrounding flat prairie; one of the most ambitious and accomplished of the "Prairie Cathedrals" designed by the Reverend Philip Ruh
Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Resurrection[54] 1939 (completed) 1997{{coord>51|8|30|N|100|3|41|W|region:CA|name=Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Resurrection}}
Ukrainian Labour Temple [55] 1919 (completed) 2009{{coord>49|55|4.06|N|97|8|54.85|W|region:CA|name=Ukrainian Labour Temple}} A centre of Ukrainian Canadian culture until the late 1960s, and a base for educational, charitable and other immigrant services; an important gathering place in 1919 for Ukrainian strikers during the Winnipeg General Strike
Union Station / Winnipeg Railway Station (Canadian National) [56] 1911 (completed) 1976{{coord>49|53|20|N|97|8|3|W|region:CA|name=Union Station / Winnipeg Railway Station (Canadian National)}} A Beaux-Arts railway terminal; one of Western Canada’s largest railway stations, the construction of which symbolized the confidence of the railway companies and the government in the growth of the West
Walker Theatre [57] 1907 (completed) 1991{{coord>49|53|45|N|97|8|37|W|region:CA|name=Walker Theatre}} A noted example of a surviving early legitimate theatre in Canada, unique in the country due to the Chicago influences in its design; associated with political rallies in its early years, particularly related to the labour and women's suffrage movements
Wasyl Negrych Pioneer Homestead [58] 1897 (established) 1997{{coord>51|18|26|N|100|27|2|W|region:CA|name=Wasyl Negrych Pioneer Homestead}} Ten log buildings with associated fields and orchards that collectively represent one of the earliest and best preserved examples of a Ukrainian farm in Canada
Winnipeg Law Courts [59] 1916 (completed) 1981{{coord>49|53|12|N|97|8|48|W|region:CA|name=Winnipeg Law Courts}} A three-storey, Beaux-Arts court house of sculpted grey limestone, located directly across from the Manitoba Legislative Building; its siting and classically inspired design symbolize the importance of Manitoba's court system
York Factory [60] 1684 (established) 1936{{coord>57|0|10|N|92|18|17|W|region:CA|name=York Factory}} A 17th-century fur trade post, first established by the French and later rebuilt by the Hudson’s Bay Company, located near the mouth of the Hayes River; the principal base for expansion of the fur trade into the interior of Western Canada

See also

{{Commons category|National Historic Sites of Canada in Manitoba}}
  • History of Manitoba
  • List of historic places in Manitoba

References

1. ^{{cite web|title=Manitoba|url=http://www.pc.gc.ca/apps/dfhd/results-resultats_eng.aspx?p=1&m=10&ctl00%24Main%24PageSearch1%24txtKeyword=&desCheck=NHS&c=&ctl00%24Main%24PageSearch1%24ddlProvince=100069&dey=&ctl00%24Main%24PageSearch1%24ddlCustodian=|work=Directory of Federal Heritage Designations|publisher=Parks Canada|accessdate=5 May 2012}}
2. ^Manitoba, National Historic Sites of Canada - administered by Parks Canada
3. ^{{CRHP|16005|Battle of Seven Oaks|5 May 2012}}
4. ^{{CRHP|7753|BCATP Hangar No. 1|5 May 2012}}
5. ^{{DFHD|784|Brockinton|5 May 2012}}
6. ^{{cite web|title=Brockinton Archaeological Site|url=http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/articles/brockinton-archaeological-site|work=Canadian Encyclopedia|accessdate=5 May 2012}}
7. ^{{DFHD|784|Camp Hughes|5 May 2012}}
8. ^{{cite news|title=Camp Hughes Names National Historic Site|url=http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/camp-hughes-named-national-historic-site-144560465.html|accessdate=5 May 2012|newspaper=Winnipeg Free Press|date=28 March 2012}}
9. ^{{CRHP|7402|Canadian Pacific Railway Station (Winnipeg)|5 May 2012}}
10. ^{{CRHP|12776|Churchill Rocket Research Range|5 May 2012}}
11. ^{{CRHP|7599|Confederation Building|5 May 2012}}
12. ^{{CRHP|3999|Dalnavert|7 May 2012}}
13. ^{{CRHP|7411|Dominion Exhibition Display Building II|7 May 2012}}
14. ^{{CRHP|7411|Early Skyscrapers in Winnipeg|11 May 2012}}
15. ^{{CRHP|1208|Exchange District|11 May 2012}}
16. ^{{CRHP|17541|First Homestead in Western Canada|13 May 2012}}
17. ^{{CRHP|1136|Former Union Bank Building / Annex|13 May 2012}}
18. ^{{DFHD|157|Fort Dauphin|20 May 2012}}
19. ^{{CRHP|12688|Fort Dufferin|20 May 2012}}
20. ^{{CRHP|1190|Fort Garry Hotel|20 May 2012}}
21. ^{{CRHP|17947|Fort La Reine|20 May 2012}}
22. ^{{CRHP|13312|Forts Rouge, Garry, and Gibraltar|20 May 2012}}
23. ^{{CRHP|7420|Grey Nuns' Convent|21 May 2012}}
24. ^{{DFHD|144|Holy Trinity Anglican Church|21 May 2012}}
25. ^{{CRHP|7875|Inglis Grain Elevators|21 May 2012}}
26. ^{{CRHP|10475|Linear Mounds|23 May 2012}}
27. ^{{CRHP|4224|Lower Fort Garry|23 May 2012}}
28. ^{{CRHP|16342|Maison Gabrielle-Roy|23 May 2012}}
29. ^{{CRHP|14667|Manitoba Theatre Centre|24 May 2012}}
30. ^{{CRHP|3110|Metropolitan Theatre|24 May 2012}}
31. ^{{CRHP|4229|Miami Railway Station (Canadian Northern)|27 May 2012}}
32. ^{{CRHP|12704|Miss Davis' School Residence / Twin Oaks|27 May 2012}}
33. ^{{CRHP|12302|Neepawa Court House / Beautiful Plains County Court Building|27 May 2012}}
34. ^{{CRHP|13161|Neubergthal Street Village|8 June 2012}}
35. ^{{CRHP|12041|Norway House|8 June 2012}}
36. ^{{CRHP|12956|Pantages Playhouse Theatre|8 June 2012}}
37. ^{{CRHP|7543|Portage La Prairie Public Building|8 June 2012}}
38. ^{{CRHP|7760|Prince of Wales Fort|13 May 2012}}
39. ^{{CRHP|15003|Ralph Connor House|10 June 2012}}
40. ^{{CRHP|13693|Red River Floodway|10 June 2012}}
41. ^{{CRHP|10550|Riding Mountain Park East Gate Registration Complex|10 June 2012}}
42. ^{{CRHP|7762|Riel House|10 June 2012}}
43. ^{{CRHP|1159|Roslyn Court Apartments|10 June 2012}}
44. ^{{DFHD|118|Sea Horse Gully Remains|10 June 2012}}
45. ^{{DFHD|136|Souris-Assiniboine Posts|14 June 2012}}
46. ^{{CRHP|4440|St. Andrew's Anglican Church|14 June 2012}}
47. ^{{CRHP|11805|St. Andrew's Rectory|14 June 2012}}
48. ^{{CRHP|4441|St. Andrews Caméré Curtain Bridge Dam|15 June 2012}}
49. ^{{CRHP|4444|St. Boniface City Hall|15 June 2012}}
50. ^{{CRHP|13401|St. Boniface Hospital Nurses' Residence|15 June 2012}}
51. ^{{CRHP|12762|St. Michael's Ukrainian Greek Orthodox Church|15 June 2012}}
52. ^{{CRHP|4488|The Forks|16 June 2012}}
53. ^{{CRHP|13013|Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception|16 June 2012}}
54. ^{{CRHP|12283|Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Resurrection|15 August 2012}}
55. ^{{CRHP|13921|Ukrainian Labour Temple|17 June 2012}}
56. ^{{CRHP|4484|Union Station / Winnipeg Railway Station (Canadian National)|17 June 2012}}
57. ^{{CRHP|7747|Walker Theatre|17 June 2012}}
58. ^{{DFHD|1793|Wasyl Negrych Pioneer Homestead|17 June 2012}}
59. ^{{CRHP|12789|Winnipeg Law Courts|17 June 2012}}
60. ^{{CRHP|12789|York Factory|17 June 2012}}
{{NHSC|state=expanded}}{{Manitoba parks}}

3 : National Historic Sites in Manitoba|Lists of National Historic Sites of Canada|Manitoba-related lists

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/23 4:39:58