Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Fattouma-Bourguiba Hospital, Monastir. Rabta Hospital, Tunis. Razi Psychiatric Hospital, La Manouba. Sahloul Hospital, Sousse. Tunis Military Hospital. Bizerte Regional Hospital. Ibn El Jazar Hospital, 1936. The notable hospitals are listed in the table below, along with the location and references for individual hospitals.
A French-speaking Walloon town[edit] Grand-Place of Tournai. Tournai is a French-speaking town of Belgium. The local language is tournaisien, a Picard dialect similar to that of other municipalities of Hainaut and Northern France. Tournai also belongs to Romance Flanders, like Lille, Douai, Tourcoing, and Mouscron.
John Radcliffe Hospital (Oxford Children's Hospital), Oxford. King's College Hospital, London. Leeds General Infirmary (Leeds Children's Hospital), Leeds. Nottingham Children's Hospital, Nottingham. Portland Hospital for Women and Children, London (non- NHS) Queen Elizabeth Hospital for Children, London. Queen Mary's Hospital for Children, Surrey.
With this fleet, Barbarossa conducted aggressive raids along the coast of Italy, then conquered Tunis on 16 August 1534, ousting the theretofore local ruler, Muley Hasan, who had been subservient to the Spanish [10] [11] Barbarossa established a strong naval base in Tunis, which could be used for raids in the region, and on nearby Malta.
Tournaisis. The Tournaisis, or Tournai (Flemish: Doornik ), a territory in the Low Countries in present-day Belgium, is one of Europe's oldest town centres. [1] Located in the Wallonia region of Belgium on the Scheldt River (French: L'Escaut ), northwest of Mons, Tournai residents are primarily French-speaking.
The Sainte-Croix Church of Tunis is located in the medina of Tunis in Tunisia. It is a Roman Catholic church that was built in 1837 before the establishment of the French protectorate . Given to the Tunisian government in 1964, it now houses offices of the municipality.
The Diocese of Tournai ( Latin: Dioecesis Tornacensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in Belgium. The diocese was formed in 1146, upon the dissolution of the Diocese of Noyon and Tournai, which had existed since the 7th century. [1] It is now suffragan in the ecclesiastical province of the ...
The Archdiocese of Tunis is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in Tunis, Tunisia. It was founded on 10 November 1884 under the name "Archdiocese of Carthage", with territory corresponding to that of the then French protectorate of Tunisia. On 9 July 1964, it became a territorial prelature under the ...