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Caledonia - Wikipedia There is an emerging trend to use the term Caledonia to describe New Caledonia in English, which reflects the usage in French of Calédonie (where the full name is La Nouvelle-Calédonie)
Caledonia | Britain, Map, History | Britannica Caledonia, historical area of north Britain beyond Roman control, roughly corresponding to modern Scotland It was inhabited by the tribe of Caledones (Calidones) The Romans first invaded the district under Agricola about 80 ce and later won a decisive battle at Mons Graupius
Caledonia | Research Starters - EBSCO Caledonia refers to a historical region in the Scottish Highlands, identified by the ancient Roman writer Tacitus as the land of the Celtic tribes known as the Caledonii
Caledonians - Wikipedia The Romans never fully occupied Caledonia, though several attempts were made Nearly all of the information available about the Caledonians is based on predominantly Roman sources, which may be biased
Village of Caledonia The Village of Caledonia, WI is conveniently located on Lake Michigan in 49 square miles of the northeast corner of Racine County which is in the Milwaukee to Chicago corridor
Cultures | Caledonians - History Archive The name is an exonym: the Ancient Greeks and Romans knew their territory as Caledonia and used the term vaguely to reference its inhabitants The Caledonians were initially considered to be a group of Britons, [1] but were later distinguished as the Picts
Caledonia Chamber of Commerce A community of approximately 3,000 people, Caledonia is located where the land transitions from rolling hills to scenic bluffs Eagles soaring or sitting in the treetops are common, as are deer and wild turkeys
Caledonia - Encyclopedia. com Caledonia the Roman name for northern Britain, later applied poetically or rhetorically to Scotland, as in Scott's The Lay of the Last Minstrel (1805), ‘O Caledonia! stern and wild’