Caledonia - translation to spanish
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Caledonia - translation to spanish

LATIN NAME GIVEN BY THE ROMANS TO THE LAND IN TODAY'S NORTHERN SCOTLAND
Caledonia (northern Britian); Caledonia (Roman); Old Caledonia
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  • label=none}} ([[Firth of Clyde]]). From [[Edward Bunbury]]'s ''A History of Ancient Geography Among the Greeks and Romans'' (1879)
  • [[Scottish pub]] in [[Budapest]] named "The Caledonia"
  • The north-west ridge of [[Schiehallion]], the "fairy hill of the Caledonians".
  • Scottish Highlands in Caledonia Region

Caledonia         
n. Caledonia, New Caledonia (group of islands in the Pacific Ocean)
New Caledonia         
  • ''[[Araucaria columnaris]]'', New Caledonia
  • Pyramid graph illustrating the administration of New Caledonia
  • ''[[Amborella]]'', the world's oldest living lineage of flowering plant
  • The [[kagu]], an [[endemic]] flightless bird
  • A creek in southern New Caledonia. Red colours reveal the richness of the ground in [[iron oxide]]s and nickel.
  • special territories of the European Union]] prior to [[Brexit]]
  • Logo of the Territorial Congress
  • European]] people born in New Caledonia
  • Chief King Jacques and his Queen
  • Landscape in the south of New Caledonia
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  • Detailed map of New Caledonia
  • New Caledonia from space
  • A proportional representation of New Caledonia exports, 2019
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  • Coral reefs of New Caledonia from ISS, September 9, 2020
  • penis gourd]]s and spears, around 1880
  • Flags side by side on the same pole, Nouméa, March 2011
  • [[Jean Lèques]] during a ceremony honouring U.S. service members who helped ensure the freedom of New Caledonia during World War II
SPECIAL COLLECTIVITY OF FRANCE IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC OCEAN
History of New Caledonia; Foreign relations of New Caledonia; New Caledonia/History; New Caledonia/Transnational issues; ISO 3166-1:NC; Kanaky; Kanaky.; New Caledonia and Dependencies; Nouvelle-Calédonie; Collectivité sui generis; Nouvelle Calédonie; Calédonien; Nouvelle Caledonie; Nouvelle-Caledonie; Néo-Calédonien; Néo Calédonien; Neo Caledonien; Neo-Caledonien; Néocalédonien; Neocaledonien; New Calidonia; Nova Caledonia; New caledonia; New-Caledonia; Territory of New Caledonia and Dependencies; Caledonian hip hop; Caledonien; Collectivite sui generis; Name of New Caledonia; Culture of New Caledonia; Dance in New Caledonia; Bibliography of New Caledonia; Nouvelle‐Calédonie; Territory of New Caledonia; New Caledonia Day; New Caledonians; New Caledonia (France); Cuisine of New Caledonia; Religion in New Caledonia; List of newspapers in New Caledonia; Ethnic groups in New Caledonia
Nueva Caledonia (grupo de islas en el Océano Pacífico)
Scotland         
  • Deer stalkers on Glenfeshie Estate spying with [[monocular]]s, ca. 1858
  • The [[Bank of Scotland]] – one of the oldest operating banks in the world.
  • tidal]] [[beach]] as the runway
  • Robert I]] addresses his troops before the [[Battle of Bannockburn]]. <small>Drawing from c. 1900.</small>
  • Scotland has been a member of the [[British-Irish Council]] since 1999.
  • First Minister [[Jack McConnell]] greets U.S. President [[George W. Bush]] ahead of the [[31st G8 summit]], July 2005.
  • A [[Challenger 2]] [[main battle tank]] of the [[Royal Scots Dragoon Guards]]
  • [[Cock-a-leekie soup]]
  • The Disruption Assembly; painted by [[David Octavius Hill]]
  • website=Holyrood Website}}</ref>
  • No. 6 Squadron]] markings taking off from runway 23 at Lossiemouth
  • The [[president of the European Commission]], [[Jean-Claude Juncker]] and first minister Nicola Sturgeon
  • The [[Forth Bridge]] in Edinburgh, a well-known structure in Scottish rail and a [[UNESCO World Heritage Site]]
  • [[Glasgow City Chambers]], seat of [[Glasgow City Council]]
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  • The [[Glenfinnan Viaduct]]
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  • [[Hampden Park]] is Scotland's national football stadium.
  • US President]] [[George W. Bush]] in the [[Oval Office]] of the [[White House]], April 2001.
  • The [[High Court of Justiciary]] building, Edinburgh, the supreme criminal court in Scotland
  • [[Iona]] in the [[Inner Hebrides]]
  • [[Scotland national football team]] in competition against Russia, 2019
  • archive-date=26 January 2016}}</ref>
  • The [[International Financial Services District]] in Glasgow, a major financial district in Scotland
  • New housing developments in [[ Scalloway]]
  • First Minister Sturgeon meets with [[Katrín Jakobsdóttir]], [[Prime Minister of Iceland]], 2019.
  • [[Dorothy Bain]], the current [[Lord Advocate]] since June 2021
  • The [[Old Course at St Andrews]] where [[golf]] originates from
  • Presiding Officer]] [[Sir David Steel]] (right)
  • James VI]] succeeded to the English and Irish thrones in 1603.
  • [[Red deer]] [[stag]] with velvet antlers in [[Glen Torridon]]
  • The [[royal arms of Scotland]]
  • Burma]], 1945
  • Bonnyton Moor]] in the Scottish central belt in an attempt to make peace.
  • Scottish Television]] (STV) HQ in Glasgow
  • Scotland population [[cartogram]]. The size of councils is in proportion to their population.
  • The [[thistle]], the [[national emblem]] of Scotland
  • [[Walter Scott]], whose [[Waverley Novels]] helped define Scottish identity in the 19th century
  • The exposed interior of a house at [[Skara Brae]]
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  • [[St Giles' Cathedral]], a parish church of the [[Church of Scotland]], Edinburgh
  • [[Douglas Haig]] and [[Ferdinand Foch]] inspecting the [[Gordon Highlanders]], 1918
  • The [[National Monument of Scotland]] on [[Calton Hill]] in Edinburgh is the national memorial to Scottish soldiers lost in the [[Napoleonic Wars]].
  • [[Tiree]] in the [[Inner Hebrides]] is one of the sunniest locations in Scotland.
  • Scottish Exemplification (official copy) of the Treaty of Union of 1707
  • website=HeraldScotland}}</ref>
  • [[Whitelee Wind Farm]] is the largest onshore wind farm on the [[British Isles]].
CONSTITUENT COUNTRY OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
Scotland's; Scotchland; Communications in Scotland; Scotlander; Scotia minor; Scotland, UK; Scot Land; SCOTLAND; Scottish Nation; Auld Country; Maps of scotland; East coast of Scotland; North of Great Britain; Northern Great Britain; The Scottish Nation; United Kingdom: Scotland; Flora and fauna of Scotland; Infrastructure in Scotland; Scotlan; Scotland, United Kingdom
Escocia

Definition

Caledonia
·noun The ancient Latin name of Scotland;
- still used in poetry.

Wikipedia

Caledonia

Caledonia (; Latin: Calēdonia [kaleːˈdonia]) was the Latin name used by the Roman Empire to refer to the part of Great Britain (Latin: Britannia) that lies north of the River Forth, which includes most of the land area of Scotland. Today, it is used as a romantic or poetic name for all of Scotland. During the Roman Empire's occupation of Scotland, the area they called Caledonia was physically separated from the rest of the island by the Antonine Wall. The Romans several times invaded and occupied it, but unlike the rest of the island, it remained outside the administration of Roman Britain.

Latin historians, including Tacitus and Cassius Dio, referred to the territory north of the River Forth as "Caledonia", and described it as inhabited by the Maeatae and the Caledonians (Latin: Caledonii). Other ancient authors, however, used the adjective "Caledonian" more generally to describe anything pertaining to inland or northern Britain. The name is probably derived from a word in one of the Gallo-Brittonic languages.

Examples of use of Caledonia
1. NosucedíadesdelaguerradeArgelia, siseexceptúaelcasoparticular y limitado de Nueva Caledonia en 1'84.
2. Las autoridades de Nueva Caledonia han evacuado a los habitantes de las poblaciones que podrían estar expuestas a un maremoto como consecuencia del fuerte temblor.
3. Se sabe que cuando el CO2 reacciona con una roca llamada peridotita, el resultado es carbonato cálcico, piedra caliza; la peridotita es muy abundante en el manto terrestre, a 20 kilómetros de profundidad, pero aflora en algunas zonas, como el desierto de Omán, Papúa Nueva Guinea, Nueva Caledonia y las costas de Grecia y la antigua Yugoslavia.
4. Nada más ocurrir el sismo, se emitieron alarmas en las Islas Salomón, Nueva Guinea Papúa, Vanuatu, Nauru, Nueva Caledonia, Indonesia, Tuvalu, Kiribati y las Islas Marshall, además del nordeste de Australia y Japón, que fueron levantadas nueve horas después del terremoto.
5. Los expertos militares franceses consideran que el nuevo eje estratégico sobre el que hay que estar presente se mueve hacia el Este, del Atlántico hacia al Índico, configurando una línea que pasa por la nueva base de Abu Dhabi, en los Emiratos Árabes, frente a Irán, y acaba en Nueva Caledonia, cruzando las bases galas en las islas del Índico.