Wild West - définition. Qu'est-ce que Wild West
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Wild West - définition

UNDEVELOPED TERRITORY OF THE UNITED STATES, C. 1607–1912
Old West; Wild west; Wild West; American Wild West; The Western Frontier; Post-Civil War Expansion of the United States; The wild west; Old west; Frontier, American; Frontier (American); Frontier (U.S.); Western Frontier; The Frontier (North American history); Old American West; Western American history; American Old West; American Frontier (1600-1900); Myth of the West; American Frontier; Old western; Frontier west; Near West; Hurdy-gurdy girl; History of the American West; Western frontier; American frontier culture
  • The first [[Fort Laramie]] as it looked before 1840. Painting from memory by [[Alfred Jacob Miller]]
  • buffalo]]'', by [[Alfred Jacob Miller]]
  • A [[Buffalo Soldier]]. The nickname was given to the black soldiers by the Native tribes they controlled.
  • Birds of America]]''
  • Poster for ''[[Buffalo Bill]]'s Wild West'' Show
  • [[Clipper]] ships took 5 months to sail the 17,000 miles (27,000 km) from New York City to San Francisco.
  • C.M. Russell]]
  • circuit rider]] to create and serve a series of churches in a geographical area.
  • Settlers escaping the [[Dakota War of 1862]]
  • Richard M. Johnson]], who later became vice president
  • US Census map showing the extent of settlement and frontier line in 1900.
  • William "Bat" Masterson]] (1853–1921), William F. Petillon (1846–1917), (seated from left) [[Charlie Bassett]] (1847–1896), [[Wyatt Earp]] (1848–1929), Michael Francis "Frank" McLean (1854–1902), Cornelius "Neil" Brown (1844–1926). Photo by Charles
A. Conkling.<ref>[http://www.kansashistory.us/dodgecitylawmen.html Dodge City Peace Commission Old West Gunfighters Dodge City, KS 1883]  (1883)  Ford County Historical Society. retrieved October 2014</ref>
  • Mass hanging of [[Sioux]] warriors convicted of murder and rape in [[Mankato, Minnesota]], 1862
  • San Xavier del Bac]], near Tucson, founded in 1700
  • The battle near [[Fort Phil Kearny]], Dakota Territory, December 21, 1866
  • [[Fur trading]] at [[Fort Nez Percés]] in 1841
  • Camp Supply]] Stockade, February 1869
  • [[Daniel Boone]] escorting settlers through the [[Cumberland Gap]]
  • Homesteaders]], {{circa}} 1866
  • Kearny]]'s annexation of [[New Mexico]], August 15, 1846
  • Map of the [[Santa Fe Trail]]
  • alt=Men lined up along a tree line are shot by men on horseback.
  • Puck]]'' February 20, 1915.
  • The ''Handcart Pioneer Monument'', by [[Torleif S. Knaphus]], located on [[Temple Square]] in Salt Lake City, Utah
  • Paiute]] natives against 120 civilians bound for California.
  • Native American chiefs, 1865
  • Profile of the Pacific Railroad from San Francisco (left) to Omaha. ''Harper's Weekly'' December 7, 1867
  • H. B. Hall]].
  • Crow Chief [[Plenty Coups]]
  • Map of [[Pony Express]] route
  • 1850}}. Between 1847 and 1870, the population of San Francisco exploded from 500 to 150,000.
  • Santa Anna]], 1836
  • Fort Dodge]], Kansas
  • ''The Searchers'']], a 1956 film portraying racial conflict in the 1860s
  • [[Siege of Fort Detroit]] during [[Pontiac's Rebellion]] in 1763
  • Sioux Chief [[Sitting Bull]]
  • 1908 editorial cartoon of President [[Theodore Roosevelt]] features his cowboy persona and his crusading for conservation.
  • [[Thomas Jefferson]] saw himself as a man of the frontier and a scientist; he was keenly interested in expanding and exploring the West.
  • Route of the first transcontinental railroad across the western United States (built, 1863–1869)
  • Poster for the Union Pacific Railroad's opening-day, 1869
  • United States territories in 1834–36
  • Temporary quarters for [[Volga Germans]] in central [[Kansas]], 1875
  • Trans Mississippi]] West (1860–1890)
  • ''What An Unbranded Cow Has Cost'' by [[Frederic Remington]], which depicts the aftermath of a range war between cowboys and supposed rustlers. 1895
  • Map of the [[Wilderness Road]] by 1785
  • 400,000 men, women, and children traveled 2,000 miles (3,200&nbsp;km) in wagon trains during a six-month journey on the [[Oregon Trail]].

Wild West         
The Wild West is used to refer to the western part of the United States during the time when Europeans were first settling there.
N-SING: the N
Wild West (disambiguation)         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Wild West; Wild West (song)
Wild West often refers to the American frontier period of the Western United States in the 19th century.
Wild West shows         
1870–1920 TRAVELING VAUDEVILLE PERFORMANCE
Wild West Show; Wild West show; The Wild West Show; Wild West Traveling Show; Captain Jack Baldwin's Wild West Show; Texas Jack's Wild West Shows; Wild West Shows
Wild West shows were traveling vaudeville performances in the United States and Europe that existed around 1870–1920. The shows began as theatrical stage productions and evolved into open-air shows that depicted romanticized stereotypes of cowboys, Plains Indians, army scouts, outlaws, and wild animals that existed in the American West.

Wikipédia

American frontier

The American frontier, also known as the Old West, popularly known as the Wild West, encompasses the geography, history, folklore, and culture associated with the forward wave of American expansion in mainland North America that began with European colonial settlements in the early 17th century and ended with the admission of the last few western territories as states in 1912 (except Alaska, which was not admitted into the Union until 1959). This era of massive migration and settlement was particularly encouraged by President Thomas Jefferson following the Louisiana Purchase, giving rise to the expansionist attitude known as "Manifest Destiny" and the historians' "Frontier Thesis". The legends, historical events and folklore of the American frontier have embedded themselves into United States culture so much so that the Old West, and the Western genre of media specifically, has become one of the defining periods of American national identity.

The archetypical Old West period is often cited by historians to have occurred between the end of the American Civil War in 1865 and the 1890 U.S. census. Others, including the Library of Congress and University of Oxford, often cite differing points reaching into the early 1900s; typically within the first two decades. A period known as "The Western Civil War of Incorporation" lasted from the 1850s to 1919. This period included historical events synonymous with the archetypical Old West or "Wild West" such as violent conflict arising from encroaching civilization into frontier land, the removal and assimilation of natives, consolidation of property to large corporations and government, vigilantism, and the attempted enforcement of laws upon outlaws.

In 1890, the Census Bureau released a bulletin stating: "Up to and including 1880 the country had a frontier of settlement, but at present the unsettled area has been so broken into by isolated bodies of settlement that there can hardly be said to be a frontier line. In the discussion of its extent, its westward movement, etc., it can not, therefore, any longer have a place in the census reports." Despite this, the later 1900 U.S. census continued to show the westward frontier line. By the 1910 U.S. census though, the frontier had shrunk into divided areas without a singular westward line of settlement. An influx of agricultural homesteaders in the first two decades of the 20th century, taking up more acreage than homestead grants in the entirety of the 19th century, is cited to have significantly reduced open land.

A frontier is a zone of contact at the edge of a line of settlement. Leading theorist Frederick Jackson Turner went deeper, arguing that the frontier was the scene of a defining process of American civilization: "The frontier," he asserted, "promoted the formation of a composite nationality for the American people." He theorized it was a process of development: "This perennial rebirth, this fluidity of American life, this expansion westward...furnish[es] the forces dominating American character." Turner's ideas since 1893 have inspired generations of historians (and critics) to explore multiple individual American frontiers, but the popular folk frontier concentrates on the conquest and settlement of Native American lands west of the Mississippi River, in what is now the Midwest, Texas, the Great Plains, the Rocky Mountains, the Southwest, and the West Coast.

Enormous popular attention was focused on the Western United States (especially the Southwest) in the second half of the 19th century and the early 20th century, from the 1850s to the 1910s. Such media typically exaggerated the romance, anarchy, and chaotic violence of the period for greater dramatic effect. This inspired the Western genre of film, along with television shows, novels, comic books, video games, children's toys, and costumes.

As defined by Hine and Faragher, "frontier history tells the story of the creation and defense of communities, the use of the land, the development of crops and hotels, and the formation of states." They explain, "It is a tale of conquest, but also one of survival, persistence, and the merging of peoples and cultures that gave birth and continuing life to America." Turner himself repeatedly emphasized how the availability of "free land" to start new farms attracted pioneering Americans: "The existence of an area of free land, its continuous recession, and the advance of American settlement westward, explain American development." Through treaties with foreign nations and native tribes, political compromise, military conquest, the establishment of law and order, the building of farms, ranches, and towns, the marking of trails and digging of mines, and the pulling in of great migrations of foreigners, the United States expanded from coast to coast, fulfilling the ideology of Manifest Destiny. In his "Frontier Thesis" (1893), Turner theorized that the frontier was a process that transformed Europeans into a new people, the Americans, whose values focused on equality, democracy, and optimism, as well as individualism, self-reliance, and even violence.

Exemples du corpus de texte pour Wild West
1. "Wild West justice, the way I see it." Police Capt.
2. In many aspects, this quarter is like the Wild West.
3. We‘re in the Wild, Wild West right now," Hillsman said.
4. "Most people associate it with the Wild West," he said.
5. The town is dusty, smoky and rugged, like a Wild West frontier town.