Switzerland Culture:
Languages: In Switzerland there main language is German but there is also a lot of French, Italian and Romansh.
Food; There are quite a few dishes that you may know of but they might have come from Switzerland. One example is: Zürcher Geschnetzeltes-thin strips of veal with mushrooms in a cream sauce served with rösti. Italian food is popular in contemporary Switzerland, mostly pasta and pizza. Foods often associated with Switzerland include cheese and chocolate. Swiss cheeses, a few in particular: Emmental cheese, Gruyère, Vacherin, and Appenzeller, are famous Swiss products. The most popular cheese dishes are fondue and Raclette. Both these dishes were originally dishes just from that area, but were popularized by the Swiss Cheese Union to boost sales of cheese. Rösti is a popular potato dish that is eaten all over Switzerland. It was originally a breakfast food, but this has been replaced by the muesli, which is commonly eaten for breakfast and in Switzerland goes by the name of "Bircher muesli" ("Birchermiesli" in some areas). For breakfast and dinner many Swiss enjoy sliced bread with butter and jam, so not too different from us in America. There is a wide variety of bread rolls available in Switzerland. Bread and cheese is a very popular dish for dinner. One of the oldest traditional dishes from Switzerland is the Fasnachtskiechli, which translates out to “Carnival Treats”. It’s a very popular olden time treat that is very fattening, since
Colonial America History is a very important aspect of our lives. It is essential to individuals and to society. It focuses attention on the complex processes of social changes, including factors that are causing changes around us. One should know about the people, their origin and ideas; their impact on society, the trade and diseases that affected us. It helps us understand people, how they change, how the society we live in came to be and how these changes impacted our lives. The history of…
Introduction: Back then in colonial times slavery was a big part of life. Slaves cost about $40,000 in today's money. Slavery is still happening around the world. There are about 30 million slaves in the world, even in the U.S , there are still 60,000 slaves in America and 5 million of those 30 million are enslaved children. Enslaving black people was legal in all the 13 colonies . More than half of them lived in Virginia and Maryland and in the Chesapeake region where they made up of 50 to 60…
colonies... The vast majority of the white inhabitants were either born in England or descended from English immigrants. Only about 11 percent [27,500] of the non-Native American population were black." "Colonial immigration laws... set precedents that were followed in subsequent national legislation. Colonial Americans, who viewed strangers as legitimate objects of suspicion, cautiously allowed sttlers but were wary of those of religious difference (i.e., Catholics/Jesuits) or those who might become public…
During the colonial era in Latin America, there were three different classes of women. There were the Elite women, the Mulata and the Indian. Where in those groups they had different roles and positions in the colonial society. There was a big diversity of conditions for the women related with power, wealth, and the access to culture and overall the social group they belonged to. To be able to understand the roll that women played in the colonial Latin America we need to understand the colonial society…
Maddie Piotrowski March 20, 2014 Professor Miller Business in Colonial America The Colonial American system of business practices did not start at the birth of the nation. Many practices developed by the budding country were adopted from other, well established countries. As many Colonial Americans immigrated from Great Britain, many business practices came from a British descent. However, the business world in the early formation of the United States did not begin with the practices of fifthteenth century Europe…
The Forgotten Women of Colonial and Revolutionary America For throughout the history of education a great focus has been put on the men of colonial and revolutionary America. Students learn about the powerful leaders that lead to our freedom from England and the brave men that came to a new land for work. Hidden in the background of those lessons are the women. Just because they did not have the rights to stand up and lead an army or nation does not mean that they were useless to the new world.…
In the 1700s, America was a brand-new and desired land. Many immigrants, mostly English, arrived in America seeking for commodities that their native land did not supply them with. Although the Chesapeake and New England colonies were both settled by people from English origin, both regions developed into distinctive societies because of their social and political purposes. These English societies were each founded for different social purposes. New England was established because the…
role of three of the following “ISMs” in shaping the development of Latin America from the Colonial Period to the end of the Cold War. Liberalism 3. Communism Capitalism /Industrialism* 2. Nationalism Socialism 1. Conservatism * You may discuss capitalism independently of industrialism if it is appropriate for the time period. Dan Cetlin Mrs. Stevens History II Honors 2 January 2014 Ever since Latin America was colonialized, it has struggled long and hard for suitable social,…
Early Colonial Governments HIS/309 Introduction •Similarities of American Colonial Government and British Government •Differences of American Colonial Government and British Government •Social Challenges Faced by Colonists •Political Challenges Faced by Colonists •Economic Challenges Faced by Colonists •Were the Early English Colonies Truly Representative? Similarities of American Colonial Government and British Government Both settled in America and granted control of their territories.…
KhhhhhnUnits I & II: Colonial and Revolutionary America I. Pre-Columbian Societies Early inhabitants of the Americas American Indian empires in Mesoamerica, the Southwest, and the Mississippi Valley American Indian cultures of North America at the time of European contact II. Transatlantic Encounters and Colonial Beginnings, 1492–1690 First European contacts with American Indians Spain’s empire in North America French colonization of Canada English settlement of New England, the…