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・ Saint-Nicolas-du-Tertre
・ Saint-Nicolas-la-Chapelle
・ Saint-Nicolas-la-Chapelle, Aube
・ Saint-Nicolas-la-Chapelle, Savoie
・ Saint-Nicolas-lès-Cîteaux
・ Saint-Nicéphore, Quebec
・ Saint-Nizier Church
・ Saint-Nizier-d'Azergues
・ Saint-Nizier-de-Fornas
・ Saint-Nizier-du-Moucherotte
・ Saint-Nizier-le-Bouchoux
・ Saint-Nizier-le-Désert
・ Saint-Nizier-sous-Charlieu
・ Saint-Nizier-sur-Arroux
・ Saint-Nolff
Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche
・ Saint-Norbert, New Brunswick
・ Saint-Norbert, Quebec
・ Saint-Norbert-d'Arthabaska, Quebec
・ Saint-Noël, Quebec
・ Saint-Nérée-de-Bellechasse, Quebec
・ Saint-Octave-de-Métis, Quebec
・ Saint-Odilon-de-Cranbourne, Quebec
・ Saint-Offenge
・ Saint-Offenge-Dessous
・ Saint-Offenge-Dessus
・ Saint-Omer
・ Saint-Omer Cathedral
・ Saint-Omer Open
・ Saint-Omer, Calvados


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Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche : ウィキペディア英語版
Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche

Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche is a commune in the Yvelines department in the Île-de-France in north-central France.
==History==
Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche was built around 4 core hamlets near the Forest of Marly. The village takes its name from a 9th-century co-bishop, saint Nonne, who re-evangelized the country after the Norman invasions, and from La Bretesche, a wooden stronghold (from ''breit eiche'': big oak tree) consisting of a hamlet at the edge of the forest of Cruye, now the forest of Marly.
The hamlet was originally called "Saint-Nonne au Val de Galie", the name of the parish, then "Saint-Nom près de la Bretesche" and since the Revolution, "Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche".
During the French Revolution the district was called "La Montagne Fromentale" and then "l'Union la Bretesche".
The hamlets of Avinières, Val-Martin, La Tuilerie-Bignon were the responsibility of numerous lords, as well as of the Dames de Poissy and the Vaux-de-Cernay Abbey.
The north of the village, La Bretèche, was part of Marly Park, while the south, Saint-Nom, was part of , making it difficult for the village as a whole to acquire an identity well into the 20th century.
Steady demographic growth, which accelerated significantly after 1982, eventually unified the two villages and allowed the building of a "Centre Village" and a Library by 2000.
Some historic structures in the village suffered irreparable damage from a freak storm with tornado strength winds that struck France in December 1999. The storm, which also damaged nearby Versailles, uprooted centuries-old trees and part of the wall of the Château de la Bretèche along the Route de Sainte Gemme.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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