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・ Tô Lịch River
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Tête de Chien
・ Tête de Ferret
・ Tête de l'Estrop
・ Tête de l'Etret
・ Tête de la Cicle
・ Tête de Milon
・ Tête de Moine
・ Tête de Ran
・ Tête de Valpelline
・ Tête des Fétoules
・ Tête du Géant
・ Tête du Portail
・ Tête du Rouget
・ Tête Jaune
・ Tête Jaune Cache, British Columbia


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Tête de Chien : ウィキペディア英語版
Tête de Chien

The Tête de Chien (Dog's Head) is a 450 m (1,476 ft) high rock promontory near the village of La Turbie in the Alpes-Maritimes department of France. It overlooks the Principality of Monaco, and is the highest point on the Grande Corniche road.〔
The American diplomat Samuel S. Cox, in his 1870 travel book ''Search for Winter Sunbeams in the Riviera, Corsica, Algiers and Spain'' wrote that the Tête de Chien more resembled a tortoise than a dog's head, and believed that 'Tête de Chien' was a corruption of 'Tête de Camp', as it was where Caesar stationed his troops after the conquest of Gaul. Vere Herbert, the heroine of Ouida's 1880 novel ''Moths'' is described as living under the Tête de Chien, "...within a few miles of the brilliant Hell ()." In 1944, Leopold Bohm, a German defence company commander, was stationed on the Tête de Chien and saw a low flying airplane crash into the sea, which had been pursued by two other planes. Bohm's observation was on the day of the disappearance of the aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, and it has been speculated that it was the final flight of Saint-Exupéry that Bohm saw.〔
==References==



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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