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Showing posts with label Canadian History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canadian History. Show all posts

Thursday, September 27, 2018

Frozen in Time - I

Frozen in Time


The 10th annual Icefest held in Village of Yorkville Park, at Cumberland Street & Bellair Street.

The site was transformed into a showcase of incredible ice sculptures. Live ice carving demonstrations were given for the entire family to enjoy. In 2015, Bloor-Yorkville brought the past back to life in ice with a “Frozen in Time” ancient Egyptian-inspired showcase of striking carvings. From King Tut, to two Pharaohs, an Anubis, an Iris with a Clock and Egyptian Gods, crafted from an astonishing 20,000 lbs. of ice.

This is an all ages, family friendly, free. All people had to do was wear warm clothes, and bring a hearty winter spirit, and don’t forget a camera to capture the moments in ice forever!

Here you can find dozen of images of this Frozen in Time Icefest. Enjoy!

The IceFest represents one among many festivals dedicated the visual art form, namely ice carving. Sizes of carved frozen water range from small decorations to entire fashionable Scandinavian resorts. One such opportunity to transform natural raw material into thought provoking ice art is celebrated during the winters of Groenland, a part go the kingdom of Denmark. Indeed, hotels in Scandinavia have been entirely carved of ice. Along similar lines, Quebec and Ontario below zero temperatures remain conducive to inspire this way of producing art.

Egyptian Ice Figures.
An Ice Camel, Egypt Tourism.
Blachere.
Innoclean.inc.
Starbucks.
Ice Kids.
Sassafraz. The heart of Yorkville.
Incredible India.
A nice horse.
Whole Foods.

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Deep Night : Views of Old Montreal

A Few Views of Old Montreal in Deep Night


Montreal as seen by Elena in a summer night, during a long walk along the night city which never sleeps. All the pictures have been taken by Elena.


St.Jean Street.
Jacques-Cartier Place.
Some boutiques along the Cartier Place.
Lydia Monaro Galery.
Notre-Dame Street at the Des Armes Square.
Creme de la Creme Coffee House.
Display window.
St.Paul Street and Poutine restaurant (Poutine - national Quebecor plate, nothing in common with the Russian nazi president).
Greenery on the Jacques-Cartier place.
Place Jacques-Cartier, a restaurant.
Nelson Column and Cartier Place.
Municipal building.

Tuesday, September 18, 2018

University of Toronto

University of Toronto


University of Toronto is a public research university, situated on the grounds that surround Queen's Park. It was founded by royal charter in 1827 as King's College and it was the first institution of higher learning in the colony of Upper Canada. The institution assumed the present name in 1850. Today it comprises twelve colleges that differ in character and history, each retaining substantial autonomy on financial and institutional affairs. The University of Toronto has two satellite campuses located in Scarborough and Mississauga.

The University of Toronto is noted for influential movements and curricula in literary criticism and communication theory, known collectively as the Toronto School.

Historically, the University of Toronto was the birthplace of insulin and stem cell research, and was the site of the first practical electron microscope, the development of multi-touch technology, the identification of Cygnus X-1 as a black hole, and the theory of NP completeness.

Toronto ranks highly in global rankings and is consistently ranked first in Canada.

All the pictures have been taken by Elena.

  • John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design. 230 College Street.
  • Engineering Faculty. The University site encompasses 71 hectares (180 acres) bounded mostly by Bay Street, Bloor Street, Spadina Avenue and College Street.
  • Here was realized a major nineteenth century aspiration: the establishment of a non-denominational institution of higher learning supported by Gouvernement.

Faculty of Music of the University of Toronto.
Flavelle House, Faculty of Law.
Universitiè's College in Victorian Style.University College. The building of University College in 1856-1859 largely assured the furture of the University of Toronto and drew it in time into a federal pattern, hich was widely followed in Canada and the Commonwealth.
Coats of arms, More, Victoria University.
The granting of the charter of the new educational institution in 1827 was largely the result of intense lobbying by John Strachan, the influential Anglican Bishop of Toronto who took office as the first president of the college.
Faculty of Music.The original three-storey Greek Revival school building was constructed on the present site of Queen's Park.
Victoria College.
Under Strachan's stewardship, King's College was a religious institution that closely aligned with the Church of England and the British colonial elite, known as the Family Compact.
Caven Library. During the American Civil War, the threat of Union blockade on British North America prompted the creation of the University Rifle Corps, which saw battle in resisting the Fenian raids on the Niagara border in 1866. University of Toronto Book Store: Technology, cell phones, custom garment printing, bookpod print on demand, textbooks, clothing, stationery, gifts/frames, medical, fiction/non-fiction, snacks & drinks.
Relief sculptures of General James Wolfe, Samuel de Champlain, John Graves Simcoe and Isaac Brock. They grace the facade of the Archives and Canadiana Building at the University of Toronto.  Like their real-life counterparts, these sculptures keep a watchful and weathered gaze upon the surrounding landscape.
The namesake University Avenue is a ceremonial boulevard and arterial thoroughfare that runs through downtown between Queen's Park and Front Street.
Bookstore of the University of Toronto.
Engineering Faculty.
Hart House. One of the historical buildings on the site.
Knox College built in 1911 - 1912.
Metallic Installation on the Campus. Metallic-structure on the site of the University of Toronto.
University Tower.

Varsity Blues of University of Toronto. With its green spaces and many interlocking courtyards, the university forms a distinct region of urban parkland in the city's downtown core. The Varsity Arena is part of the University of Toronto central campus.

World War I in Canada

World War I in Canada


Tanks were first used at the Battle of Flers-Courcelette, September 1916. The British government sent this Mark IV tank ”Britannia” to Canada in 1917 for the Victory Loan Campaign. Victory Loan bonds offered a 5,5 percent return over five, ten or twenty years. A 50-dollar bond was introduced to encourage wide participation. The government hoped to raise $150 million, but the loan was oversubscribed reaching $398 million. The money was used both for Canadian war production and to provide credit for Allied purchases of wheat and other goods.

British tank Britannia taking part in the Victory Loan Parade on Sherbrooke Street, Montreal. Anonymous, November 19th, 1917. Photograph, Department of National Defense, Library and Archives Canada.
The history of the 163rd Battailion, known as the Poil-aux-Pattes (Narry Paws), is interwined with the story of Olivar Asselin's decision to enlist and raise a battalion of young French Canadians for overseas service. Asselin, one of the founders of the nationalist movement, was devoting considerable energy to the defence of French language rights in Ontario when, on November 15th 1915, he agreed to recruit a new French Canadian battalion. Asselin was a secular, anti-clerical nationalist with a deep love for France. He told a mass meeting at the Monumen National Theater, that the defeat of France “would condemn us her children in North America to drag out henceforth diminished lives.” The 163rd trained in Bermuda before sailing to England where it was disbanded and used for reinforcements.

163rd Batallion.
Recrutement in Québec focused on Montréal. Nineteen infantry battalions, as well as a pioneer battalion, reinforcing companies, artillery regiments and other units sought volunteers. As many as one in three men were rejected for health or fitness reasons, and by mid-1916 there were few men available who were willing to serve.

150th Mont Royal Carabiniers Recruiting Poster. 1914-1915.

Many of Québec's Irish Catholics had intermarried and assimilated with their French-speaking co-religionists, but a thriving Irish Catholic community – 30 000 strong-lived in Montreal, maintaining their identification as Irish Canadians. Concentrated in Pointe-Saint-Charles and Griffintowm they maintained their own parishes, schools and colleges. With the outbreak of war, a new militia regiment, the Irish Canadian Rangers, was organized and in early 1916 it became the core of the 199th overseas battalion. As is evident in the recruiting posters, Irish Montreal supported Home Rule for Ireland, as well as the war effort. After a tour of Ireland and a brief period with the 5th Canadian Division in England, the 199th was disbanded, with officers and men joining the reinforcement stream.

All in One with the Irish Canadian Rangers 199th Overseas Battalion. 1914-1918. Lithograph. Library and Archives Canada, 1983-28-888.

Monday, September 17, 2018

Montreal - Nightlife

Montreal - Nightlife


Walking through Old Montreal's night streets is a real pleasure. So we suggest you look at these beautiful photos and we hope you'll admire these scenes of nightlife in Montreal. 

All the pictures have been taken by Elena:

Our Lady of Montreal Cathedral.

Vauquelin Square by the Montreal city hall.

Jacques-Cartier Place.
A monument on the Place des Armes square.
St. Aimable street.
Flower installation on the Jacques-Cartier Place square.
St.Laurent street
St.Jacques street.
A coffee house in the Old town.
Boutiques at St.Paul street
Ernest Cormier building.
Montreal in deep night
Gates of the Ste.Family Chapel.
St.Jean street.
St.Family Chapel.
St.Paul street
Everyone is sleeping in Old Montreal.
Notre-Dame street.