Antoine Dadin de Hauteserre died in 1682.
Antoine Dadin de Hauteserre was born in 1602.
He doesn't want to. But through out the book there are clues that he comes out. Like when Miss. Maudie's house was on fire, Jem and Scout went across the street in front of the Radley's house. When the fire was out Scout had a brown blanket draped over her shoulders, only Boo could have put the blanket on her because Nathen (Boo's older brother) was across the street helping put the fire out and getting Miss. Maudie's stuff out of the house. Also when Scout and Jem would walk by the tree in front of the yard they would find things that only Boo would be able to put in there. And in the end of the book Boo helps Jem and Scout. He only comes out when he feels like he needs to is basically the answer.
HISTORY OF GOMBE STATE OF NIGERIA Gombe town and traditional emirate, southeastern Gombe state, northeastern Nigeria. Gombe emirate was founded in 1804 by Buba Yero (Abubakar), a follower of the Muslim Fulani leader Usman dan Fodio. The emirate headquarters of Gambe was established in 1824 and renamed Gombe Aba ("Old Gombe") in 1841. The emirate prospered until the 1880s, when religious warfare and the encroachment of British colonial rule brought severe disruption to the area. The emirate capital was moved in 1919 to Doma, which was then renamed Gombe. Lying in the wooded savanna lands of the Gongola River basin, the area is mainly inhabited by the Fulani, Bolewa, Tera (Terawa), Tangale, Hausa, Kanuri, Waja (Wajawa), and Tula peoples. Important market centres in addition to Gombe town include Kumo, Deba Habe, Pindiga, Dukku, and Nafada. The multipurpose Dadin Kowa Dam has been constructed on the nearby Gongola River. Gombe town is a major collecting point, especially since the opening of the railroad in 1963, for peanuts (groundnuts) and cotton and is a local trade centre in sorghum, millet, cowpeas, cassava (manioc), beans, onions, and tobacco. Its people keep cattle, goats, sheep, horses, and donkeys and practice the traditional crafts of weaving and dyeing cotton. The presence of limestone deposits led to the building of a cement factory at nearby Ashaka in the early 1970s. Modern textile manufacture in Gombe town also began in the early '70s, and a seed-oil mill has been built. The town is served by a national technical teacher-training college and an Arabic teacher-training college. Gombe is located just south of the railway from Bauchi to Maiduguri and on the secondary highway between Bauchi and Kumo. Pop. (2008 est.) town, 194,809.