france, canada, belgium and other former french colonies
Yes Ivory Coast is a former French colony together with Burkina Faso, Niger, Togo, Benin, Senegal, Mali ...
Mali
Yes, Haiti is a francophone country. It is a former French colony and this is why French and Haitian creole French are spoken here.
Jacques Chirac is the former (last) French president.
anjou
The Quebec Act (1774) was designed to benefit French Catholics, who constituted the majority of residents in the former French province of Quebec.
Croatia, and it was (and is) a Republic, not a province.
The Franks conquered the former Roman province of Gau. They were a confederation of Germanic tribes.
Touraine is a former province of France.
The distinguished French surname of Chant is first found amidst the early records of the former province of Dauphine, in the southeastern part of France.
French. However, I'm not sure if their laws are still used as the province is a part of Canada and follows Canadian laws.
No, what was New France is currently known as the Province of Quebec (in Canada), its former name of New France was given when the French first settled there in the sixteenth century.
French. However, I'm not sure if their laws are still used as the province is a part of Canada and follows Canadian laws.
French. However, I'm not sure if their laws are still used as the province is a part of Canada and follows Canadian laws.
Italy's specific goals in the Versailles Treaty were to end up with territory that had at one time belonged to the Republic of Venice (renaissance era). To get the specifics look up the Treaty of London of 1915 in which the French, English & Russians promised the Italians added territory if they declared war on their former allies Austria & Germany.
French. However, I'm not sure if their laws are still used as the province is a part of Canada and follows Canadian laws.