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・ Franconian Forest
・ Franconian Forest Railway
・ Franconian International School
・ Franconian Jura
・ Franconian Keuper-Lias Plains
・ Franconian Lake District
・ Franconian languages
・ Franconian Line
・ Franconian Museum Railway
・ Franconian Rezat
・ Franconian Saale
・ Franco-Moroccan War (disambiguation)
・ Franco-Nevada
・ Franco-Newfoundlander
・ Franco-Nigerian Chamber of Commerce & Industry
Franco-Ontarian
・ Franco-Ontarian flag
・ Franco-Ottoman alliance
・ Franco-Persian alliance
・ Franco-Polish alliance (1524)
・ Franco-Polish alliance (1921)
・ Franco-Provençal language
・ Franco-Prussian War
・ Franco-Prussian War order of battle
・ Franco-Româna Brăila
・ Franco-Russian Alliance
・ Franco-Russian War
・ Franco-Seychellois
・ Franco-Siamese War
・ Franco-Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance


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Franco-Ontarian : ウィキペディア英語版
Franco-Ontarian

Franco-Ontarians ((フランス語:Franco-Ontariens) or ''Franco-Ontariennes'' if female) are French Canadian or francophone residents of the Canadian province of Ontario. They are sometimes known as "''Ontarois''".
According to the 2006 Canadian census, there were 488,815 self-declared francophones in Ontario (declaring one mother tongue), comprising 4.1 per cent of the province's total population. A further 1,000,000 Ontarians self-declared French to be one of multiple mother tongues.
According to the subsequent 2011 Canadian census, there were 493,300 self-declared francophones in Ontario (declaring one mother tongue) comprising 3.9% of the province's total population. There were 284,115 Ontarians who declared French as their home language, which represents only 2.2% of the population.〔()〕 Franco-Ontarians constitute the largest French-speaking community in Canada outside of Quebec, as well as the largest minority language group within Ontario.
The francophone population is concentrated in Eastern Ontario, in Ottawa, Cornwall and many rural farming communities, and in Northeastern Ontario, in the cities of Sudbury, North Bay and Timmins and a number of smaller towns. Other communities with notable francophone populations are Lakeshore, Windsor, Penetanguishene and Welland. Most communities in Ontario have at least a few Franco-Ontarian residents.
Ottawa, with 128,620 francophones, has the province's largest Franco-Ontarian community by size. Among the province's major cities, Greater Sudbury, 29 per cent francophone, has the largest proportion of Franco-Ontarians to the general population, and Timmins, 41 per cent francophone, has the largest proportion among the smaller sized cities. Prescott and Russell United Counties has the highest proportion of Franco-Ontarians to the general population among the province's census divisions, with about two-thirds of the population being francophone.
Some smaller communities in Ontario have a francophone majority. These include Hearst, Kapuskasing, Smooth Rock Falls, Embrun, St. Charles, Sturgeon Falls, Rockland, Casselman, Dubreuilville, Vankleek Hill and Hawkesbury.
==Early settlement==

The French presence in Ontario dates from the mid-17th century. Early settlements in the region include the Mission of Sainte-Marie among the Hurons at Midland in 1649, Sault Sainte Marie in 1668, and Fort Pontchartrain du Détroit in 1701. Southern Ontario was part of the ''Pays d'en-haut'' (Upper Country) of New France and was later part of the province of Quebec until Quebec was split into The Canadas in 1791. However, prior to the Articles of Capitulation of Quebec, which handed control of New France from France to Great Britain, modern-day Ontario had only very limited European settlement, apart from a few military forts. Modern Franco-Ontarians are instead descended primarily from people who moved to Ontario from Quebec or New Brunswick in the 19th and 20th centuries.

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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