. . . . . . . . . "La Elizabeth City County \u00E8 stata una contea della Virginia dal 1634 al 1952. Creata nel 1634 come Elizabeth River Shire, fu una delle otto contee create nella Colonia della Virginia per ordine del re Carlo II. Nel 1636, venne suddivisa e la porzione a nord del porto di Hampton Roads divenne Elizabeth City Shire. Dopo pochi anni venne ribattezzata Elizabeth City County. Alla contea venne dato il nome di Elisabetta di Boemia, figlia del re Giacomo I."@it . . . "Elizabeth City County was a county in southeastern Virginia from 1634 until 1952 when it was merged into the city of Hampton. Originally created in 1634 as Elizabeth River Shire, it was one of eight shires created in the Virginia Colony by order of the King Charles I. In 1636, it was subdivided, and the portion north of the harbor of Hampton Roads became known as Elizabeth City Shire. It was renamed Elizabeth City County a short time later. Elizabeth City was originally named Kikotan (also spelled Kecoughtan and Kikowtan), presumably a word for the Native Americans living there when the English arrived in 1607. They were friendly to the English, but Sir Thomas Gates either worried about safety (including potential attack by the Spaniards and the Dutch) or coveted their corn fields after the \"starving time\" of the 1609\u201310 winter. The English seized their land while the men were out hunting, and for some reason, the natives never attacked the settlement in response. The shire and county were named for Elizabeth of Bohemia, daughter of King James I, sister of Princes Henry and Charles. The town of Hampton, established in 1680, became the largest city in Elizabeth City County, and was the county seat. Hampton became an independent city in 1908, though it remained the seat of Elizabeth City County and continued to share many services with the county. In 1952, Elizabeth City County and the only incorporated town in the county, Phoebus, merged with and into Hampton. This merger was the first in a series of municipal consolidations in Hampton Roads that resulted in most of the area being split into independent cities. With few exceptions, modern-day Hampton encompasses nearly all of what was Elizabeth City County. The main exceptions are portions of Elizabeth City County that are now part of Newport News. At the time of the Peninsula Extension of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, part of the western portion of the county became part of Warwick County. This enabled the entire southern end of the extension to be in Warwick County. The City of Newport News was formed out of this portion of Warwick County, and in January 1927 the Elizabeth City County town of Kecoughtan was also annexed into the City of Newport News. Since English settlers occupied the former Indian village of Kecoughtan in 1610, and the town at Jamestown was abandoned in 1699, the city of Hampton now claims to be the oldest continuously settled English-speaking city in North America."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Elizabeth City County, Virginia"@en . . "Comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City"@fr . . . . "Contea di Elizabeth City"@it . . . "1106942028"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u5E02\u7E23\u662F\u4E00\u500B\u73FE\u5728\u7D55\u7A2E\u7684\u7E23,\u5728\u6771\u7DAD\u5409\u5C3C\u4E9E\u3002\u6700\u521D\u57281634\u5E74\u70BA\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u6CB3\u90E1, (\u4EA6\u7A31\u70BA\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u5E02\u90E1)\u662F\u516B\u500B\u82F1\u570B\u570B\u738B\u547D\u4EE4\u8981\u7D44\u6210\u7DAD\u5409\u5C3C\u4E9E\u7684\u6B96\u6C11\u5730\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u90E1\u30021636\u5E74\u88AB\u7D30\u5206,\u77ED\u6642\u9593\u4EE5\u5F8C\u7D66\u6539\u540D\u70BA\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u5E02\u7E23\u3002"@zh . . . . . "\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u5E02\u7E23\u662F\u4E00\u500B\u73FE\u5728\u7D55\u7A2E\u7684\u7E23,\u5728\u6771\u7DAD\u5409\u5C3C\u4E9E\u3002\u6700\u521D\u57281634\u5E74\u70BA\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u6CB3\u90E1, (\u4EA6\u7A31\u70BA\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u5E02\u90E1)\u662F\u516B\u500B\u82F1\u570B\u570B\u738B\u547D\u4EE4\u8981\u7D44\u6210\u7DAD\u5409\u5C3C\u4E9E\u7684\u6B96\u6C11\u5730\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u90E1\u30021636\u5E74\u88AB\u7D30\u5206,\u77ED\u6642\u9593\u4EE5\u5F8C\u7D66\u6539\u540D\u70BA\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u5E02\u7E23\u3002"@zh . . . "Le comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City, en anglais : Elizabeth City County, est un ancien comt\u00E9 de Virginie, situ\u00E9 au sud-est de la colonie de Virginie, de 1634 \u00E0 1952, date \u00E0 laquelle il est fusionn\u00E9 avec la ville de Hampton. Cr\u00E9\u00E9 \u00E0 l'origine en 1634, sous le nom d'Elizabeth River Shire, il est l'un des huit shires cr\u00E9\u00E9s dans la colonie de Virginie, par ordre de Charles Ier, roi d'Angleterre. En 1636, il est subdivis\u00E9 et la partie au nord du port de Hampton Roads devient connue sous le nom d'anglais : Elizabeth City Shire. Elle est rebaptis\u00E9e anglais : Elizabeth City County peu de temps apr\u00E8s."@fr . . . . . . "La Elizabeth City County \u00E8 stata una contea della Virginia dal 1634 al 1952. Creata nel 1634 come Elizabeth River Shire, fu una delle otto contee create nella Colonia della Virginia per ordine del re Carlo II. Nel 1636, venne suddivisa e la porzione a nord del porto di Hampton Roads divenne Elizabeth City Shire. Dopo pochi anni venne ribattezzata Elizabeth City County. Elizabeth City nacque in origine come Kikotan (anche nota come Kecoughtan e Kikowtan), presumibilmente con il nome con cui veniva chiamata dai nativi americani che vivevano l\u00EC prima dell'arrivo degli inglesi nel 1607. In un primo tempo essi furono amichevoli con i nuovi arrivati, ma Sir Thomas Gates era preoccupato per la sicurezza del luogo (compresi potenziali attacchi degli spagnoli e degli olandesi) e desiderava i loro campi di mais dopo il periodo di grande carestia dell'inverno 1609-10. Gli inglesi occuparono il terreno mentre gli indiani erano a caccia, e per qualche ragione i nativi non attaccarono mai l'insediamento dei coloni in risposta all'atto di ostilit\u00E0 subito. Alla contea venne dato il nome di Elisabetta di Boemia, figlia del re Giacomo I. La citt\u00E0 di Hampton, fondata nel 1680, divenne la pi\u00F9 grande citt\u00E0 della Contea di Elizabeth City, e fu sede della contea. Nel 1952, La Contea di Elizabeth City si fuse con la citt\u00E0 di Hampton ed oggi la citt\u00E0 indipendente di Hampton. La citt\u00E0 comprende anche la vecchia citt\u00E0 di Phoebus. Fino a quando i coloni inglesi non occuparono Kecoughtan nel 1610, e la citt\u00E0 di Jamestown non venne abbandonata, la citt\u00E0 di Hampton si considera oggi il pi\u00F9 antico insediamento, ancora abitato, fra quelli fondati dai coloni inglesi in Nord America."@it . . "Le comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City, en anglais : Elizabeth City County, est un ancien comt\u00E9 de Virginie, situ\u00E9 au sud-est de la colonie de Virginie, de 1634 \u00E0 1952, date \u00E0 laquelle il est fusionn\u00E9 avec la ville de Hampton. Cr\u00E9\u00E9 \u00E0 l'origine en 1634, sous le nom d'Elizabeth River Shire, il est l'un des huit shires cr\u00E9\u00E9s dans la colonie de Virginie, par ordre de Charles Ier, roi d'Angleterre. En 1636, il est subdivis\u00E9 et la partie au nord du port de Hampton Roads devient connue sous le nom d'anglais : Elizabeth City Shire. Elle est rebaptis\u00E9e anglais : Elizabeth City County peu de temps apr\u00E8s. Elizabeth City s'appele \u00E0 l'origine Kikotan (\u00E9galement orthographi\u00E9 (en) et Kikowtan), probablement un mot en am\u00E9rindien de l'\u00E9poque o\u00F9 les Anglais sont arriv\u00E9s, en 1607. Ils \u00E9taient amicaux envers les Anglais, mais Thomas Gates, le (en), \u00E0 Jamestown s\u2019inqui\u00E8te de la s\u00E9curit\u00E9 (y compris d'une \u00E9ventuelle attaque par les Espagnols et les Hollandais) ou convoitait leurs champs de ma\u00EFs apr\u00E8s la (en) de l'hiver 1609-1610. Les Anglais s'emparent de leurs terres pendant que les hommes sont \u00E0 la chasse et, pour une raison ignor\u00E9e, les indig\u00E8nes n'attaqu\u00E8rent jamais la colonie en r\u00E9ponse. Le shire puis le comt\u00E9 sont nomm\u00E9s en l'honneur d'Elizabeth de Boh\u00E8me, fille du roi Jacques VI et Ier, s\u0153ur des princes Henry et Charles. La ville de Hampton, fond\u00E9e en 1680, est devenue la plus grande ville du comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City, et en a \u00E9t\u00E9 le si\u00E8ge de comt\u00E9. Hampton devient une ville ind\u00E9pendante, en 1908, bien qu'elle reste le si\u00E8ge du comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City et continue \u00E0 partager de nombreux services avec le comt\u00E9. En 1952, le comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City et la seule ville incorpor\u00E9e du comt\u00E9, Phoebus, fusionnent avec et dans Hampton. Cette fusion est la premi\u00E8re d'une s\u00E9rie de regroupements municipaux dans Hampton Roads qui aboutissent \u00E0 la division de la majeure partie de la r\u00E9gion en villes ind\u00E9pendantes. \u00C0 quelques exceptions pr\u00E8s, la ville actuelle de Hampton englobe presque tout ce qui \u00E9tait le comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City. Les principales exceptions sont les parties du comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City qui font d\u00E9sormais partie de Newport News. Au moment de l' (en) du Chesapeake and Ohio Railway, une part de la partie ouest du comt\u00E9 devient partie de l'ancien (en). Cela permet \u00E0 toute la partie sud de l'extension d'\u00EAtre dans le comt\u00E9 de Warwick. La ville de Newport News est form\u00E9e \u00E0 partir de cette partie du comt\u00E9 de Warwick et, en janvier 1927, la ville de (en), dans le comt\u00E9 d'Elizabeth City, a \u00E9galement quitt\u00E9 le comt\u00E9, \u00E9tant annex\u00E9e par la ville de Newport News. Depuis que les colons anglais ont occup\u00E9 l'ancien village indien de Kecoughtan, en 1610, et que la ville de Jamestown est abandonn\u00E9e, en 1699, la ville de Hampton pr\u00E9tend dor\u00E9navant \u00EAtre la plus ancienne ville anglophone d'Am\u00E9rique du Nord \u00E0 avoir \u00E9t\u00E9 colonis\u00E9e de mani\u00E8re continue."@fr . . . . . . . "8802"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . "262599"^^ . . "Elizabeth City County was a county in southeastern Virginia from 1634 until 1952 when it was merged into the city of Hampton. Originally created in 1634 as Elizabeth River Shire, it was one of eight shires created in the Virginia Colony by order of the King Charles I. In 1636, it was subdivided, and the portion north of the harbor of Hampton Roads became known as Elizabeth City Shire. It was renamed Elizabeth City County a short time later. The shire and county were named for Elizabeth of Bohemia, daughter of King James I, sister of Princes Henry and Charles."@en . . . "\u4F0A\u9E97\u838E\u767D\u5E02\u7E23"@zh . . . . . . . . . . . . .