Index of Mauritius-related articles

Last updated

The following is an index of Mauritius-related topics by alphabetical order. For a list by topic, see list of Mauritius-related topics

Contents

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1-9

1

114 (number) - 115 (number)

2

2009 Mauritian Cup final - 2009–10 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season - 2010 Mauritian Cup final - 2010 Mauritian League - 2010 Republic Cup final - 2010–11 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season - 2011 Mauritian League - 2011–12 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season - 2021 in Mauritius - 2022 in Mauritius - 20th parallel south - 230 (number)

4

5

59th (2nd Nottinghamshire) Regiment of Foot

7

8

9

999 (emergency telephone number)

A

A Voyage to Terra Australis - Aapravasi Ghat - Abdool Razack Mohamed - Abel Tasman - Aboobakar Augustin - Abraham Momber van de Velde - Abricta - Abu Kasenally - Acacia floribunda - Acanthophoenix rubra - Achaea umbrigera - Acrocercops macrochalca - Actaeon - Additional Mathematics in Mauritius - Adriaan van der Stel - Adrien d'Épinay - AfrAsia Bank - African and Malagasy Union - African currency - African Economic Community - African French - African Nuclear Weapon Free Zone Treaty - African Peer Review Mechanism - African people - African Securities Exchanges Association - African Tax Administration Forum - African Telecommunications Union - African tourism by country - African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States - Africanogyrus rodriguezensis - Africa's Special Economic Zones - AfriNIC - Agalega Islands - Aganais borbonica - Ages of consent in Africa - Agonostomus telfairii - Agriocnemis exilis - Air Mauritius - Air Mauritius destinations - Airline codes-I - Ajay Daby - Akash Choolun - Alan Rogers (bishop) - Albin Roussin - Albizia vaughanii - Alessandro Cevese - Alfred Potiquet - Alix D'Unienville - Alliance of Small Island States - Alliance of the Future - Alliance Sociale - Alloblennius anuchalis - Allyson Jolicoeur - Almondo Fricain - Amateur radio call signs of Africa - Ambroise Louis Garneray - Amédée Maingard - Anaïs Veerapatren - Anchor coinage - Ancylosis - Andy Sophie - Anerood Jugnauth - Angidi Chettiar - Anglican Diocese of Saldanha Bay - Anglo-Dutch Java War - Angraecum cadetii - Anil Bachoo - Anil Gayan - Anisomeles malabarica - Anna Brassey, Baroness Brassey - Anne Antoine, Comte d'Aché - Anne Joseph Hippolyte de Maurès, Comte de Malartic - Annuaires Afrique - Anomaly (Primeval) - Anse aux Anglais - Anthony Delpech - Anthony van Diemen - Anund Neewoor - Aphanapteryx - Apollo 11 goodwill messages - Apollo Hospitals - Apostolic Vicariate of Rodrigues - Appleby Spurling Hunter - Arassen Ragaven - Argiocnemis solitaria - Argyrogramma signata - Arild Eik - Ariranga Pillay - Ark on the Move (TV series) - Arnaud Casquette - Arnhem (ship) - Arsenal Wanderers - Arthur Hamilton-Gordon, 1st Baron Stanmore - Arthur Havelock - Arthur Purves Phayre - Arvin Boolell - Arya Samaj in Mauritius - AS de Vacoas-Phoenix - AS Port-Louis 2000 - AS Quatre Bornes - AS Rivière du Rempart - Ashik Punchoo - Ashley Lemince - Ashok Chundunsing - Ashok Jugnauth - Asplenium daucifolium - Association of International Accountants - Astelia - Auguste Toussaint

B

- B4U (network) - B4U Movies - B4U Music - Babla & Kanchan - Badula crassa - Badula platyphylla - Badula reticulata - Baie aux Huîtres - Baie-du-Tombeau - Bambous, Mauritius - Banaras (2006 film) - Bango (music) - Bank of Baroda - Bank of Mauritius - Bank of Mauritius Tower - Banque Française Commerciale Océan Indien - Barclays Bank Mauritius - Bareback shovelnose ray - Barleria observatrix - Battle of Grand Port - Battle of Porto Praya - Battle of Tamatave - Beau-Bassin Rose-Hill - Bede Edmund Hugh Clifford - Begonia salaziensis - Bel Air Rivière Sèche - Bel Ombre, Mauritius - Bénarès - Benoit Bouchet - Bertrand-François Mahé de La Bourdonnais - Bhojpuri language - Big C Vietnam - Bihari cuisine - Bihari Mauritian - Bihari people - Billy Jacobson - Bindi (decoration) - Birla Institute of Technology, Mesra - Bishop of Mauritius - Black River District - Black River Gorges National Park - Blue Penny Museum - Blue pigeon - Blue-tailed day gecko - Bobre - Bojer's skink - Bollywood - Bolyeriidae - Borbo borbonica - Bornetella nitida - Le Morne Brabant - Brenthia leptocosma - British Colonial Auxiliary Forces - British Empire - British Indian Ocean Territory - British undergraduate degree classification - Broad-billed parrot - Broadsheet - Brownea coccinea - Brown-marbled grouper - Bruno Julie - Bruno Ravina - BS 7671 - Bulinus cernicus - Bullia mauritiana

C

C. typica - HMS Mauritius (C80) - Cabinet of Ministers of Mauritius- Cabrera - Caesalpinia decapetala - Caldwellia imperfecta - Caldwellia philyrina - Caleb Francis - Callicercops triceros - Calodyne - Canarium - Canarium paniculatum- Cancilla praestantissima - Cape canary - Cape Malheureux- Capture of Belle Île - Cargados Carajos - Carl Hilsenberg- Casearia - Casearia mauritiana - Casearia tinifolia - Cassam Moollan - Cassam Uteem - Cassis- Cassiya - Cathay Pacific destinations - Catovair- Caudan Waterfront - Cecil Cherrington - Cédric Permal- Censorship of Facebook - Census - Central banks and currencies of Africa - Centre de Flacq - Cephalopholis boenak - Cephonodes apus- Cephonodes trochilus - Cereus Blooms at Night - Ceriagrion glabrum - Ceridian - Cesar B. Cabrera - César Benito Cabrera- Chagos Archipelago - Chagossian Creole - Chagossians- Chamarel - Champ de Mars - Champ de Mars Racecourse- Charles Allix Lavington Yate - Charles Bruce (governor) - Charles Cavendish Boyle - Charles Colville - Charles Content - Charles E. Johnson (businessman) - Charles John Irving - Charles Lees (colonial administrator) - Charles Marsh Schomberg - Charles Mathieu Isidore Decaen - Charles Robert Malden - Charles Swanston- Charles Telfair - Charles William Barkley - Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard - Château of Réduit - Chettiar - Cheval tree - Camille Charles Leclerc, Chevalier de Fresne - Chhath - Chief Commissioner - Chief executive (gubernatorial) - Chikungunya outbreaks - Chinatowns in Africa - Choreutis ialeura - Choreutis ialeura - Choreutis turilega - Chris Hackel - Christianity in Mauritius - Christopher Bazerque - Christopher Ironside - Christopher Perle - Chrysoblephus laticeps - Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean - Clarisse - Clathrus mauritianus - Claude de Baissac - Cliff L'Aimable - Clifford Lincoln- Clothing in Mauritius - Coat of arms of Mauritius - Coelonia solani - Coenagriocnemis insulare - Coëtivy Island - Colin Bell (footballer born 1979) - Collège du Saint-Esprit - Coloured - Colparion madgei - Colvillea - Colvillea racemosa - Combined Joint Task Force – Horn of Africa - Commander-in-chief - Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa - Commonwealth banknote-issuing institutions - Commonwealth Broadcasting Association - Commonwealth citizen - Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2009 - Commonwealth Judo Championships - Commonwealth Pool Lifesaving Championships - Community of Portuguese Language Countries - Compendium of postage stamp issuers (Ma – Md) - Confederation of African Football - Confederation of African Tennis - Constituencies of Mauritius - Conus aulicus - Convention on Fishing and Conservation of Living Resources of the High Seas - Conyers Dill & Pearman - Coracina - Cordemoya integrifolia - Cornelis Matelief de Jonge - Cornelius Gooyer - Corporate Registers Forum - Corps de Garde - Corruption in Mauritius - COSAFA Senior Challenge Cup - Cottage Industries Exposition Limited - Court piece - Crown Colony class cruiser - Cryptopus - Cryptostegia grandiflora - Ctenoglypta newtoni - Ctenophila caldwelli - Cuisine of Mauritius - Culture of the Indian Ocean Islands - Culture of Mauritius - Curepipe Botanic Gardens - Curepipe- Curepipe Starlight SC - Currencies of the British West Indies - Cyclone Elita - Cyclone Gamede - Cyclone Hollanda - Cyclone Hondo - Cyligramma limacina - Cylindraspis - Cylindrocline commersonii - Cylindrocline lorencei - Cyril Golding-Bird - Cyril Mourgine

D

Drugs in Mauritius

E

F

Financial Services Commission (Mauritius) - Flic en Flac - Fond du Sac

G

Ganga Talao - Geography of Mauritius - Grand Baie - Grand Gaube - Grande Rivière Sud Est - Grande Rivière Noire - Guttural toad

H

Hawkins Bank - History of Mauritius - History of rail transport in Mauritius

I

Île aux Cerfs - Île de la Passe - Île Plate - Independent Commission Against Corruption (Mauritius) - Islets of Mauritius

J

K

L

Le Morne - Le Morne Brabant - LGBT rights in Mauritius - List of cities, towns and villages in Mauritius - List of people on stamps of Mauritius - List of rivers of Mauritius

M

Mahébourg - Mapou - Mare aux Vacoas - Mauritius at the Olympics - Mauritius at the 1984 Summer Olympics - Mauritius at the 1988 Summer Olympics - Mauritius at the 1992 Summer Olympics - Mauritius at the 1996 Summer Olympics - Mauritius at the 2000 Summer Olympics - Mauritius at the 2004 Summer Olympics - Mauritius at the 2008 Summer Olympics - Mauritius Bank - Mauritius Commercial Bank - Mauritius Post - Mauritius "Post Office" stamps - Midlands, Mauritius - Ministry of Tourism (Mauritius) - Moka - Mont Malartic - Montagne Cocotte

N

Nepalis in Mauritius

O

Open University of Mauritius

P

Petit Bel Air - Pieter Both (mountain) - Piton de la Petite Rivière Noire - Port Louis - Port Mathurin - Postage stamps and postal history of Mauritius

Q

Quartier Militaire - Quatre Bornes

R

Réduit (Mauritius) - Revenue stamps of Mauritius - Rivière des Créoles - Rivière du Rempart (river) - Rivière Tamarin - Rivière du Tombeau - Rodrigues - Rose-Belle - Rose-Hill, Mauritius - Round Island

S

Saya de Malha Bank - Souillac, Mauritius - Soudan Banks - St. Pierre, Mauritius - Statistics Mauritius

T

Tamarin, Mauritius - Tamarind Falls - Triolet, Mauritius - Trou aux Biches - Trou aux Cerfs

U

V

Vacoas-Phoenix - Vingt-Cinq

W

X

Y

Z

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Transport in Mauritius</span>

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Port Louis is the capital city of Mauritius. It is mainly located in the Port Louis District, with a small western part in the Black River District. Port Louis is the country's economic, cultural and political centre, and most populous city. It is administered by the Municipal City Council of Port Louis. According to the 2012 census conducted by Statistics Mauritius, the population was 147,066.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rodrigues</span> Autonomous outer island in Mauritius

Rodrigues is a 108 km2 (42 sq mi) autonomous outer island of the Republic of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, about 560 km (350 mi) east of Mauritius. It is part of the Mascarene Islands, which include Mauritius and Réunion. Rodrigues is of volcanic origin and is surrounded by coral reef, and some tiny uninhabited islands lie just off its coast. The island used to be the tenth District of Mauritius; it gained autonomous status on 10 December 2002, and it is governed by the Rodrigues Regional Assembly. The capital of the island is Port Mathurin. The islands of Rodrigues, Agaléga and Saint Brandon form part of the larger territory of the Republic of Mauritius.

The Districts of the Republic of Mauritius are the second-level administrative divisions after the Outer Islands of Mauritius.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pamplemousses District</span> District in Mauritius

Pamplemousses is a district of Mauritius, located in the north west of the island, and is one of the most densely populated parts of the island. The name of the district comes from the French word for grapefruits. The district has an area of 178.7 km2 and the population estimate was at 139,966 as of 31 December 2015.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Plaines Wilhems District</span> District in Mauritius

Plaines Wilhems is a district of Mauritius. It is the most populous district, with its population estimated at 366,506 as the end of 2018. The district is mainly urban; it consists of four towns, the village of Midlands and part of two other villages. The Plaines Wilhems district does not have a District Council; it has four Municipal Town Councils. The towns are Beau-Bassin Rose-Hill, Curepipe, Quatre Bornes and Vacoas-Phoenix. The villages are Midlands, Cascavelle and Moka. The district was named after Wilhem Leicknig. Of Prussian origin, he settled on the island of Mauritius, then known as Isle de France, in 1721.

Mauritian Premier League is the top division of football in Mauritius, governed by the Mauritius Football Association since its establishment in 1935.

The Mauritian Cup is the top knockout tournament of the Mauritian football. It was created in 1957 by the Mauritius Football Association.

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The wildlife of Mauritius consists of its flora and fauna. Mauritius is located in the Indian Ocean to the east of Madagascar. Due to its isolation, it has a relatively low diversity of wildlife; however, a high proportion of these are endemic species occurring nowhere else in the world. Many of these are now threatened with extinction because of human activities including habitat destruction and the introduction of non-native species. Some have already become extinct, most famously the dodo which disappeared in the 17th century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Outline of Mauritius</span> Overview of and topical guide to Mauritius

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Mauritius:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of rail transport in Mauritius</span> Aspect of history

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Constituencies of Mauritius</span>

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The Mauritian Republic Cup is an annual Mauritian football competition created by the Mauritius Football Association in 1990. It usually takes place in the summer of each year. Along with the MFA Cup, it serves as a major cup competition for teams in the top flight of Mauritian football, the Mauritian League.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mauritian Creole</span> French-based creole language spoken in Mauritius

Mauritian Creole or Morisien is a French-based creole language spoken in Mauritius. English words are included in the standardized version of the language. In addition, the slaves and indentured servants from cultures in Africa and Asia left a diverse legacy of language in the country. The words spoken by these groups are also incorporated into contemporary Morisien.

The growing of sugar cane has been the dominant industry of Mauritius for most of its inhabited period, until recent decades. The island was uninhabited when first settled with a small base by the Portuguese in 1507. Sugar was introduced on a small scale during the period of Dutch Mauritius (1638–1710), when some slaves were imported to work this and other crops. After about 1735, during the period of French Mauritius (1715–1810), under the French East India Company, the industry developed considerably. In 1735 there were 638 slaves in a population of 838 inhabitants. Thereafter, some 1,200 to 1,300 slaves arrived annually; within five years the number of slaves had quadrupled to 2,612 and the number of French had doubled.

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References