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Canterbury and New
However, when observing the native bees in the Canterbury province in the South Island, the scientists were astonished to see the bees biting the top off the buds, then pushing with their legs, occasionally popping open the buds to allow the bees to harvest the nectar and pollen, and therefore aid in the pollination of the mistletoe which is in decline in New Zealand.
* Canterbury, New South Wales, a suburb of Sydney
** Electoral district of Canterbury, an electoral district in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
* City of Canterbury, New South Wales, a local government area of Sydney
* Canterbury Region, a region in the South Island of New Zealand
* Canterbury Province, a former province of New Zealand
* Canterbury, New Hampshire, a town in New Hampshire
* University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
* Canterbury of New Zealand, a New Zealand-based sports apparel company
* HMNZS Canterbury ( F421 ), a decommissioned New Zealand Navy frigate
* HMNZS Canterbury ( L421 ), a multi-role vessel in the New Zealand Navy
* Lake Coleridge, a lake located in Canterbury, New Zealand
* Coleridge ( New Zealand electorate ), a former South Canterbury, New Zealand parliamentary electorate
* Canterbury of New Zealand, a New Zealand-based sports apparel company
* 1850 – History of New Zealand: The Charlotte-Jane and the Randolph bring the first of the Canterbury Pilgrims to Lyttelton, New Zealand.
The first few chapters of the novel, dealing with the discovery of Erewhon, are in fact based on Butler's own experiences in New Zealand where, as a young man, he worked as a sheep farmer on Mesopotamia Station for about four years ( 1860 – 1864 ) and explored parts of the interior of the South Island of which he wrote about in his A First Year in Canterbury Settlement ( 1863 ).
* John Evans Brown ( 1827 – 1895 ), Canterbury ( New Zealand ) politician, known as " Yankee Brown "
* Honorary Doctorate, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand

Canterbury and Brunswick
On July 7, 2011, Richard Oland's body was found near his Canterbury Street office in Saint John, New Brunswick.
This line joined the SA & Q line ( by now part of the New Brunswick Railway ) in City Camp ; as a result City Camp was renamed to McAdam Junction after John McAdam a prominent lumberman and politician, who had numerous land grants in the Canterbury and Dumfries parishes at that time.
Canterbury ( 2011 population: 331 ) is a village in York County, in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.
The closest rail connection to Quebec from the Atlantic coast in the 1860s was the New Brunswick and Canada Railway line extending from the port of St. Andrews through Canterbury to the end of rails in nearby Richmond Corner.
The New Brunswick and Canada Railway extended the former St. Andrews and Quebec Railway line to Canterbury in 1859, placing Canterbury roughly halfway between Woodstock to the north and McAdam to the south.
In 1890, the New Brunswick Railway was purchased by the Canadian Pacific Railway, which operated the line through Canterbury to serve its rail network in the upper Saint John River valley until rail service was abandoned in the early 1990s.

Canterbury and village
The Canterbury, New Hampshire, Shaker village was operating as a historic site even before its last member, Ethel Hudson, died in September 1992.
* Dunkirk, Kent, a village between Faversham and Canterbury
The two were married in 1638 and Aphra, or Eaffry, was baptized on 14 December 1640 in Harbledown, a village just outside Canterbury.
* Denton, Kent, a village near Canterbury
The village is situated to the west of Ramsgate and to the north east of Canterbury ; it lies just south west of Kent International Airport and just north of the River Stour.
Minster railway station lies to the south of the village, on the line from Canterbury West to Ramsgate and on the junction to the Kent Coast Line.
More recently Stagecoach have implemented a service ( No11 ) to Canterbury and Ramsgate via the village.
The institutional evidence for Kent's uniqueness was marshaled by J. E. A. Jolliffe, who instanced the hamlet of free peasant cultivators, not the nucleated village, the inheritance pattern of kindred's common right called gavelkind, and the dominant landscape pattern of the uniquely Kentish lathes, each with its share in the forested Weald, four lathes of East Kent centred on Wye, Canterbury, Lympne and Eastry, and three in West Kent, administered from Rochester.
* Mayfield, Canterbury, a village in Canterbury
It is likely that the town originates from an original settlement established in 893 AD by inhabitants escaping a Danish Viking raid on the nearby ancient village of Great Chart ( Seleberhtes Cert in 762AD ), although a Roman road passed through here from the iron making area to Canterbury.
The oldest building in the village is the Anglican church, Saint Thomas of Canterbury.
At 10: 00 the attack from the north was led by the Auckland Mounted Rifle Regiment supported by two machine guns while the Canterbury Mounted Rifle Regiment on their right rode towards Rafa where they quickly captured the village along with six German and two Ottoman officers, 16 other ranks and 21 Bedouins.
Hayville Village, located on Elgar Road, near the intersection of Canterbury Road, is a retirement village, operated by TriCare.
The ancient Pilgrims ' Way from Winchester to Canterbury passes through the village.
Some claim that the author of The Pilgrim's Progress, John Bunyan, once lived in the village and drew his inspiration from the fair, and from the ancient route known as the Pilgrims ' Way, which passes nearby, on its way to Canterbury.
Reculver is a village and coastal resort about east of Herne Bay in south-east England, in a ward of the same name, in the City of Canterbury district of Kent.
Most modern-day pilgrims would wish to follow Sigeric's documented route in the reverse order, i. e. from Canterbury to Rome, and so would journey from Canterbury to the English coast before crossing the Channel to Sumeran ( now called Sombres ) landing at the point where the seaside village of Wissant now lies.
The village is sited on the Pilgrims ' Way from London to Canterbury, and is one day's walk from Canterbury.
Sturry is a village on the Great Stour river three miles north-east of Canterbury in Kent.
A 16th Century manor house and oasthouse, built in 1583 and which belonged to St Augustine's Abbey in Canterbury still stand in Sturry village beside the medieval tithe barn-although they have all been incorporated into the King School after they were sold by the widow of Lord Milner in 1925.
Since the 1960s a large number of satellite housing estates have been built on the north side of the village, mostly in former woodland, which have turned Sturry into one of the major dormitary villages for Canterbury.

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