J'ai trouvé, il n'y avait que 9 point-virgules à la fin des entrées dans text.csv. Il en faut 10...
C'est tout ce bloc qui ne va pas :
EVENTNAME170074;L'encyclopédie;;;;;;;;;;
EVENTHIST170074;Encyclopedias date back to 2nd-century Rome. But Ephraim Chambers's English encyclopedia broke new ground in 1728. Its title, typical of the time, sounds more like a table of contents: 'Cyclopaedia: or a Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences, Containing an Explication of the Terms ... in the Several Arts, both Liberal and Mechanical ... etc., etc. ... '.\n The new idea here is mechanical arts. Earlier encylopedias were never that down-to-earth. The French arranged to publish Chambers's encyclopedia in 1745.\n But, after a fight with the English translator, they decided to develop a greatly expanded French version instead. By 1747, Denis Diderot had assumed leadership of the project -- except for mathematical parts, which were handled by the mathematician d'Alembert.\n Diderot added real fire to the project. He was briefly jailed in 1749 for his liberal views, and when the first two volumes were published in 1751, he was attacked by Jesuit authorities.\n The problem was that Diderot and the other writers were rationalists. The work was now titled Encyclopedia, or a Systematic Dictionary of Science, Arts, and the Trades, and it was on its way to becoming a 28-volume treatise on human affairs.\n The Dictionnaire, as it was called, laid bare the workings of the known world in a way no one had ever tried to do. It boldly told the average man that he could know what only kings, emperors, and their lieutenants were supposed to know.\n It suggested that anyone should have access to rational truth. In that sense it was a profoundly revolutionary document.;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170074A;All the knowledges are gather together !;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170074B;Persecute these modernists;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170074C;Reform the kingdom;;;;;;;;;;
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EVENTNAME170075;Michel Eyquem de Montaigne;;;;;;;;;;
EVENTHIST170075;Montaigne is a great French Renaissance thinker who took himself as the great object of study in his Essays. In studying himself Montaigne is studying mankind. He attempted to weigh or 'assay' his nature, habits, his own opinions and those of others. He is searching for truth by reflecting on his readings, his travels as well as his experiences both public and private.\n The Renaissance was also a period of expanding horizons, and one in which there was a vast increase in knowledge of the world and its inhabitants. At the same time Europeans were recovering Latin culture and a much more complete grasp of Greek literature, Science was developing.\n New horizons made previous truths seem wrong or parochial. These discoveries provided Montaigne and other skeptics with a treasure chest of new facts which they used to increase our sense of relativity of all man's beliefs about himself and the world in which he lives.;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170075A;Publication of his 'Essais';;;;;;;;;;
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EVENTNAME170076;Jean Talon;;;;;;;;;;
EVENTHIST170076;In 1665 Jean Talon (1625-1694) arrived in New France as the colony's first Intendant. He soon proved himself to be an a resourceful and engergetic administrator and he attempted to diversify the colony's economy by encouraging agriculture, fishing, lumbering, and industry as well as the traditional fur trade. In 1666, he conducted the first census in North America.;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170076A;Appoint Jean Talon;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170076B;Appoint a noble;;;;;;;;;;
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EVENTNAME170077;A great governor;;;;;;;;;;
EVENTHIST170077;While Talon, New France first Intendant, succeeded in settling some two thousand people in the colony, many of the industries he initiated failed when he returned to France, mainly due to a lack of proper funding from France.;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170077A;Make a reasonable effort;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170077B;Make a big effort;;;;;;;;;;
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EVENTNAME170078;Denonville's Parley;;;;;;;;;;
EVENTHIST170078;In the Winter of 1687, Jacques-René de Brisay, Marquis de Denonville, and Governor of New France instructed the Intendant of New France, Jean Bochart de Champigny, sieur de Noroy de Verneuil to hold a grand festival at Fort Frontenac as a peace parley for the Iroquois who had been in a state of hostility to outright war since the days of Champlain. On the day of of the festival in June 1688 de Denonville arrived with 1600 armed troops and seized 1600 men, women and children along with the Mohawk Chief Orcanoue and brought them back to Quebec in chains. This treachery by the French outraged the Iroquois Confederacy who would go begin a new campaign to drive the French out of North America culminating at the Massacre of Lachine.;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170078A;Seize them;;;;;;;;;;
ACTIONNAME170078B;We need peace;;;;;;;;;;
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ACTIONNAME170079A;We trust him;;;;;;;;;;
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