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Canadian History Unit1-Jesse

Terms

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longhouse
The basic house type of northern Iroquoian peoples such as the HURON and IROQUOIS.
seigneurial system
An institutional form of land distribution and occupation established in NEW FRANCE in 1627.
totem pole
The signboard, genealogical record and memorial of Northwest Coast Indian tribes
Jacques Cartier
Navigator; Cartier led 3 voyages of exploration to the St Lawrence region beginning in 1534.
Quebec
The largest province in Canada
igloo
Igloo, or snowhouse, was a winter dwelling utilized by INUIT across the Arctic.
wigwam
an Algonquian domed or conical dwelling prevalent in the eastern half of N America. The circular framework of poles was covered with bark or reed mats.
Indian Treaties
Treaties in Canada are constitutionally recognized agreements between the Crown and aboriginal peoples.
shaman
A religious or mystical expert (male or female) who in FIRST NATIONS and INUIT societies undergoes initiation experiences in altered states of consciousness.
sun dance
An annual Plains Indian culture ceremony given at midsummer when bands and tribes congregated at a predetermined location.
kayak
A one-person closed-deck hunting craft, employed by Inuit groups
potlatch
A highly regulated event historically common to most Northwest Coast native groups
Samuel de Champlain
Cartographer, explorer, governor of New France. The major role Champlain played in the St Lawrence River area earned him the title of "father of New France
land claims
Enabled INDIANS, INUIT and MÉTIS to obtain full recognition of their rights under treaties or as the original inhabitants of what is now Canada.
Aboriginal
original or earliest known; native; indigenous
pemmican
Dried meat, usually BISON, pounded into coarse powder and mixed with an equal amount of melted fat, and occasionally saskatoon berries or other edibles.
Montcalm
Military officer at Québec City to 14 Sept 1759. Defeated by the English at the Batlle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759.
Iroquois:
term which designates a confederacy of 5 tribes originally inhabiting the northern part of New York state, consisting of the SENECA, CAYUGA, ONEIDA, ONONDAGA and MOHAWK.
travois
A device for transportation among Plains Indians, the travois consisted of 2 long poles, each lashed to the sides of the dog (and later horse) pulling it.
residential school
variety of educational institutions. Residential schools are usually considered part of the assimilative policies that the Canadian government directed at native peoples from the 1880s onward.
Inuit
Inuit simply means "people." Inuit were earlier known by Europeans as "Eskimos"
coureurs de bois
Itinerant, unlicensed fur traders of NEW FRANCE known as "wood-runners" to the English on Hudson Bay and "bush-lopers"
tipi
A conical skin-and-frame dwelling, the tipi was an easily moved yet substantial structure used by the nomadic Plains Indians.
voyageurs
An adventurer who journeyed by canoe from Montréal to the interior to trade with Indians for furs.
Indian Reserve
land set aside by treatys
canoe
Principal means of water transportation of the woodlands natives and the VOYAGEURS.
buffalo
hoofed MAMMALS of the cattle family common to the Canadian prairie
First Nations
the name used by Canada's Aboriginal or indigenous peoples, which refers to INDIAN peoples and may sometimes include the MÉTIS and INUIT.
Jean Talon
Talon was a determined, energetic and imaginative INTENDANT of New France from 1665-68 and 1669-72.
umiak
Used for moving family and possessions to seasonal hunting areas and for whaling expeditions.
epidemic
Affecting many persons at the same time, and spreading from person to person in a locality where the disease is not permanently prevalent.

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