History of the Acadians

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main article:Acadians

Acadian flag.
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Acadian flag.

The Acadians (French: Acadiens) are the descendants of the original French settlers of parts of Acadia (French: Acadie) in the northeastern region of North America comprising what is now the Canadian Maritime Provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island, Gaspé, in Québec, and parts of the American state of Maine.

In the Great Upheaval of 1755, Acadians were uprooted by the British; some of these resettled in Louisiana, where they became known as Cajuns. War between the French and the British in their colonies and in Europe is an important element in the history of the Acadians. No other factor shaped the cultural evolution of Acadians in such dominant way. A second historical element to affect development of the Acadians is a sense of abandonment by France.

Contents

[edit] Pre-settlement

By the beginning of the 16th century, European fishermen (Basque, English, French and Portuguese) had been sailing to the Grand Banks off the coast of Newfoundland where they caught cod. In 1524, Francis I, the French king sent the Italian Giovanni da Verrazzano to explore the coast of North America from Florida northwards and to seek an alternative route to the Indies.

At the time, the Malecite called the area quoddy (fertile land) and the Mi'kmaq called it algatig (place of encampment). J-C Dupont (1977) argues that Verrazzano was inspired by these names and called the land near present day New York or Pennsylvania "Arcadia", meaning a pastoral paradise. [1] Over time, this name evolved to Accadie and even Cadie to define the area of the Gulf Islands, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and much of present day Maine.

In 1534, Jacques Cartier was sent to explore this Arcadia around the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. He returned again in 1535 and explored once more the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and the Saint Lawrence River. Cartier and the French made two more expeditions, in 1541-1542 and 1542-1543. These expeditions were bitterly disappointing for the French.

European contact with northern North America returned to the pre-Cartier days: fishermen in the Grand Banks and in the gulf. Later, traders arrived with European goods to be traded with locals for furs. By the end of the late 16th century, the need for a permanent settlement for trading in furs was great.

In 1603, Henri IV, the King of France, granted Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Monts, exclusive right to colonize lands in North America between 40シ- 60シ North latitude. The King also gave de Monts a monopoly in the fur trade for these territories and named him Lieutenant General for Acadia and New France. In return, de Monts promised to bring 60 new colonists each year to what would be called l'Acadie.

[edit] First settlements

Samuel de Champlain
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Samuel de Champlain

[edit] Île-Ste-Croix and Port-Royal

Arriving in 1604 with 79 settlers, including the royal cartographer Samuel de Champlain, Jean de Biencourt de Poutrincourt et de Saint-Just, a Catholic priest Nicolas Aubry, and a Huguenot minister, de Monts and his party chose a site in the Baie Francis (present day Bay of Fundy), at the mouth of the St. Croix River which separates present day New Brunswick and Maine , on a small island named Saint Croix. Poutrincourt, perhaps the most fortunate of the group, was sent back to France that autumn by Dugua with a boatload of furs.

During that first summer, Champlain, along with a smaller party, explored the Bay of Fundy area. The day upon which Champlain sighted a mighty river emptying into the bay was June 24th, St. John The Baptist's Day, thus the name for the river (Fleuve Ste-Jean, or St. John River).

The location of the first settlement on Île-Ste-Croix was a poor choice. Water had to be rowed from the mainland. Gardens withered. Regardless, they were most likely planted too late in the season. Unlike in warmer Europe, only about 90 frost-free days could be expected. And in 1604, the first snow fell on October 6th. Dangerous ice flows prevented the French from re-stocking wood, meat, and water supplies from the mainland, and soon their resources were exhausted. Many of the settlers died from starvation, scurvy, or the cold weather.

The following spring, when the ice melted, the Passamquoddy Bay tribes brought the settlers meat which they traded for iron tools. Soon after, the surviving settlers sailed across the bay to Port-Royal (Annapolis Royal) in present day Nova Scotia.

At Port-Royal, Poutrincourt and Louis Hébert planted grain and became the first European farmers in North America. That same year, Marc Lescarbot, a lawyer by trade, established a theater, le Théâtre de Neptune which became the first theater in North America. Also, to maintain morale, the l'Ordre du Bon-Temps (the Order of Good Cheer) was established. Despite these efforts, several more men died of scurvy.

In the summer of 1607, owing to financial problems of the company in France, the settlers abandoned Port-Royal and returned to France, leaving their fort to the Mi'kmaq chief Membertou. It was not until 1610 that French colonists would return to Acadia. In the meantime, Champlain had established a colony in present day Quebec City.

[edit] Return to Port-Royal

On June 1, 1610, Jean de Biencourt de Poutrincourt et de Saint-Just arrived in Acadia with another group of settlers, including his 19-year old son Charles de Biencourt de Saint-Just, and the Huguenots Claude de Saint-Étienne de la Tour, and his 14-year old son, Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour, and another Catholic priest, named Flesch. In late June 1610, Flesch began baptizing the Micmac, including their chief, Membertou.

The ship, now captained by the young Biencourt, immediately returned to a France to secure more supplies, arrived on August 21. However, he was held up until January 1611. Biencourt was obliged to take two Jesuits with him. This was unacceptable to Poutrincourt's backers, Huguenot channel merchants. The merchants were eventually bought out.

The group which remained in Acadia the winter of 1610-1611 numbered 24, and all survived. In May 1611, Biencourt, aboard the Grace de Dieu (Grace of God), arrived in Port-Royal with the supplies and the Jesuits. In July, this time the elder Biencourt returned to France for more supplies and to trade goods. Charles de Biencourt became the governor in charge of 22 others.

In 1612, on January 23, Poutrincourt arrived from France with more supplies and another Jesuit. The Jesuit missionaries lived among the local First Nations tribes: one of them at the mouth of the St.John River.

On March 13, 1613, a crew of 48, along with horses, goats, and a year's supply of goods, set sail under the command of M. de la Saussaye. Near the end of May, this new group arrived at Port-Royal.

In the summer of 1613, the colony at Port-Royal was attacked by the English, led by Samuel Argall sailing out of Virginia. Several Acadian settlers were killed, others were taken prisoner, however, the main party had been away from the fort when Argall arrived. The fort and goods were destroyed. Poutrincourt, who had once again returned to France, arrived in Acadia on March 27, 1614 to find the settlers starving. He was forced to return to France with the surviving settlers. However, the young Biencourt and younger Charles La Tour maintained a French presence in Acadia, living amongst the Mi'kmaq.

In 1615, Charles de Biencourt succeeded his father, the baron of Poutrincourt, as governor of Acadia. Biencourt died in 1623 and was succeeded by Charles La Tour.

In 1625, La Tour married a woman from one of the tribes of the local First Nations. The family built a fort at the mouth of the Penobscot River where they traded with the local tribes. In 1626, once again the English arrived to destroy the French fort. La Tour returned to Port-Royal where Biencourt had remained.

[edit] Richelieu's influence

In the 16th century, France had been in a state of anarchy as Catholic and Huguenot armies battled one another. Late in the 16th century, the Bourbon dynasty seized the throne, enabling France to overcome these troubles. One of the leading figures in the administration of the Bourbons was Cardinal Richelieu.

Richelieu tried to initiate plans to colonize North America. In 1627, he revoked all previous French monopolies for North America and in their place, launched the Company of New France, also known as the Company of One Hundred Associates. In return for the fur trade monopoly, the company had to guarantee that two hundred migrants would emigrate per year.

Another element of Richelieu's scheme, was his desire to ensure the colonies became an exclusively Roman Catholic colony - without Protestants, Richelieu believed there would be no internal division - despite many of the original settlers and supporters being Huguenots.

In 1627, La Rochelle was the last stronghold of the Huguenots in France. During the siege that took place around this city, which he himself led, Richelieu drew up the charter for the One Hundred Associaties.

A merchant family by the name of Kirke, who had been forced out of France for their religious beliefs and now living in London, wanted to revenge the defeat of La Rochelle. Leaving England in 1628, three Kirke brothers in three boats that were given to them by Charles I, captured four boats with four hundred settlers belonging to Company of the One Hundred Associates. One of the prisoners was Claude de La Tour.

The Kirke brothers continued on to Quebec where Champlain's habitation was sacked, the area was taken for the King of England, and Champlain himself was kidnapped. It was not until the treaty of St.Germain-en-Laye in 1632 that the lands were returned to France.

In 1631, Charles La Tour had become governor of Acadia, and moved to the mouth of the St.John River and built a new fort there, where in 1635, he was formally granted a seignory.

In 1621, James I King of England had granted a charter to the Scot Sir William Alexander, Earl of Stirling to a large portion of north-eastern coast of North America to develop New Scotland (Latin: Nova Scotia). The aim of the charter was to supplant the French colony that had been established. In the late 15th century, Giovanni Caboto, an Italian explorer for the English crown had discovered the north-eastern shores of North America. The charter granted to William Alexander by James I was based on these earlier discoveries. It was not until 1629 that the Alexander group set sail. During the first winter, many of the settlers died from scurvy. By 1631, the English agreed to return Nova Scotia to the French crown and the Scottish settlement was dismantled. One Scotsman remained, married a French settler, and the name, Melanson (also Melançon), has since become an Acadian family name.

In 1632, Richelieu sent his cousin, Isaac de Razilly to Port-Royal, with the title Lieutenant-general of all of New France and governor of Acadia. With him were two men who would play a significant role in the development of Acadia: Charles de Menou d'Aulnay and Nicolas Denys. Razilly and La Tour agreed to divide control of Acadia: the former controlling all of the eastern side of Nova Scotia, the latter controlling the south-western corner of Nova Scotia and the territory along the Saint John River.

MacDonald writes about La Tour's possession at the mouth of this river: [d]own this river highway came fleets of canoes, bringing the richest fur harvest in all Acadia to Charles La Tour's storehouses: three thousand moose skins a year, uncounted beaver and otter. On this tongue of land his habitation stood, yellow-roofed, log-palisaded, its cannon commanding the river and bay (p. 183).

In 1633, merchants from Massachusetts established a trading post at Machias, Maine. La Tour attacked the post, killing two guards, taking the other three prisoners and goods with him back to Cape Sable. In 1634, a Boston merchant named Allerton who had interests in the Machias post, sailed to La Tour to demand the prisoners and goods. La Tour replied that the Machias post was in French territory and he had acted in the name of the French king. Razilly used this incident to identify the Kennebec River, near Portland, Maine, as the line at which the English must not cross.

In 1635, Razilly died a sudden death at the age of 48. His legacy was his role in promoting emigration to Acadia. His immediate successor, d'Aulnay, succeeded him. The following year, d'Aulnay married Jeanne Motin in Port-Royal, the daughter of Louis Motin, a financial backer of Razilly.

[edit] Fratricide: La Tour and D'Aulnay

With the help of the monies he acquired from the fur trade, La Tour was able to purchase power in Paris. As a result of this, he was granted co-lieutenant-governor of Acadia, along with d'Aulnay, in 1638. Unfortunately for Acadia and the colonists, a long and wasteful struggle was about to begin between these two men. In the end, the struggle between La Tour and d'Aulnay would cost hundreds of thousands of livres.

On two occasions, in 1639 and 1640, La Tour attempted to unseat d'Aulnay in Port-Royal. As a result, the French court, in 1641, annulled the charter granted to La Tour in 1631. D'Aulnay, in 1642, received an order to bring La Tour by force to Paris.

La Tour found allies in Massachusetts and on August 6th, 1643, La Tour and his paid army descended on Acadia, killing three, injuring seven others, and taking a prisoner. They killed a number of animals and looted the storehouses, of which one third went to La Tour and the rest to the Bostonians. The Capucins demanded Paris send support for d'Aulnay. D'Aulnay himself returned to France to inform the government of La Tour's treason. In the spring of 1644, the court declared La Tour outside the law.

By 1645, several hundred people were living in Port-Royal, including Capucins who had established a monastery there. Capucins were also found in Acadia, in La Hève (near present day Luneburg), Pentagoet (near Castine, Maine), and Canso (at the tip of pennisular Nova Scotia).

In 1645, d'Aulnay, with his reinforcements, attacked La Tour's fort on the St.John River. La Tour himself was in Boston. His second wife, Marie Jacquelin La Tour, defended the fort for three days. On April 17, despite losing thirty-three men, d'Aulnay succeeded in taking the fort. La Tour's men were sent to the gallows. Madame La Tour was taken prisoner and died three months later. Charles La Tour sought refuge in Quebec.

In 1647, d'Aulnay became governor-general and seigneur of Acadia by royal proclamation. However, while La Tour had been enriching himself with the fur trade, d'Aulnay had become heavily indebted to pay for the colony. On May 24, 1650, d'Aulnay's canoe capsized and he drowned. His widow, Jeanne, was left heavily indebted and with eight young children: four daughters and four sons. All four sons would later perish in French battlefields.

Creditors in France demanded payment from Madame d'Aulnay. Emmanuel LeBorgne from La Rochelle, the future governor of Acadia, claimed 260,000 livres. Others that made claims against Madame d'Aulnay included Nicolas Denys, the holder of one of the largest seigneuries in Acadia. In 1651, LeBorgne sent a confidant, le sieur de Saint-Mas, to Port-Royal to seize the fort. The Capucins tried to intervene, but the fort was pillaged.

Around this time, hearing of d'Aulnay's death, La Tour returned to Paris where he was rehabilitated and absolved of crimes against Acadia, and made governor of Acadia. He returned to Port-Royal, then to his old fort along the St.John River, and sent his lieutenant, Philippe Mius d’Entremont, to Cap-de-Sable.

Then, on February 24, 1653, La Tour, at the age of 57, and the widow of his old enemy, Jeanne Motin, married. With the exception of Denys's sieugneury, La Tour, once again, came to control Acadia. This was La Tour's third marriage and Jeanne would bear him several more children.

[edit] English Occupation (1654-1667)

In 1654, war between France and England broke out. Led by Major Robert Sedgwick, a flotilla from Boston, under orders from Cromwell, arrived in Acadia to chase the French out.

The flotilla seized La Tour’s fort, then Port-Royal.

La Tour, nevertheless, managed to find himself in England, where, with the support of John Kirke, succeeded in receiving from Cromwell a part of Acadia, along with Sir Thomas Temple. La Tour returned to Cap-de-Sable where he remained until his death in 1666 at the age of 70.

During the English occupation of Acadia, Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Louis XIV's minister forbade the Acadians from returning to France. The Treaty of Breda, signed July 31, 1667, returned Acadia to France. A year later, Marillon du Bourg would arrive to take possession of the territory for France. The son of LeBorgne, Alexandre LeBorgne, was named provisionary governor and lieutenant-general of Acadia. He married Marie Motin-La Tour, the eldest child in the marriage between La Tour and d'Aulnay's widow.

[edit] Return to French control

As a result of the English occupation, no new French families would install in Acadia between 1654 and 1670. In the spring of 1671, more than fifty colonists left La Rochelle aboard the l'Oranger. Others arrived from Canada (New France) or were retired soldiers.

During this time, a number of colonists married with the local First Nations. Some of the first to marry were Charles de Saint-Étienne de La Tour, Martin, Pierré Lejeune–Briard, Jehan Lambert, Petitpas and Guidry. The capitan, Vincent de Saint-Castin, the commander at Pentagoet, married Marie Pidikiwamiska, the daughter of an Abenakis chief.

In 1670, the new governor of Acadia, the chevalier Hubert d'Andigny, chevalier de Grandfontaine, was responsible for the first census undertaken in Acadia. The results did not include those Acadians living with local First Nations. It revealed that there were approximately sixty Acadian families with approximately 300 inhabitants in total. These inhabitants were predominantly engaged in aboiteau farming along the shores of the present day Bay of Fundy. No serious attempt was made to boost the population of Acadia. French efforts in North America were concentrated on New France.

Aboiteau farming is a labor-intensive farming method in which earthen dykes are constructed to stop high tides from inundating marshland. A wooden sluice or aboiteau (plural aboiteaux) is then built into the dyke, with swinging doors that allow for water to drain from the farmland but slams shut at high tide to prevent salt water from returning to the fields. The English in the American colonies to the south preferred another, more labor-intensive method—forest clearing. By 1683, however, the population of Port-Royal had grown to around 800 inhabitants.

[edit] English Possession

Fortress at Louisbourg
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Fortress at Louisbourg

The Acadians became British subjects when France ceded Acadia by the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, and Acadia became known as Nova Scotia ("New Scotland"). As a result of the loss of Acadia and Newfoundland, the French fortified the island of Cape Breton with the construction of a fortress at Louisbourg, beginning in 1719. When the French and Indian War began in 1754, the British government, doubting the loyalty of the newly-British Acadians, demanded that they take an oath of allegiance to the British monarch. Since the oath required renouncing a key article of the Acadians' Roman Catholic faith, most refused.

[edit] Great Upheaval

Deportation of the Acadians
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Deportation of the Acadians

An Acadian delegation arrived in Halifax in 1755 with a petition to present to the lieutenant-governor of Nova Scotia, Colonel Charles Lawrence. Lawrence demanded that they take the oath of allegiance; the petitioners refused and Lawrence had them imprisoned. Under pressure from the Province of Massachusetts Bay and the British admiral in Halifax, Lawrence ordered the mass deportation of the Acadians despite earlier cautions from British authorities against drastic action.

In what is known as the Great Expulsion (Grand Dérangement), more than 12,000 Acadians (three-fourths of the Acadian population in Nova Scotia) were expelled from the colony between 1755 and 1764. The British destroyed around 6,000 Acadian houses and dispersed the Acadians among the 13 colonies from Massachusetts to Georgia. Although there were no purposeful attempts to separate families, this did occur in the chaos of the eviction. Popular historian Tim Frink writes in the contrary that "the separation of the men from their families" indeed was purposefully planned and undertaken from the beginning of the upheaval. He adds "no effort was made to keep families together" (Frink, 1999). Members of the same family and community were sent to different colonies to impose assimilation.

The largest group of Acadians, 3,500, were sent to Poitou, France. Other groups were forcibly settled throughout North America: Quebec (2,000), Nova Scotia (1,249), Massachusetts (1,043), South Carolina (942), Maryland (810), Baie des Chaleurs (700), Connecticut (666), Pennsylvania (383), Ile Saint-Jean (300), Louisiana (300), North Carolina (280), New York (249), Georgia (185), and along the St. John River (86). Another 866 were sent to England.

Some Acadians escaped into the woods and lived with the Mi'kmaq; some bands of partisans fought the British, including a group led by Joseph Broussard, known as Beausoleil, along the Peticodiac River of New Brunswick. Some followed the coast northward, facing famine and disease. Some were recaptured, facing deportation or imprisonment at Fort Beausejour (renamed Fort Cumberland) until 1763.

The Acadians that were deported to what is now the United States were met by British colonists who treated them much like African slaves. Some Acadians became indentured servants. Massachusetts passed a law in November 1755 placing the Acadians under the custody of "justices of the peace and overseers of the poor"; Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Connecticut adopted similar laws. The Province of Virginia under Robert Dinwiddie initially agreed to resettle about one thousand Acadians that arrived in the colony but later ordered most deported to England, writing that the "French people" were "intestine enemies" that were "mudr'd and scalp'd our frontier settlers."

Other Acadians were deported to France, where many had to live in the slums of Nantes or on Belle-Isle off Brittany. The French islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon near Newfoundland became a safe harbor for many Acadian families until they were once again deported by the British in 1778 and 1793.

After the end of the Seven Years War in 1763, Acadians were allowed to return to Nova Scotia as long as they did not settle in any one area in large numbers; they were not permitted to resettle in the areas of Port Royal or Grand-Pre. Some Acadians resettled along the Nova Scotia coast and remain scattered across Nova Scotia to this day.

Many dispersed Acadians looked for other homes. Beginning in 1764, groups of Acadians began to arrive in Louisiana (which had been passed to Spanish control in 1762). They eventually became known as Cajuns.

See also:

[edit] Silent return

  • 1767 St. Pierre et Miquelon
  • 1772 census
  • 1774 Founding of Saint-Anne's church
  • American Loyalists
  • the Acadian school at Rustico and the abby Jean-Louis Beaubien
  • the Trappistines in Tracadie
  • Simon d'Entremont and Frederic Robichaud, 1836 MLAs in N.S.
  • 1846 Amand Landry, MLA in N.B.
  • 1847, Longfellow publishes Evangeline
  • 1854, Stanislaw-Francois Poirier, MLA in P.E.I
  • 1854, the seminary Saint-Thomas in Memramcook becomes the first upper level school for Acadians
  • 1859, the first history of Acadia is published in French by Edme Rameau de Saint-Pere, Acadians begin to become aware of their own existence

[edit] Acadian Renaissance

  • 1867, first Acadian newspaper, Le Moniteur Acadien (The Acadian Monitor) is published by Israel Landry
  • 1871 Common School Act prohibiting the teaching of religion in the classroom
  • 1875, the death of Louis Mailloux, 19 years old in Caraquet by government forces only stokes Acadian nationalism

1880, the Society of Saint John the Baptiste invites Francophones from all over North America to a congress in Quebec City

July 20th-21st, 1881, Acadian leaders organize the first Acadian National Convention in Memramcook, New Brunswick which had for its goal to take care of the general interests of the Acadian population. More than 5,000 Acadians participated in the convention. It was decided that August 15th, the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, would be chosen to celebrate Acadian culture. Other debates at the convention centered around education, agriculture, emigration, colonization, and newspapers, and these same issues would arise at subsequent conventions.

At the second convention, on August 15th, 1884, in Miscouche, Prince Edward Island, the Acadian flag, an anthem - Ave Maris Stella, and a motto - L'union fait la force were adopted. Issues discuss

  • 1885, John A. Macdonald nominates Pascal Poirier from Shediac as the first Acadian senator
  • Also, in that year, a second Acadian newspaper, Le Courrier des Provinces Maritimes
  • 1887, the newspaper L'Evangeline begins being published from Digby, later, in 1905, moves to Moncton
  • 1890, third Acadian convention
  • 1912, Mgr Edouard LeBlanc is the first Acadin bishop in the Maritim
  • 1917, the Conservative Aubin-Edmond Arsenault becomes the first Acadian premier of P.E.I.
  • 1920, 2nd Acadian bishop, Mgr Alexandre Chiasson in Chatham and later Bathurst
  • Also, la Societe nationale de l"Assomption undertakes a campaign to build a commemorative church in Grand-Pre
  • 1923, Pierre-Jean Veniot, becomes the first Acadian premier of N.B. but was not elected
  • 1936, the first Caisse Populaire Acadien in Petit-Rocher is founded

...

  • The committee France-Acadie is founded

[edit] Since the 1960s

Louis Robichaud, popularly known as Ti-Louis was the first elected Acadian Premier of New Brunswick from 1960 to 1970. First elected to the legislature in 1952, he became provincial Liberal leader in 1958 and led his party to victory in 1960, 1963, and 1967.

Robichaud modernized the province's hospitals and public schools and introduced a wide range of reforms in an era that became known as the quiet revolution. To carry out these reforms, Robichaud restructured the municipal tax regime, expanded the government and sought to ensure that the quality of health care, education and social services was the same across the province -- a programme he called equal opportunity, is still a buzzword in New Brunswick.

Critics accused of Robichaud's government of "robbing Peter to pay Pierre" with the assumption being that rich municipalities were Anglophone ones and poor municipalities were Francophone ones. While it was true that the wealthier municipalities were predominantly in certain English-speaking areas; areas with significantly inferior services were to be found across the province in all municipalities.

Robichaud was instrumental in the formation of New Brunswick's only French-speaking university, the Universit de Moncton in 1963, which serves the Acadian population of the Maritime provinces.

His government also passed an act in 1969 making New Brunswick officially bilingual. "'Language rights," he said when he introduced the legislation, "are more than legal rights. They are precious cultural rights, going deep into the revered past and touching the historic traditions of all our people."

1977, official opening of the Acadian Historic Village in Caraquet, New Brunswick.

Born 1929 in Bouctouche, Antonine Maillet,is an Acadian novelist, playwright, and scholar. Maillet received a BA and MA from the Universit de Moncton, followed by a Ph.D in literature in 1970 from the Universit Laval. Maillet won the 1972 Governor General's Award for Fiction for Don l'Orignal. In 1979, Maillet published P四agie-la-Charrette for which she won the prix Goncourt. Maillet's character La Sagouine (from her book of the same name) is the inspiration for Le Pays de la Sagouine in her hometown of Bouctouche.

[edit] Recent History

In 2003, at the request of Acadian representatives, a proclamation was issued in the name of Queen Elizabeth II, acting as the Canadian monarch, officially acknowledging the deportation and establishing August 15 as a day of commemoration. The day of commemoration is observed by the Government of Canada, as the successor of the British Government.

[edit] Notes

1. ^ Bona Arsenault argues that Verrazano named the place Arcadie en raison de la beaut de ses arbres (p.14) (because of the beauty of the trees). Furthermore, she adds that during Verrazano's voyage, he only made landfall for three days, therefore he would not have had enough time to learn the names of the land from the various tribes.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • Arsenault, B. (1994). Histoire des Acadiens. Gasp: Fides.
  • Dupont, Jean-Claude (1977). H屍itage d'Acadie. Montreal: ヅitions Lem斬c.
  • MacDonald, M.A. (1983). Fortunes & La Tour: The Acadian Civil War. Toronto: Methuen.
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