The MétisPosted in Anthropology, Canada, History, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Native Americans/First Nation, Reports on 2012-10-10 04:29Z by Steven |
Métis National Council
Ottowa, Ontario, Canada
2011
Prior to Canada’s crystallization as a nation in west central North America, the Métis people emerged out of the relations of Indian women and European men. While the initial offspring of these Indian and European unions were individuals who possessed mixed ancestry, the gradual establishment of distinct Métis communities, outside of Indian and European cultures and settlements, as well as, the subsequent intermarriages between Métis women and Métis men, resulted in the genesis of a new Aboriginal people—the Métis.
Distinct Métis communities emerged, as an outgrowth of the fur trade, along part of the freighting waterways and Great Lakes of Ontario, throughout the Northwest and as far north as the McKenzie river…
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