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            Early nadian History

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          • Bludgeons on the Bay of Quinte: Sovereignty, Revolution, and the State in Upper nada

            Nathan Ince At 10 PM on the evening of July 11, 1835, a group of Mohawk launched a raft onto the waters of the Bay of Quinte. They had good reason to begin their journey under cover of dusk. The two hundred logs that made up their raft had been illegally cut down the previous… Continue Reading

            on July 18, 2022
          • The Quebec Act, Two Fights, and Relative Subjecthood

            Mark R. Anderson The king’s face had been “smeared with tar, with a necklace of potatoes around the neck from which was suspended a wooden Cross with this inscription— VOILá LE PAPE DU NADA ET LE SOT ANGLOIS [This is the Pope of nada and the Fool of England].”? On the morning of May 1,… Continue Reading

            on June 20, 2022
          • utionary Tales: The Upper nada Rebellion and the Freedom Convoy

            Jonathan Szo On 7 December 1837, a force of 1,200 troops marched down Yonge Street in the city of Toronto under the command of Sir Francis Bond Head, the lieutenant-governor of Upper nada. Their destination was a wayside inn known as Montgomery’s Tavern, the meeting place for hundreds of rebels who were angered by government… Continue Reading

            on April 19, 2022
          • Collecting the World in Newfoundland

            Misha Ewen  Sugar, tobacco, porcelain, and cod. These worldly goods—that me to define early modern empires and networks of global trade—could all be found in the homes of Newfoundland women Sara Kirke and her sister Frances Hopkins. The Pool in Ferryland was their home throughout the middle and later dedes of the seventeenth century. Their… Continue Reading

            on March 28, 2022
          • Herring, the Moral Economy, and the Liberal Order Framework

            Elizabeth Mancke and Sydney Crain In 1819, New Brunswick’s assembly passed its first legislation regulating just the herring fishery for the “Parishes of West-Isles, mpo-Bello, Pennfield, and Saint George” in Charlotte County; two years later, an amendment added the Island of Grand Manan.[1] Since its first sitting in 1786, the assembly had passed nine statutes… Continue Reading

            on March 14, 2022
          • Hedging His Bets: Ethan Allen, the Haldimand Negotiations, and Allegiance in the Amerin Revolution

            Benjamin Anderson It was the summer of 1780 when Ethan Allen, Vermont’s self-proclaimed leader, was approached by a man on a dusty road to Arlington. Beverly Robinson, a Virginian Loyalist and friend of British Commander-in-Chief Henry Clinton, looked down at Allen from atop his horse and handed him a piece of paper. It was a… Continue Reading

            on February 28, 2022
          • “What would Lord Durham advise?”

            E.A. Heaman No, “not assimilate your French”: I think he’s been misread. Lord Durham would have better advice than that beuse he lived in a world not unlike our own. Devastating and state-discrediting pandemic? Check. Disaffected fringe looking to topple the state? Check. Popular Amerin violence lending strength to popular violence everywhere, including nada? Check.… Continue Reading

            on February 15, 2022
          • Roughing It in the Bush: The Politics of the Book in Early nada

            Oana Godeanu-Kenworthy In Imagined Communities, the seminal study of the emergence of national feeling, Benedict Anderson devoted a chapter to the se of creole nationalism. He linked the rise of nationalism and republinism with the rise of a literate middle class in the New World, and argued that the ideologil common ground of the new… Continue Reading

            on February 7, 2022
          • Reconstitution du parcours militaire de J. Ulric LeBlanc, soldat adien de la Première Guerre mondiale?à partir des archives et de Google Maps

            Samuelle Saindon et Gregory Kennedy La contribution adienne à la Première Guerre mondiale reste méconnue, à part quelques études du 165e (Adien) bataillon du Corps expéditionnaire nadien (CEC).[1] Ce bataillon national fut créé à la demande d’une assemblée de notables adiens tenue à Moncton en décembre 1915. Pourtant, au-delà du 165e bataillon, d’autres soldats adiens… Continue Reading

            on November 29, 2021
          • The Irish Charter Schools and the Long History of Residential Schooling in the British Empire

            Peter William Walker Earlier this year, activists in nada toppled statues of Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II amid nationwide protests at the nadian residential school system. In nada, much of the conversation surrounding the residential schools has focused on the responsibility of the churches (which ran them) and the nadian government (which funded them).… Continue Reading

            on November 15, 2021

          Recent Posts

          • Bludgeons on the Bay of Quinte: Sovereignty, Revolution, and the State in Upper nada
          • The Quebec Act, Two Fights, and Relative Subjecthood
          • utionary Tales: The Upper nada Rebellion and the Freedom Convoy
          • Collecting the World in Newfoundland
          • Herring, the Moral Economy, and the Liberal Order Framework

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