{"id":465,"date":"2020-11-18T14:39:18","date_gmt":"2020-11-18T19:39:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/?post_type=back-matter&#038;p=465"},"modified":"2025-05-02T16:40:16","modified_gmt":"2025-05-02T20:40:16","slug":"glossary","status":"publish","type":"back-matter","link":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/back-matter\/glossary\/","title":{"raw":"Glossary","rendered":"Glossary"},"content":{"raw":"","rendered":"<dl data-type=\"glossary\">\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-abolition-ch-7\">abolition (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Refers to putting an end to the institution of slavery. In Britain, a single piece of legislation resulted in the abolition of slavery in 1834. Abolition in Upper Canada was initiated by John Graves Simcoe in 1793.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-aboriginal-title-ch-7\">aboriginal title (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Indigenous ownership of land, territory, or other material resources.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-absentee-landlords-ch-7\">absentee landlords (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Also called\u00a0proprietors, the main landowners on Prince Edward Island, whose land was allocated to them in a lottery held in London in 1767. Few of them visited the island and few attended to the responsibilities they were given as landlords. Most, however, attempted to charge significant rents to their tenant farmers in the colony.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-absolutism-ch-3\">absolutism (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A system of government in which authority is vested in the monarch with no provision for any kind of institutional opposition.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-acadian-expulsion-ch-6\">Acadian Expulsion (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The removal of Acadians and other francophones from \u00cele Royale after 1745, and accelerating after 1755 as the British forcibly removed the larger portion of the colonist population. In French, it is called\u00a0Le Grand\u00a0D\u00e9rangement.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-african-american-slaves-ch-7\">African American slaves (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Chattel slaves, principally from Africa, who worked primarily on plantations. Slavery occurred throughout North America in both European and Indigenous communities. Some African American (as opposed to African Caribbean) slaves were later freed, depending on their role in the American Revolution.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-agricultural-revolution-ch-2\">agricultural revolution (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>In the context of the Archaic era, the development of the first farming societies in the Americas.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-anglicization-ch-7\">anglicization (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>British policy of replacing French culture \u2014 language, customs, laws, and Catholic religion \u2014 with those of Anglican\/Protestant Britain.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-anthropogenic-ch-2\">anthropogenic (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Made or modified\u00a0by humans.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-archaeological-record-ch-2\">archaeological record (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Any evidence regarding past societies and civilizations that is derived from the use of archaeological techniques and methods.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-archaic-period-ch-2\">Archaic period (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The era described by archaeologists and anthropologists as roughly 10,000 to 3000 years BP.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-archives-ch-1\">archives (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Collections of original documents, including print-based objects, like personal letters, official reports, journals, newspapers, maps, government papers, and so on. Archival collections may also include photographs, music (in a variety of forms), and textiles. Technically, your own collection of original materials is an archive, but for the purposes of history courses, archives are official repositories that may or may not be open to the public.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-aristocracy-ch-3\">aristocracy (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A privileged social class whose power is usually derived from birth, heredity, and almost exclusive ownership of land, as well as close connections with the clergy, the government, and with the Crown. As a form of government, an aristocracy is a system in which a small and wealthy elite holds power to the exclusion of others.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-attawandaron-ch-5\">Attawandaron (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An Iroquoian people located in the contact and post-contact periods in what is now southwestern Ontario. Also known as the Neutral.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-aztecs-ch-2\">Aztecs (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A Mesoamerican civilization and polity that collapsed in the early 16th century. The Aztecs developed many agricultural techniques and administrative customs that influenced societies around the Gulf of Mexico. Their influence may have spread up the Mississippi River as well.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-baby-boom-generation-ch-1\">baby boom generation (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Individuals born in the post-Depression era of c. 1939 to 1964.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-battle-of-sainte-foy-ch-6\">Battle of Sainte-Foy (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Battle on April 28, 1760, near the citadel of Quebec with the French\/Canadien forces attacking the British. General Murray repeated many of the errors Montcalm made only months before. The British survived (but not without suffering more than a thousand casualties) by hunkering in the fortress until British naval reinforcements arrived.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-before-the-common-era-bce-ch-2\">Before the Common Era (BCE) (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The time period before our current one. This term, along with CE, aligns exactly with the Christian dating system, dividing time approximately 2000 years ago.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-before-the-present-bp-ch-2\">Before the Present (BP) (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A dating system based on the use of radiocarbon dating that uses January 1, 1950, as its baseline. Therefore, 10,000 years BP equals 10,000 years before New Year\u2019s Day, 1950.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-bering-land-bridge-ch-2\">Bering land bridge (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The land form that connected Eurasia and North America between Siberia and Alaska 50,000 to 10,000 years BP. Made mostly of land that was exposed by falling sea levels, it is a possible historical route for human migration from Asia to the Americas. Also called Beringia.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-black-death-ch-3\">Black Death (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Also called simply \u201cthe plague,\u201d a highly contagious disease reckoned to have reduced the total human population by 25% and as much as half of Europe's population in the 14th century. In its aftermath, there was social and religious upheaval from China to the British Isles.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-blackfoot-confederacy-ch-5\">Blackfoot Confederacy (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Also known as the Niitsitapi, an alliance centred in the western Plains, in territory that extended from what is now southern Alberta into Montana. Consisting of the Piik\u00e1ni (Piegan), Siksika (Blackfoot), K\u00e1\u00ednawa (Kainai, Blood), Tsuut\u2019ina (Sarcee), and A\u2019aninin (Gros Ventre).<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-bourgeois-ch-6\">bourgeois (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Originally someone who lived in the town (French: <em>bourg<\/em>; German:\u00a0<em>burg<\/em>; English:\u00a0<em>borough<\/em>), typically associated with merchants, professionals, etc. By the 18th century, the bourgeoisie emerged as a distinct social class, a \u201cmiddle class.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-brewing-ch-7\">brewing (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The production of beer, like the distilling of whisky, was a means of adding value to surplus grain being grown in Upper and Lower Canada beginning in the 1780s. John Molson of Montreal was an early participant in brewing and \u2014 like many Canadians who followed in his footsteps in the liquor production trade \u2014 amassed a great fortune.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-british-north-america-ch-7\">British North America (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Term used intermittently after 1783 to describe the colonies left to Britain after the Revolution. Initially, these included Newfoundland, the Province of Quebec, Prince Edward Island, and Nova Scotia. Subsequently, the list would increase to include new colonies (Cape Breton Island and New Brunswick), a partitioned colony (Upper and Lower Canada), and \u2014 in very general terms \u2014 Rupert\u2019s Land (which was not administered by a Crown delegate). Vancouver Island and British Columbia would also be regarded as part of British North America before Confederation.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-buffalo-jump-ch-2\">buffalo jump (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A kind of site found on the Plains that is associated with highly coordinated bison hunts conducted by Indigenous communities.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-cahokia-ch-2\">Cahokia (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Thought to be the largest of the Mississippian towns\/cities. Located near present-day St. Louis, it is believed to have crested around 1050 CE and collapsed around 1350 CE.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-cajuns-ch-4\">Cajuns (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Francophone settlers in Louisiana descended mostly from Acadiens.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-capitalism-ch-9\">capitalism (ch. 9)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Capitalism is the system in which the means of production (farms, factories, etc.) are privately owned and capable of being bought and sold. It generally depends on wage labour. Capitalism is also a system of social relations based on the right of the individual to move capital to wherever it will generate the greatest benefits.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-cayuse-ch-5\">cayuse (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Regional word for \u201chorse\u201d in the Cordillera and western Plains. Derived from the Cayuse First Nation, who were responsible for significant advances in breeding in the 18th century. Another variant is cayoosh.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-censitaires-ch-4\">censitaires (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Also known as \u201chabitants,\u201d the rent-paying tenants of the seigneurs. The rent is known as the\u00a0<em>cens<\/em>.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-chateau-clique-ch-7\">Chateau Clique (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The\u00a0<em>Chateau Clique<\/em> were a highly influential cadre of economic and social leaders who fashioned themselves politically as the British (or Tory) Party in Lower Canada. Their numbers included prominent merchants like James McGill and John Molson. Their agenda included assimilation of the French Catholic population and perpetuating a hierarchical social and political order.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-chattel-slavery-ch-3\">chattel slavery (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Ownership of a human being as a piece of property.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-chemin-du-roy-ch-6\">Chemin du Roy (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The \u201cKing\u2019s Road,\u201d built in the 1730s; a major infrastructure project in its time. One of the longest continuous roads in North America, it connected seigneuries on the north shore of the St. Lawrence.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-chesapeake-affair-ch-7\">Chesapeake Affair (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A British attempt during the Napoleonic Wars to reduce American shipping to France by capturing U.S. shipping vessels and impressing (forcing) sailors into the British Navy. In 1807, the USS Chesapeake, a warship, was bombarded and captured by the HMS\u00a0Leopard; four sailors were seized and tried for desertion from the British Navy, one of whom was subsequently hanged. The Americans regarded this as an act of aggression, and the incident fomented war fever in some quarters.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-chiefdom-ch-2\">chiefdom (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A\u00a0form of organization based on a hierarchy of chiefs that followed the leader of the most important group.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-chinook-ch-5\">Chinook (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A trade dialect developed on the West Coast comprising elements from several Indigenous languages and subsequently adopting words from various European languages. Also known as chinuk wawa.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-church-of-england-ch-3\">Church of England (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The state church in England established under Henry VIII in opposition to Roman Catholicism. Also known as the Anglican Church.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-civil-rights-movement-ch-1\">civil rights movement (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>In the United States, a movement principally in support of improved legal and civil rights for Black Americans. The movement is regarded as running from 1954 to 1968. It produced other movements associated with demands for rights for other groups that have historically faced prejudice and systemic marginalization.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-clergy-reserves-ch-7\">Clergy Reserves (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Created by the Constitutional Act (1791), land parcels\u00a0set aside (one-seventh of all public lands) in Upper Canada for the use of the Church of England (a.k.a. Anglican Church). There were smaller Clergy Reserves in Lower Canada as well.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-clovis-ch-2\">Clovis (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A prehistoric Paleo-Indian culture. Named for the archaeological site in New Mexico where\u00a0it was first identified, the Clovis culture is identifiable by the kinds of projectile heads it produced.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-coastal-migration-theory-ch-2\">coastal migration theory (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An alternative to the Bering land bridge\u00a0theory that posits that the first human arrivals in the Americas arrived by sea, following the arc of the North Pacific icefield and skirting Beringia.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-code-noir-ch-4\">Code Noir (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Introduced under Louis XIV in 1685, the\u00a0<em>Code Noir<\/em> established the ground rules for slavery in the French colonies. This included a prohibition of any religion other than Catholicism, the range of discipline permissible, and the conditions required for manumission (freeing of slaves).<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-codexes-ch-2\">codexes (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Scrolls written by Aztec and\/or Mayan authors and scribes from the period both before and after the arrival of Europeans. Also known as codices.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-collectivity-ch-1\">collectivity (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A group of people who identify as part of a social body that may or may not correspond to a political unit. For example, First Nations peoples may identify collectively as First Nations, as opposed to (or perhaps in addition to) their identity as Cree or Mi\u2019kmaq. French Canadian identity very often exists independent of (and sometimes in contrast to) a larger bicultural Canadian identity.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-columbian-exchange-ch-5\">Columbian Exchange (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The traffic of goods, ideas, <em>mat\u00e9riel<\/em>, foodstuffs, technology, knowledge, and bacteria from Europe and Africa to the Americas and vice versa.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-common-era-ce-ch-2\">Common Era (CE) (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Our current time period. This term, along with BCE, aligns exactly with the Christian dating system, dividing time approximately 2000 years ago.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-common-law-ch-7\">common law (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>British code of laws dealing with property, contracts, and other civil matters.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-communaute-des-habitants-ch-4\">Communaut\u00e9 des habitants (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Worked in conjunction with the <em>Compagnie des Cent-Associ\u00e9s<\/em>\u00a0in an arrangement that sublet\u00a0the\u00a0<em>Cent-Associ\u00e9s<\/em>'\u00a0monopoly to residents in the colony of Canada. Also known as the <em>Compagnie des habitants<\/em>.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-compagnie-des-cent-associes-ch-4\">Compagnie des Cent-Associ\u00e9s (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The Company of One Hundred Associates (sometimes called the Company of New France or <em>Compagnie de la Nouvelle France<\/em>) was chartered in 1627 to operate the fur trade in Canada and Acadia and establish settlements. It followed two earlier chartered efforts, the\u00a0<em>Compagnie des Marchands<\/em>\u00a0and the\u00a0<em>Compagnie de Montmorency<\/em>.\u00a0The\u00a0<em>Compagnie des Cent-Associ\u00e9s<\/em> ceased operating in 1663.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-constitutional-act-ch-7\">Constitutional Act (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The 1791 legislation that created two colonies \u2014 Upper and Lower Canada \u2014 out of what was left of the Province of Quebec after the Treaty of Paris (1783). In Upper Canada, the British common law was applied, while the <em>Coutume de Paris<\/em>\u00a0survived in Lower Canada. Both colonies received their own administrative structures.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-contact-ch-2\">contact (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The first documented encounter between Indigenous peoples and Europeans. This is a movable date because first encounters occur in different regions at different times. The contact era for some Arctic peoples, for example, only began in the 20th century.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-coparcenary-ch-6\">coparcenary (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A system of joint inheritance of property. Compare with primogeniture.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-counting-coup-ch-2\">counting coup (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The practice, common among many Indigenous cultures, of attacking rival groups with the objective of inflicting injury, but not necessarily death, and thereby acquiring status commensurate with the humiliation meted out to the foe.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-coureurs-de-bois-ch-4\">coureurs de bois (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>In English, known as \u201crunners of the woods.\u201d The first <em>coureurs de bois<\/em> were young men dispatched by Champlain to reside among the Wendat, learn the Wyandot language, and develop an understanding of local trade protocols. Subsequently, the <em>coureurs<\/em>\u00a0were more likely to be independent or semi-independent traders seeking sources of furs among Indigenous communities across the interior of North America.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-coutume-de-paris-ch-7\">Coutume de Paris (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The\u00a0<em>Coutume de Paris<\/em> was a code of civil law developed in and for Paris and extended to New France. Addressed land ownership and use, family relations, and inheritance.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-decapitation-thesis-ch-7\">decapitation thesis (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Historical theory that explains the apparent loss of Canadien leadership in the colony after the Conquest as the result of an exodus of leading commercial, administrative, and social figures to France.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-demographic-historian-ch-1\">demographic historian (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A historian of population trends and mechanisms.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-diffusion-ch-2\">diffusion (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The transmission of ideas, practices, or beliefs from one society to another.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-disease-vector-ch-5\">disease vector (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A living agent that transfers a virus or bacteria from one host to another. Examples include people and mosquitoes.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-divine-right-of-kings-ch-3\">divine right of kings (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A doctrine based on the belief that the monarch's power is derived directly from God and not from worldly authorities like a legislature, a council of nobles, or even the Vatican.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-dorset-ch-8\">Dorset (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The Paleo-Eskimo culture that existed in the Canadian Arctic from c. 500 BCE\u20131500 CE. Succeeded by the Inuit culture.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-east-indiacompany-ch-6\">East India\u00a0Company (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Established in 1600, the largest of Britain\u2019s chartered trade monopolies. It dominated trade and was an instrument of British imperialism in Asia, as well as the model on which the Hudson\u2019s Bay Company was based.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-edict-of-nantes-ch-3\">Edict of Nantes (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A statement of relative religious tolerance in 1598 that\u00a0brought an end to the Wars of Religion in France and extended civil rights to Protestants (Huguenots).<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-embargo-act-ch-7\">Embargo Act (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Federal legislation that was passed in the United States in 1807 to effectively close off all exports to foreign ports, in an attempt to force the British and French to respect American shipping. The objective was to starve the importing nations of American goods and thus oblige them to cease preying on American shipping. The act was repealed in 1809.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-english-reformation-ch-3\">English Reformation (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Term used to describe several events connected to the English break with Catholic Rome under Henry VIII.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-environmental-history-ch-1\">environmental history (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The history of human interaction with natural and human-made settings. The environment may be a pristine one or an urban context. In some cases, it is a study of how human activity impacts the environment (and vice versa); in others, it studies the <em>idea<\/em> of the environment and how that concept changes over time.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-environmentalism-ch-1\">environmentalism (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A philosophical interpretation of human interactions with the environment. May also refer to an activist movement and critique regarding the negative impacts of those interactions.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-escheat-ch-7\">escheat (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A movement to force unimproved lands on Prince Edward Island back into the hands of the Crown. The Escheat Party made the land issue the dominant one in the colony in the 19th century.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-ethnohistory-ch-1\">ethnohistory (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A branch of academic studies that bridges anthropological and historical approaches. Ethnohistory is principally concerned with non-European societies.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-family-compact-ch-7\">Family Compact (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An association of leading individuals and families in Upper Canada devoted to the suppression of republican tendencies in the colony and perpetuating an oligarchy in government.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-father-le-loutres-war-ch-6\">Father Le Loutre\u2019s War (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Also called the Mi\u2019kmaq (or Micmac) War, a 1749\u20131755 conflict that pitted the Mi\u2019kmaq and some of the Acadian communities against the British and New England interests in Nova Scotia. Name derived from the role played by Catholic Abb\u00e9 Jean-Louis Le Loutre, a missionary who led the French, Acadian, and Wabanaki forces.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-father-rales-war-ch-6\">Father Rale\u2019s War (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Named for Father S\u00e9bastien Rale, a Catholic priest who nominally led the Wabanaki forces, this 1722\u20131725 conflict is known by several other names as well. It was provoked by New England expansion into unceded Wabanaki territory in what is now Maine and New Brunswick. The French were allied with the Wabanaki against the British and New England forces.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-feminism-ch-1\">feminism (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An analysis of power relations that posits the existence of systemic barriers to equality between humans based on gender identity. Feminism calls for a program of political and social action aimed at improving the conditions of women.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-feudalism-ch-6\">feudalism (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An economic and landholding system of social, legal, and military customs based on notions of mutual responsibility. Land ownership was typically by a manorial elite, for which a peasantry laboured. The aristocratic landowners, in turn, owed labour to the higher nobility, including the king.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-filles-du-roi-ch-4\">filles du roi (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>In English, known as \u201cthe king's daughters.\u201d Between 1663 and about 1673, this cohort of women (mostly young and many orphans) was recruited by the Crown\u2019s agents (mostly in Paris) for settlement in Canada. Their passage was paid for by the king, and they were provided with a dowry as an incentive to marriage.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-fort-astoria-ch-8\">Fort Astoria (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Established at the mouth of the Columbia River in 1811 by John Jacob Astor\u2019s Pacific Fur Company, Astoria was the first American position on the northwest coast. It was soon sold to the North West Company.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-fort-beausejour-ch-4\">Fort Beausejour (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Settlement built by the French in 1751 on the Chignecto Isthmus, which connects modern New Brunswick to Nova Scotia. This was an important land corridor connecting the Fortress of Louisbourg with Acadien settlements and Canada. The fort was also intended to support Mi'kmaq allies during war. Captured by the British in 1755, the name was changed to Fort Cumberland.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-fort-caroline-ch-3\">Fort Caroline (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Established by the French in 1564, it is reckoned to be the oldest fortified European settlement in what is now the United States.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-fort-pitt-ch-7\">Fort Pitt (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Site of modern-day Pittsburgh. Replaced the French establishment, Fort Duquesne.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-fortress-louisbourg-ch-6\">Fortress Louisbourg (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Established in 1713 as a fishing village, an important fortified centre of trade and naval activity from the 1720s on. Louisbourg was one of the largest towns in New France by the 1740s and an important asset in French efforts to harass the British in Acadia. Twice captured by the British and New Englanders, it was largely demolished in 1758.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-franchise-ch-7\">franchise (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The ability and right to vote in a democratic society. It is always arbitrarily determined and is defined as much by who it excludes as by who it includes. \u201cUniversal adult male suffrage\u201d was never achieved in British North America before Confederation, forget the extension of the franchise to women or Indigenous peoples generally.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-free-trade-ch-6\">free trade (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A philosophy of commerce that calls for limited or no tariffs and protectionism. Free trade is in stark contrast to mercantilism.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-freedmen-ch-7\">freedmen (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Slaves who were freed from slavery, either by manumission or by emancipation.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-gallican-ch-4\">Gallican (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A perspective widely held in France and its colonies from the 17th century that spiritual authority resides with the Pope, but civil authority with the monarch. Because much of what the colonial clergy attended to was essentially \u201ccivil\u201d \u2014 farming, administering the colony generally, etc. \u2014 many of the Catholic clergy looked first to Paris for leadership and not to the Vatican. This position was challenged with some finality at the First Vatican Council of 1868, at which papal infallibility was defined.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-gift-diplomacy-ch-4\">gift diplomacy (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>In the context of European-Indigenous relations, the practice of renewing \u2014 annually or otherwise regularly \u2014 diplomatic relations and alliances by providing gifts to leadership figures. It includes the practice of \u201ccovering the dead,\u201d a round of gift-giving following wartime deaths of an ally\u2019s soldiers.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-grease-trails-ch-2\">grease trails (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Trade routes that originated in the pre-contact era in what is now British Columbia. Used for transporting oolichan grease, an important Indigenous commodity.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-great-peace-of-1701-ch-5\">Great Peace of 1701 (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A treaty struck between New France and 40 Indigenous nations. The Great Peace drew to an end the long-running war between Canada and the Haudenosaunee Five Nations and what had become known in some circles as the Beaver Wars. Also known as the Great Peace of Montreal.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-great-peaceof1701-ch-6\">Great Peace\u00a0of\u00a01701 (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A treaty struck between New France and 40 Indigenous nations. The Great Peace drew to an end the long-running war between Canada and the Haudenosaunee Five Nations and what had become known in some circles as the Beaver Wars. Also known as the Great Peace of Montreal.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-guard-hairs-ch-6\">guard hairs (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The barbed outer hairs found on many mammal pelts, typically longer than the underpelt and more easily shed.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-guerrilla-ch-6\">guerrilla (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A form of warfare distinguished by the lack of structure and organization typical of formal warfare. Characterized by ambushes, small units, and lightning raids,\u00a0guerrilla\u00a0warfare aims to demoralize and wear down a larger opponent that lacks the same speed and mobility.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-gulf-stream-ch-6\">Gulf Stream (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A strong current that runs from the Caribbean along the east coast of North America, across the Atlantic, and along northwestern Europe. It accelerates sea traffic heading east to Europe and can impede vessels heading west to the Americas.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-historiography-ch-1\">historiography (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Historical writing and the study of historical writing.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-hochelaga-ch-3\">Hochelaga (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>St. Lawrence Iroquoian fortified town at or near what is now Montreal.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-home-guard-ch-8\">home guard (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Middleman cordon formed around the HBC forts by Indigenous groups that had a prior claim to the territory. Ensured that they enjoyed first access to trade goods.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-hudsons-bay-company-ch-8\">Hudson\u2019s Bay Company (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>In 1670, a monopolistic charter modelled on the East India Company that was granted to \u201cThe Governor and Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson\u2019s Bay.\u201d Also known as the HBC.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-huguenots-ch-3\">Huguenots (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>French Protestants.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-hundred-years-war-ch-3\">Hundred Years\u2019 War (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A series of conflicts running from 1337 to 1453\u00a0related to royal successions in England and France.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-hypothesis-ch-2\">hypothesis (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A suggested explanation for a historical phenomenon, event, or idea. Plural is <em>hypotheses<\/em>.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-ideology-ch-1\">ideology (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A system of ideas and values that guides one's understanding of society and the economy and may also drive political and personal agendas.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-Ile-royale-ch-4\">\u00cele Royale (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Established as a colonial site by the French in 1713, it is the location of the Fortress of Louisbourg. Captured by the British in 1755, it was renamed Cape Breton Island.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-Ile-saint-jean-ch-4\">\u00cele Saint-Jean (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Part of the French colony of Acadia, it was captured by the British in 1758 and renamed first Saint John's Island, and later Prince Edward Island.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-illicit-trade-ch-6\">illicit trade (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>In the context of mercantilism, unsanctioned trade between colonies.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-imperialism-ch-1\">imperialism (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A philosophical position that encourages the extension of one nation or empire\u2019s power over other, subject peoples. May take the form of colonization, military conquest, or a campaign of propaganda and ideas.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-indentured-servants-ch-6\">indentured servants (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An individual contracted on a multi-year, fixed-term basis to work in the colonies. Usually taken up by young men and women whose passage would be paid by their employer. At the end of the indenture, young men would typically receive a new suit. Large numbers of migrants from Britain to the Thirteen Colonies are thought to have started in indentured servitude. This system was regularly abused and, in some circumstances, was barely distinguishable from slavery.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-inquisition-ch-3\">Inquisition (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A process and an institution aimed at ensuring Catholic supremacy and religious integrity in Western Europe. In Spain, it was geared toward eliminating Muslim and Jewish influences at the end of the 15th century and was an important part of the value system carried to the Americas by the conquistadors.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-intendant-ch-4\">intendant (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Beginning in 1663, the administrative officer responsible for civil affairs in New France. The intendant\u2019s portfolio included judicial affairs, infrastructure, military preparedness, addressing issues of corruption, and colonial finances. Notionally the most powerful figure in the colony, in practice, the intendant was often rivalled by the governor.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-interdisciplinary-studies-ch-1\">interdisciplinary studies (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Academic approaches that combine traditionally separate disciplines, such as biology and history.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-intolerable-acts-ch-7\">Intolerable Acts (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A number of taxes and tariffs introduced by the British government during the Seven Years\u2019 War that targeted the American colonies in an effort to recover financial losses. Following American protests, Parliament passed more laws that gave Britain greater powers in the colonies. It also introduced the Quebec Act, which reattached the Ohio Valley and the Northwest to the Province of Quebec and enhanced the rights of the Catholic Church; both provisions were provocative in the Thirteen Colonies. Together, the Intolerable Acts catalyzed the revolutionary movement in the colonies.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-jays-treaty-ch-7\">Jay\u2019s Treaty (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A 1794 treaty that resolved several issues outstanding from the Treaty of Paris (1783). With this treaty, the Americans were keen to address the continuing British presence and role in the Ohio\/Northwest, and the British wished to secure American neutrality in the French Revolutionary Wars and clarify the boundaries with Canada.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-jesuit-order-ch-4\">Jesuit Order (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The Society of Jesus was established in 1534 and is characterized by its fierce loyalty to papal authority in all matters. Their members first arrived in Canada in 1625 to assist the Recollets in missionary work among the Indigenous population. The Jesuits played a pivotal role in French relations with Wendake (Huronia).<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-jesuit-relations-ch-4\">Jesuit Relations (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Reports from Jesuit missionaries in Canada and an important source of historical and ethnographical material on the Wendat and other First Nations. In part, the Relations served as a means to secure more funding from France. They were eventually published for a wider readership and were thus a source of revenue for the order.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-kingdom-of-the-saguenay-ch-3\">Kingdom of the Saguenay (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>According to Donnacona and other Stadaconans, a wealthy settlement north of the Laurentian Iroquois territories. Perhaps mythical, perhaps meant to distract or deceive the Europeans, the story may have legitimate roots in an oral tradition now disappeared.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-lanse-aux-meadows-ch-3\">L'Anse aux Meadows (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The Viking settlement in northern Newfoundland, established c. 1000 CE.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-lordre-de-bon-temps-ch-4\">l'Ordre de Bon Temps (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The Order of Good Cheer was suggested\u00a0by Champlain in 1606 as a means of improving morale among the residents at\u00a0Port-Royal. It is reckoned that the first meeting of the Order constitutes the first performance of European-style theatre in North America.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-late-loyalists-ch-7\">Late Loyalists (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>American immigrants who arrived in British North America in the years after the Revolution, especially in the 1790s and the first decade of the 19th century. Their \u201cloyalism\u201d was never certain, and they were often outspoken critics of Toryism.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-little-ice-age-ch-2\">little ice age (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The term given to the hemispheric downturn in average temperatures that lasted from the 1600s (or as early as the late 1200s in some locales) to the 1820s. Much of North America and northwestern Europe was affected.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-longhouse-ch-2\">longhouse (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A style of domestic building that typically accommodates an extended family and serves as a storehouse for equipment, food, and other belongings. Longhouses take many forms in Indigenous cultures in what is now Canada, use different kinds of materials, and may be fixed, movable, or something in between.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-louisiana-purchase-ch-7\">Louisiana Purchase (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The sale of the Louisiana Territory by Napoleon to the United States in 1803. In 1800, Spain returned to France the territory it had ceded to Spain in 1762, which encompassed the western half of the Mississippi drainage (that is, from New Orleans to southern Alberta and Saskatchewan). Less than three years later, France decided to forgo attempts to rebuild New France and sold the territory to the United States.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-loyalists-ch-6\">Loyalists (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>British-American colonists who were opposed to the revolutionary position struck by other colonists. At the end of the Revolution, many Loyalists joined an exodus to other parts of British America, particularly\u00a0Nova Scotia and Quebec.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-maize-ch-2\">maize (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A modified crop form of a grass known as teosinte. Commonly referred to today as \u201ccorn,\u201d maize was first developed by Mesoamerican societies.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-marchands-ch-7\">marchands (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The <em>marchands<\/em> were the Canadien merchants of Montreal, as opposed to the post-Conquest British and British American merchants who arrived to take over the fur trade.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-maritime-archaic-ch-2\">Maritime Archaic (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A variant on the Archaic tradition. Maritime Archaic cultures were found on the Atlantic coast.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-marxism-ch-1\">Marxism (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An ideology and mode of analysis associated with the 19th-century German philosopher Karl Marx. This body of theory argues that political and social relations in the past and present are determined principally by economic structures. As an ideology, it argues for changes to productive relations that will result in greater equity and the end of social class barriers.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-matriarchy-ch-2\">matriarchy (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A\u00a0political system in which authority resides with females.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-matrilineal-ch-2\">matrilineal (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Of or denoting familial relations that focus on the mother\u2019s family, with property, status, and clan affiliation being conferred through the female line.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-matrilocal-ch-2\">matrilocal (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Of or denoting a social system in which married couples reside in or in close proximity to the home(s) of the wife's family or parents.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-megafauna-ch-2\">megafauna (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Large pre-contact animals found globally whose modern descendants are considerably smaller.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-mesoamerica-ch-2\">Mesoamerica (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The cultural zone that stretches across almost all of Mexico and south through much of Central America. Some of the largest agricultural and urban civilizations in the Americas prior to contact were in Mesoamerica.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-mesoamerican-triad-ch-2\">Mesoamerican triad (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Also called the \u201cthree sisters,\u201d the crops of maize, beans, and squash, which were developed in Mesoamerica and diffused across the Americas centuries before contact.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-michilimackinac-ch-5\">Michilimackinac (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An important centre of trade in the pre- and post-contact periods, historically dominated by the Odawa and Ojibwe. Located at the narrows between Lake Huron and Lake Michigan, Michilimackinac was used as a mission centre by the Jesuits and, later, as a trading post site by the North West Company.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-middle-passage-ch-3\">Middle Passage (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Shipping lanes between Africa and the Americas on which the principal cargo was captive humans, enslaved in west Africa. Mortality rates were as high as 20% on the voyage.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-miscegnation-ch-5\">miscegnation (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Derived from the Latin verb for \u201cto mix\u201d and the noun for \u201ckind,\u201d the term that has been used for the last two centuries to describe interracial marriage or sexual relations between people of different races.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-mississippian-ch-2\">Mississippian (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An agricultural, town-centred civilization that thrived from c. 500 to 1400 CE. Located at the heart of North America and connected by the river and lakes network to lands from the Rocky Mountains to the Gasp\u00e9, the Mississippian culture had a powerful impact on the societies that followed.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-mound-builders-ch-2\">mound builders (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Hopewellian and Mississippian cultures that were notable for erecting large complexes of earthworks.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-mourning-wars-ch-2\">Mourning Wars (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Conflicts associated principally with the Haudenosaunee and impacting virtually all their neighbours. This wide-ranging series of conflicts covered much of what is now southern Ontario and the Ohio Valley. One goal was to acquire captives who would be adopted into the captor's community, so as to replace population lost to epidemics and earlier wars and raids.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-multiculturalism-ch-1\">multiculturalism (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Both the phenomenon of the relatively equitable co-existence within a community of people from distinct cultural traditions and a policy of embracing diversity. There were, therefore, multicultural communities in pre-Confederation Canada, but multiculturalism only became widely supported in the post\u2013World War II era.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-napoleonic-wars-ch-7\">Napoleonic Wars (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A series of wars involving France and much of the rest of Europe from 1803 to 1815. The War of 1812 was a chapter in the larger conflict.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-nationalschool-ch-1\">National\u00a0School (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Sometimes called Nationalist History or National History School. Refers to accounts of the past that emphasize the growth and evolution of the nation-state as the proper focus of historical studies, as opposed to social or economic relations.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-new-amsterdam-ch-6\">New Amsterdam (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The Dutch colonial settlement at the mouth of the Hudson River in what was once called New Netherland and subsequently renamed New York.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-new-caledonia-ch-8\">New Caledonia (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Technically, the north-central part of what is now mainland British Columbia, as well as an administrative centre at Fort St. James. In practice, \u201cNew Caledonia\u201d was used to refer to most, if not all, of the mainland colony.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-new-england-ch-6\">New England (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A region in the northeastern United States consisting of six states: Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, and Maine.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-new-left-ch-1\">New Left (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A political movement in the 1960s and 1970s that opposed U.S. participation in the Vietnam War and supported the civil rights movement. Influential on university campuses at mid-century, the New Left had an impact on historical and other academic studies.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-new-social-history-ch-1\">new social history (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A school of historical studies that drew attention to race, gender, and social class as defining features of historical experience. The new social history developed a view of past societies from the \u201cbottom up.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-new-spain-ch-3\">New Spain (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>From 1522 to 1821, a territory stretching, at its peak, from the north coast of South America through Central America and Mexico to California, and what is now the American Southwest. It also included Florida, which was separated from the rest of New Spain by the French possession, Louisiana.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-north-west-companynwc-ch-8\">North West Company\u00a0(NWC) (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A joint-stock fur trading company established in Montreal after the Conquest and led by British American and Scottish merchants. The principal competition to the HBC. The NWC\u2019s agents were called North Westers or Nor\u2019Westers.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-northwest-indian-war-ch-7\">Northwest Indian War (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Conflict from 1785\u20131795. Part of an ongoing attempt by the Indigenous Northwestern Confederacy to insulate the Ohio Valley and what the Americans referred to as their Northwest Territory against American invasion. Also known as Little Turtle's War. Followed Pontiac's Rebellion and anticipated Tecumseh's War.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-northwest-passage-ch-8\">northwest passage (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The water route connecting the Atlantic Ocean with the Pacific Ocean via the Arctic Ocean.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-nursery-of-the-navy-ch-6\">nursery of the navy (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The Grand Banks and other fisheries in the northwest Atlantic that were regarded by imperial powers in Europe as training grounds for sailors and recruitment grounds for their respective navies.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-oolichan-ch-2\">oolichan (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An anadromous fish prized on the West Coast for its high oil content.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-oral-history-ch-1\">oral history (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A verbal account of events in the past. This could be an account provided by a contemporary of the events described or one that is part of an oral tradition, which suggests a multi-generational account that is preserved carefully in the retelling. Oral histories are particularly important in the study of non-literate societies.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-oral-tradition-ch-2\">oral tradition (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Generally refers to an account of events that took place in earlier generations and that is transmitted by oral storytelling (as opposed to writing). Distinctions used to be drawn sharply between oral tradition and oral history, which was regarded as accounts of events within the lifetime of the teller. More recently, oral history has become equated with oral tradition and has been granted greater respect for its reliability.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-pacific-fur-company-ch-8\">Pacific Fur Company (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Fur trade venture created by New York\u2013based entrepreneur John Jacob Astor. It established Fort Astoria on the northwest coast, but lasted for less than three years in the face of increased competition in the North American fur trade. Also known as the PFC.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-paleo-indian-ch-2\">Paleo-Indian (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Term used to describe the peoples occupying parts of the Americas until about 8000 BP.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-paleolithic-ch-2\">Paleolithic (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The period associated with the concept of the \u201cStone Age,\u201d referring to human technological development before extensive use of metals. Dates vary from continent to continent and region to region.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-parliament-ch-3\">parliament (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Generally, an elective assembly of representatives engaged for the purpose of governing the whole or advising the Crown. Specifically, the English\/British elected assembly in Westminster. After 1867, this term refers as well to the Canadian elected assembly.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-pays-den-haut-ch-6\">Pays d\u2019en Haut (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A part of New France containing much of what is now Ontario, the whole of the Great Lakes, and notionally all the lands draining into them. Extended as far as the Upper Mississippi and the Missouri. Translates roughly into the \u201cupper country.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-pennsylvania-dutch-ch-7\">Pennsylvania Dutch (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>German settlers in Pennsylvania, many of whom moved to Nova Scotia shortly after the Conquest.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-petroglyphs-ch-2\">petroglyphs (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Images carved into rock.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-pictographs-ch-2\">pictographs (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Images painted onto rock and other surfaces.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-plains-of-abraham-ch-6\">Plains of Abraham (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Located near the Citadel of Quebec, it was the site of what proved to be a pivotal battle between British and French\/Canadien\/Indigenous forces in September 1759.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-planters-ch-6\">planters (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Some 2000 settlers in Nova Scotia in the period between the Acadian Expulsion and the 1780s, drawn from New England.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-polygyny-ch-5\">polygyny (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Describes a plural marriage in which two or more women\u00a0share the same husband.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-pontiac-ch-5\">Pontiac (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Also known as Obwandiyag, Pontiac (c. 1720\u20131769) was an Odawa (Ottawa) leader who launched a campaign against the British at the end of the Seven Years\u2019 War in the region around Fort Detroit.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-post-contact-ch-2\">post-contact (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The years after documented encounters between Indigenous peoples and Europeans. Post-contact typically describes a relatively short period. Although our current society is technically \u201cpost-contact,\u201d it makes little sense to use the term that way.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-potlatch-ch-2\">potlatch (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A ceremonial event mounted by most Northwest Coast peoples and many in the interior of what is now British Columbia. It involves the giving away of property at an event, typically one marking a succession, a marriage, or a death. Accumulating goods for an impressive potlatch was an important mechanism for attaining social status for the host and also redistributing wealth through a system of related villages.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-pre-contact-ch-2\">pre-contact (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The period before the first documented encounters between Indigenous peoples and Europeans. Pre-contact societies may also be proto-contact societies, depending on circumstances.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-pre-loyalist-ch-7\">pre-Loyalist (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Term for non-francophone settlers in British North America who arrived before the Loyalist migration in 1783\u20131784. Almost exclusively associated with settlers in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-presentist-fallacy-ch-1\">presentist fallacy (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The belief that the events of the past are directly responsible for conditions in the present. Presentism often ignores intervening events. It also tends to thank the past for positives (such as current freedoms) while it seldom holds the past accountable for liabilities (such as a lacklustre economy and continuing struggles over equality).<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-primary-sources-ch-1\">primary sources (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Original historical resources, such as diaries, letters, and government inquiries.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-primogeniture-ch-6\">primogeniture (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>System of inheritance that favours the eldest male offspring. Compare with coparcenary.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-protestant-reformation-ch-3\">Protestant Reformation (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Beginning c. 1517, a movement to reform the Catholic Church and many of its practices. Resulted in a split between reformers and the papacy and the rise of distinct sects, including the Church of England, the Scottish Presbyterian Church, Methodism, Puritanism, Quakerism, Lutheranism, and many others.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-proto-contact-ch-2\">proto-contact (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The period of indirect influence of Europeans on Indigenous peoples. Some of the effects of contact ran ahead of direct encounters. For example, diseases and\/or trade goods might be passed from one Indigenous community that had experienced face-to-face contact to a great many others that had not.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-province-of-quebec-ch-7\">Province of Quebec (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Created by the Royal Proclamation (1763), the province included lands from Detroit to the Gasp\u00e9 Peninsula, but removed the Ohio Valley and the west from Quebec\u2019s (Canada\u2019s) control.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-quantitative-historicaltechniques-ch-1\">quantitative historical\u00a0techniques (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Historical methods that use statistical sources rather than (or in addition to) qualitative sources like diaries and personal letters. Tax ledgers, census manuscripts, land surveys, and many kinds of church records provide enough information for us to work toward aggregate knowledge of people in the past.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-quebec-act-ch-7\">Quebec Act (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Also called the British North America Act, 1774 (not to be confused with the British North America Act of 1867), it was the legislation that restored the Ohio Valley and the northwestern <em>Pays d'en Haut<\/em> to the Province of Quebec, provided official recognition of the rights of Catholics in the colony, and restored the <em>Coutume de Paris <\/em>and the ability of the Catholic Church to collect tithes. It recognized the rights of seigneurs and irritated the Thirteen Colonies where it was seen as cheating the Appalachian colonies of their prize in the Ohio. It was grouped with the other Intolerable Acts. It is regarded as a partial cause of the American Revolution.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-quiet-revolution-ch-1\">Quiet Revolution (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A political and social phenomenon in post\u2013World War II Quebec that saw the power of the clergy and conservative elements eclipsed by a liberal-nationalist movement.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-recollets-ch-4\">Recollets (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A Franciscan order whose members were the first missionaries in New France, arriving in 1615. The Recollets are credited with the first batch of beer in New France (1620) and were responsible for recruiting the Jesuit Order into the missionary field in Canada in 1625. Expelled from New France in 1629, they returned in 1670 and served until their numbers were depleted after the Conquest.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-reconquista-ch-3\">reconquista (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Episodes of Spanish-Christian resistance to Spanish\/Moorish-Islamic control of the Iberian Peninsula, lasting from the eighth or ninth century CE and culminating in the surrender of Granada in 1492.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-regicide-ch-6\">regicide (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The murder of a king.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-revisionist-ch-1\">revisionist (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A historian who re-evaluates history and revises it based on new understandings. As a critical term, \u201crevisionist\u201d is sometimes used to describe historians who change histories for political purposes.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-royal-proclamation-ch-7\">Royal Proclamation (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The legislation passed on October 7, 1763 that created the Province of Quebec and recognized aboriginal title in the west. The Act angered American settlers because it hampered westward movement into the Ohio Valley.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-ruperts-land-ch-8\">Rupert\u2019s Land (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>According to the HBC\u2019s charter of 1670, all the lands draining into Hudson Bay. Includes northwestern Quebec, northern Ontario, most of Manitoba, some of central Saskatchewan and Alberta, as well as southeastern Nunavut.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-sapa-inca-ch-3\">Sapa Inca (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Quechua for \u201cthe only Inca,\u201d the monarch of the Inca Empire. Atahualpa was the last person to hold this title.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-second-wave-feminism-ch-1\">second-wave feminism (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Associated principally with the 1960s and 1970s, second-wave feminism focused on systemic discrimination in domestic and public environments, calling for equality for women in pay and treatment in the workplace, an end to sexism, and legislation to protect women\u2019s reproductive rights.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-secondary-sources-ch-1\">secondary sources (ch. 1)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Documents that examine primary documents and provide an interpretation. Historical studies of past events are, by definition, secondary sources.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-seigneury-ch-4\">seigneury (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The seigneurial system in New France, and especially in the colony of Canada, sought to reproduce elements of the French feudal system. Although some of the seigneurs in Canada were nobles, most were military officers and members of the clergy. Rent values were based on rates set by the Crown, not on the scarcity of land or labour. Seigneurs had to provide their tenants (<em>censitaires<\/em>, habitants) with a gristmill (the use of which was essentially taxed), and the tenants provided an annual round of labour (<em>corv\u00e9e<\/em>), which might involve road building or erecting a chapel.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-skraelingar-ch-3\">Skraelingar (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Term used by the Norse (Vikings) to describe Indigenous North American peoples they encountered between Greenland and Newfoundland. Probably applied to the Thule and the Innu in particular, and perhaps to the Beothuk as well.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-southeastern-ceremonial-complex-ch-2\">Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The religion associated with the Mississippian cultures. Many features of the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex were shared with Indigenous cultures in what is now Ontario and Quebec.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-stadacona-ch-3\">Stadacona (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The village of the St. Lawrence Iroquois at or near the current site of Quebec City.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-staple-ch-6\">staple (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A raw material or unprocessed product. Fish and furs were primary staples in the early colonial economies of New France and British America. Lumber and grain were later staple exports from New France and British North America. For the staple theory, see\u00a0Chapter 9.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-status-quo-ante-bellum-ch-6\">status quo ante bellum (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A term used in treaty-making meaning a return to how things were before the war.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-sulpicians-ch-4\">Sulpicians (ch. 4)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Operating out of the Parisian parish of Saint-Sulpice (from which their name derives), the Sulpicians were a wealthy order without a vow of poverty. This distinguished them from the more austere Jesuits and Recollets.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-sun-dance-ch-2\">sun dance (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A renewal ceremony celebrated by many\u00a0Plains peoples. It was sponsored by an individual who wished to give to his tribe or to thank or petition the supernatural through an\u00a0act of self-sacrifice for the good of the group.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-taxation-without-representation-ch-7\">taxation without representation (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A principle espoused by American colonists in the 1770s articulating the view that British law forbade the seizing of a citizen\u2019s property by the state without his consent (which could be given by an elected representative in Parliament). As the colonies had no representatives in Parliament, the colonists maintained that they could not be taxed.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-teosinte-ch-2\">teosinte (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A variety of grass that was modified into maize (also known as \u201ccorn\u201d) by Indigenous peoples of Mesoamerica.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-thule-ch-8\">Thule (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Arctic culture that evolved into Inuit culture. The Thule migrated across and occupied the Arctic mainland and islands beginning c. 1000 CE and reached Labrador and Greenland c. 1300 CE.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-tories-ch-7\">Tories (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A term associated with Loyalists in the American Revolution whose philosophical position was opposed to the Whiggish\/republican stance of Thomas Paine and the Patriots. Also a term sometimes used for British and Canadian conservatives today.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-treaty-of-aix-la-chapelle-ch-6\">Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Treaty from 1748 that concluded the War of the Austrian Succession. Restored the status quo ante bellum in North America.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-treaty-ofghent-ch-7\">Treaty of\u00a0Ghent (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Intended to end the War of 1812 between Britain and the United States. The treaty was agreed to in 1814, but not signed into law by the U.S. Senate until February 1815. The treaty restored the status quo ante bellum between British North America and the United States, which meant that Britain was removed from the American Northwest, leaving Indigenous peoples without an ally to help defend their interests.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-treaty-of-paris-1763-ch-6\">Treaty of Paris (1763) (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A 1763 treaty that ended the Seven Years\u2019 War. France ceded all of its territory east of the Mississippi (including all of Canada, Acadia, and \u00cele Royale) to Britain and granted Louisiana and lands west of the Mississippi to its ally Spain. Britain returned to France the sugar islands of Guadeloupe. France retained St. Pierre and Miquelon, along with fishing rights on the Grand Banks. Not to be confused with the 1783 Treaty of Paris.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-treaty-of-paris-1783-ch-7\">Treaty of Paris (1783) (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The 1783 treaty that ended the American Revolution (War of Independence). Not to be confused with the 1763 Treaty of Paris. Britain recognized the independence and sovereignty of the United States of America. Boundaries were established (and later disputed) between the United States and British North America. The United States was to compensate Loyalists for lost property, which never occurred. See also Jay\u2019s Treaty.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-treaty-of-ryswick-ch-6\">Treaty of Ryswick (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Treaty from 1697 that terminated the War of the League of Augsburg and restored the status quo in North America from before the war.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-treaty-of-tordesillas-ch-3\">Treaty of Tordesillas (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The division in 1494 of the Atlantic world between Portugal and Spain. Portugal acquired Brazil and acknowledged that Spain had a prior claim to the rest of the Americas.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-treaty-of-utrecht-ch-6\">Treaty of Utrecht (ch. 6)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Treaty from 1713 that ended the War of the Spanish Succession. French claims on territory in Newfoundland, on Hudson Bay, and Acadia (Nova Scotia) were ceded to Britain, except for \u00cele Royale and \u00cele Saint-Jean.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-triangular-trade-ch-3\">triangular trade (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Commercial traffic beginning with goods from northwestern Europe traded into ports along the west African coast for slaves, ivory, and other commodities, which were then shipped across the Atlantic (the Middle Passage) to colonies in the Americas, where they were traded for plantation products, which were subsequently ferried north and east back to northwestern Europe.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-united-empire-loyalist-ch-7\">United Empire Loyalist (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>An honorific title taken by Loyalists and their descendants to celebrate their migration to British North America at the end of the Revolution. Typically signals a strong Tory bent.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-vinland-ch-3\">Vinland (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The name given by the Norse (Vikings) to the east coast of North America.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-virgin-soil-epidemic-ch-5\">virgin soil epidemic (ch. 5)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Attributed to the anthropologist\/historian Alfred Crosby, the term describing a situation in which a disease, bacteria, or virus discovers a population with no natural immunity arising from previous encounters with it. Very high mortalities are a typical consequence.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-voyageurs-ch-8\">voyageurs (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>Members of the fur trade whose principal task was to move furs, people, and materials across great distances. Some voyageurs were also traders. Also called trip men.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-war-hawks-ch-7\">War Hawks (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>American politicians mainly from the South and the West who were angered by British predations on American shipping out of their ports and harassment of American settlers and regiments by British-Indigenous armies. In 1812, their enthusiasm for war finally won out over New England's caution.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-wars-of-religion-ch-3\">Wars of Religion (ch. 3)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A series of wars fought in Europe arising ostensibly from divisions within Christianity. The French Wars of Religion (1562\u20131598) distracted the Crown from transatlantic enterprises.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-whig-ch-7\">Whig (ch. 7)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A mutable term associated with the British Whigs (a radical\/liberal political party), the American Patriots\/Whigs (revolutionaries in 1775\u20131783), and 19th century Canadian liberals. Common features include a challenge to the prerogatives of the Crown, a suspicion of Catholicism, and belief in individual rights and liberties. In the American colonies, it developed into a form of republicanism.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-winter-count-ch-2\">winter count (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>A record of events recorded in the form of pictures; associated mainly with Siouan cultures.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-wintering-partners-ch-8\">wintering partners (ch. 8)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The prominent NWC employees who spent the year in the West. As part of the decision-making process, they would meet annually with the Montreal agents at Fort William, where company-wide plans would be made in council. Also called\u00a0<em>hivernants<\/em>.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<dt data-type=\"glossterm\"><dfn id=\"dfn-woodland-period-ch-2\">Woodland period (ch. 2)<\/dfn><\/dt>\n<dd data-type=\"glossdef\">\n<p>The era described by archaeologists and anthropologists as roughly 1000 BCE to 1000 CE.<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n<\/dl>\n","protected":false},"author":124,"menu_order":4,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"back-matter-type":[37],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-465","back-matter","type-back-matter","status-publish","hentry","back-matter-type-glossary"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/back-matter\/465","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/back-matter"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/back-matter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/124"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/back-matter\/465\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":467,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/back-matter\/465\/revisions\/467"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/back-matter\/465\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=465"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"back-matter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/back-matter-type?post=465"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=465"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/preconfederation2e\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=465"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}