yes, most of them did end up returning to Acadia.
The deportation of the Acadians really hasn't ended yet, and maybe it never will. Each year, descendants of the deported Acadians return on a pilgrimage to Acadia, from all over North America, in search of their roots.
because of the great upheavel
They created Acadia.
To France as a whole group
The Acadians were primarily of French descent, coming from the French colony of Acadia in present-day Canada. They spoke a distinct dialect known as Acadian French.
Despite Great Britain's taking of Acadia in 1710, it remained a Catholic settlement. The Acadians refused to swear allegiance to the British crown. Many led assaults against the British, who decided to deport them. About 7,000 Acadians were deported to the lower United States. By 1764, a number of Acadians had settled in the Louisiana area. A former pejorative term, 'Cajuns,' was excepted to represent the former Acadians.
When the Britain feared that the Acadians could go to France and defeat them they made the Acadians sign a decloration but when the Acadians refused a utrech was signed and acadians were kicked out of there homes,farms,and went going off to France for help
the orders were to fight with the british but the acadians did not want to some went to live with other nations that is why it is so important
French settlers in Acadia, which was a French colony in North America, were called Acadians because they settled in the region known as Acadia. Acadia encompassed parts of present-day Canada's Maritime provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island.
The Acadians are, indeed, one of the original groups of francophone Canadians. Acadia, although a French settlement in North America, was a separate colony from what would originally be considered Canada (i.e. Ontario and Quebec).
The term "Cajun" is derived from "Acadian," the French colonists who settled in Acadia (now Nova Scotia) in the 17th century. When the British forcibly removed them from Acadia in the mid-18th century, many Acadians resettled in what is now Louisiana, where they became known as Cajuns. The term evolved over time to distinguish this unique cultural group in Louisiana.
are the descendants of the 17th-century French colonists who settled in Acadia, a colony of New France. The colony was located in what is now Eastern Canada's Maritime provinces (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island), as well as part of Quebec, and present-dayMaine to the Kennebec River. Although today most of the Acadians and Québécoisare French speaking (francophone) Canadians, Acadia was a distinct colony of New France, and was geographically and administratively separate from the French colony of Canada (modern day Quebec), which led to Acadians and Québécois developing two rather distinct histories and cultures.[3]The settlers whose descendants became Acadians came from "all the regions of France but coming predominantly directly from the cities".