i think the fn won that one (first nations)
discuss the roles of key individuals and groups in the Red River rebellion and the impact of the conflict on the development of western canada. what was the significance of the red river resistance and the north-west rebellion for the first nations and metis people?
He wanted that land for Canada and was prepared to kill for it.
The Metis Rebellion was when the Metis People in Canada fought for their rights and freedom, fighting because the Canadian Government was not treating them well. it was also known as the Red River Rebellion. I've attached a link to a good website for more detailed.
Not at all. They were not under Canadian rule, they had not even been invited into the Confederation. Canada calls it a rebellion because they claimed to have purchased the Metis when they bought Ruperts Land. Of course they never asked the Metis or anyone living in Ruperts Land, so no surprise that some decided they wanted to talk about it. In 1869 the people of Western Canada were only resisting a takeover, an occupation. You cannot rebel if you are not part of the country to begin with.
When Canada was formed in 1867 its provinces were a relatively narrow strip in the southeast. The Red River Rebellion (or the Red River Resistance, Red River Uprising, or First Riel Rebellion) was the sequence of events related to the 1869.
The Red River Rebellion began in the fall of 1869 and continued until the summer of 1870.
The Red River Rebellion occurred from the fall of 1869 to the summer of 1870. The Northwest Rebellion occurred in the spring and early summer of 1885.
The Red River Rebellion occurred, for the most part, in the Red River Settlement. The Red River Settlement was centred at the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine Rivers. Today, that is part of downtown Winnipeg, Manitoba, and is known as "the Forks."
By farting
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1869
The Red River Rebellion or "Red River Resistance" are the names given to the events surrounding the actions of a provisional government established by Metis leader Louis Riel in 1869 at the Red River Settlement in what is now the Canadian province of Manitoba.
Louis Riel was the most vocal leader or spokesman, though there were other leaders in both rebellions.
"Red River."
i think the fn won that one (first nations)