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alexander the great and he was from the athens i know this trust me
On July 1 1867 the Confederation of Canada was formed when Upper Canada, Lower Canada, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia became the first four provinces of Canada.
Depends on which English we are talking about. The English people and for that matter the Scottish and Irish including those who intermarried with aboriginals that found themselves included in Canada's purchase and acquisition of lands they live on were generally supportive. Riel found support among other groups with history in Western Canada, and met little or no resistance when setting up a provisional government. If we are talking about the English who were new to Western Canada or were Canadians intending to take control of their new possession they did not like Riel at all. Some of these formed the Canadian Party Militia and hoped to attack Riel and his forces. The Canadian Party had little support among the local English and found themselves imprisoned in Fort Garry. English Canadians liked Riel even less after he killed a member of the Canadian Party. English in Britain on the other hand knew and cared little about Riel or Western Canada.
your butt
The English premier league was formed in season 1992/1993
Canada became a country ("one dominion under the name of Canada") on July 1, 1867.
The Dominion of Canada was formed July 1, 1867. The first four provinces were Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick.
They were formed in February 10th, 1841. They were formed in February 10th, 1841.
The Dominion of Canada was formed July 1, 1867. The first four provinces were Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick.
Canada officially became a country on July 1, 1867. The first provinces were Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. (The term "Dominion" is simply a historical reference to Section 3 of the British North America Act: "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never known officially as "The Dominion of Canada". It found its way into popular venues such as paper currency and school maps. However, on Canadian bills it was meant as "The Dominion Under Canada" and on school maps as "The Queen's Dominion of Canada".)
Canada officially became a country on July 1, 1867 with the passing of the British North America Act (BNA) by the British Parliament. The first provinces were Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. The term "Dominion" is simply a historical reference to Section 3 of the BNA: "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never known officially as "The Dominion of Canada", even though it was incorrectly labeled such at times.
ontario, new brunswick, nova scotia and quebec
Canada was formed in 1867. Canada was formed partly because of economic needs. Provinces could easily trade with each other giving people more places to sell their products. As a country, Canadians could also more easily defend themselves against threats from other countries. In the 1860's, people in Canada were concerned about attack from the United States, especially since Canada was a British colony at that time. The Americans were not on good terms with the British.
The upper portion of canada
The upper portion of canada
Depending on how far back in history you're looking, I wouldn't say Canada was *recently* formed. Upon Confederation in 1867, Canada was adopted as the legal name for the new country, and the word Dominion was conferred as the country's title. However, as Canada asserted its political autonomy from the United Kingdom, the federal government increasingly used simply Canada on state documents and treaties.
In 1867, the federal dominion of Canada was formed. In 1931, Canada was granted its independence from Britain in almost every way, but it wasn't until 1982 that all legal dependence on British Parliament was finally severed.