Want this question answered?
Donald Smith was the manager of the Hudson's Bay Compnay in the Montreal District, he was sent to Manitoba as a representative, he would be able to relate to the Metis because his own wife was Metis. Heres a good site: http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?BioId=41832
A democracy.
They had to form a government to be able to form an army, to have a means to make laws, and to make payments/salary of the troops, buy weapons, to buy gunpowder and feed troops.
1. People are free to make their own government. 2. No one should be able to ignore the law. 3. The government has limits.
government and people created market economy . Because government decide the market price . But sometimes people make their own market prices to get more money.
He led all the metis to protest against the government to get there own rights Louis riel is a important Canadian hero.
Louis Riel was a hero because he fought for his beliefs and what he thought was right. He was also a leader of the Metis and Red River territory. He had also formed a Metis government. He showed that the Metis can stand on there own
his beliefs where your face
Louis Riel was a Métis political leader who led two resistance movements against the Canadian government. While he was tried and executed for treason, his actions were rooted in the defense of Métis rights and autonomy rather than criminal behavior. Riel is now recognized as a key figure in Canadian history for his advocacy of Métis rights.
Thomas Scott and Louis Riel both lived in Red River around 1869. They also were both powerful public speakers for opposite parties. Louis Riel believed that the Metis should have a voice and Scott did not. Scott came from Ireland where they believed that Catholics should not have a voice, so his prejudice probably developed from that controversy in his own country. Louis Riel also drafted The Metis List of Rights. Riel viewed Scott as a threat and ordered his provisional government to arrest him, where he was found guilty of treason, and executed in 1870
Louis Riel's decision to execute Thomas Scott was controversial and seen as extreme. While some argue that Scott was a threat to the Métis cause, others believe that his execution was unjust and unnecessary. It ultimately contributed to Riel's own downfall and tarnished his reputation in the eyes of many.
did Louis Braille make an impact on his own
AnswerIt was legal. Under the law during that time, a provisional government is allowed to be set up if the acting one (The Council of Assiniboia in this case) was not recognized by the people. Louis Riel and the other Métis did not recognize this government, so they set up their own provisional government.
Louis Riel emerged as the Métis leader during the Red River Rebellion due to his ability to unite and mobilize his people in the face of the Canadian government's encroachment on their land rights. He was seen as a charismatic figure who championed the Métis cause and fought for their rights and recognition.
the provisional government demanded: - to have the right to enter Canada's cofederation as a province - the right to elect and send four members of parliament to Ottawa - right to control over their own local affairs - the right to use both french and English languages equally in schools and law courts - the right to keep their customs, tradition, and metis way of life
Because he fought against Canadian colonisation of Western Canada and for the rights of those who lived in a land Canada considered empty of people for the most part. Needless to say he is not a hero in Canada, to most Canadians.
Louis Riel because studying his history and the very many different views of him shows Canada to be a Confederation of many Nations, each with many cultures and each with their own history and vision of the future.