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Native Tribes


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Canada's Native Peoples

The origin of the name Micmac or Mi'kmaq, which identifies both a people and their language, is unclear. Alternative names for the Micmac, which can be found in historical sources, include Gaspesians, Souriquois, Acadians and Tarrantines; in the mid-19th century Silas Rand recorded the word wejebowkwejik as a self-ascription. At the time of European contact, Micmac-speaking peoples occupied the coastal areas of the Gaspé and the Maritime provinces east of the SAINT JOHN RIVER drainage. They continue to occupy this area as well as settlements in Newfoundland and New England, especially Boston. The number of registered Micmac is 19 891 (1996), with another 4500 (approximately) nonstatus persons of Micmac heritage (see INDIAN). Estimates of the Micmac population range from 3000 to 35 000, with 20 000 being a reasonable figure.

Language
Micmac is among the Wabanaki cluster of Eastern Algonquian languages, which include the various ABENAKI dialects and the Penobscot and MALISEET-Passamaquoddy languages. Maritime PREHISTORY extends 11 000 years into the past, but the date of arrival of Algonquian speakers into the area remains uncertain.

Social, Political and Cultural Patterns
Aboriginal Micmac settlements were characterized by individual or joint households scattered about a bay or along a river. Communities were related by alliance and kinship. Leadership, based on prestige rather than power, was largely concerned with effective management of the fishing and hunting economy. Painting, music and oratory were encouraged. The Micmac were among the first peoples to be affected by European activities in the New World and underwent early depopulation and sociocultural disruption. They attempted to profit from the FUR TRADE by serving as intermediaries between Europeans and groups farther west. As their trade advantages disappeared, they tried to exploit a military alliance with the French (see IROQUOIS WARS).

After British suzerainty was established, the Micmac were subjected to conscious attempts by government to alter their lifestyle. Most moves to establish them as agriculturalists failed because of badly conceived programs and encroachments upon reserved lands. Their employment as labourers effected irreversible change: crafts, coopering, the porpoise fishery, and road, rail and lumber work integrated the Micmac into the 19th- and 20th-century economy, but left them socially isolated.

Forced Relocation
A forced relocation scheme in the 1950s posed the greatest threat to them as a distinctive people. The Micmac have been able to salvage some of their traditional culture in political decision-making, religion and language. The rate of unemployment for reserve communities is extremely high in a region with high unemployment, but there are a number of successful musicians, artists, writers and business and professional persons among the Micmac.

See also NATIVE PEOPLE, EASTERN WOODLANDS and general articles under NATIVE PEOPLE.


Micmac Quillwork
Micmac quillwork chair seat (courtesy Glenbow Museum/Canadian Ethnology Service, CMC).

Micmac Chief's Coat
Micmac military great coat, back view (courtesy Glenbow Museum/Museum of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia).

Micmac Indians
This painting circa 1850 (oil on canvas, 45.7 x 61.0 cm) was by an unknown artist who showed a mixture of knowledge and naivety (courtesy NGC).

Micmac Wigwam
View of a Micmac wigwam, a man, and a child, probably Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, photographed 1860. National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Photo NO. 47728.

Mi'kmaq
A Mi'kmaq Chief waits to be presented to their Majesties during the 1939 Royal Tour of Canada at Halifax, NS (courtesy Canada Science and Technology Museum/CN Collection/CN003696).

Author HAROLD FRANKLIN MCGEE, JR


Suggested Reading
A.G. Bailey, The Conflict of European and Eastern Algonkian Cultures, 1504-1700 (2nd ed, 1969); Harold Franklin McGee, Jr, ed, The Native Peoples of Atlantic Canada (1984); B.G. Trigger, ed, Handbook of North American Indians, vol 15: Northeast (1978); Harald Prins, The Mi'kmaq: Resistance, Accommodation and Cultural Survival (1996).


Links to Other Sites
Mi'kmaq Portraits Collection
A fascinating collection of notes, annotated images and videos depicting Mi'kmaq communities, structures and culture. Check out the petroglyphs and other archaeological items. From the Nova Scotia Museum.

Archaeology in Nova Scotia
Discover the history and archaeology of Nova Scotia at this Nova Scotia Museum website.

Keys to History
Search this "Keys to History" website for fascinating online exhibits about notable people, places, and events in Canadian history. From Montréal's McCord Museum.

Legends Project
Listen to dramatizations of oral histories, including ancient legends and myths, that Inuit and First Nations elders would have shared during family gatherings and activities in their communities. The series of recordings on this website were originally broadcast on the CBC Radio 1 program “Ideas.”

Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples
The website for the "Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples." Click on the links for feature articles about Canada's many multicultural communities, access to their extensive digital archives collection, learning modules, and much more. From "Multicultural Canada."

Languages of Canada
A comprehensive online database of languages currently in use in Canada. Also provides details about extinct languages. Check out the "language maps" for more information. Based on "Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Fifteenth edition." From SIL International, a US website.

Battle of the Ristigouche National Historic Site of Canada
The website for the Battle of the Restigouche National Historic Site, located at the mouth of the Restigouche River, at the far end of Chaleur Bay. From Parks Canada.

Raid on Deerfield
A narrated history of the 1704 Raid on Deerfield and its aftermath from Native and European perspectives. Also features fascinating stories about Native societies, cultures, trade practices, and traditions. This multimedia website is from the Memorial Hall Museum in Deerfield, Massachusetts.

Maliseet - Passamaquoddy Dictionary
This online dictionary is from the Mi'kmaq - Maliseet Institute, University of New Brunswick.

Four Directions Teachings
Elders and traditional teachers representing the Blackfoot, Cree, Ojibwe, Mohawk, and Mi’kmaq share teachings about their culture. Animated graphics visualize each of the oral teachings. This website also provides biographies of participants, transcripts, and extensive learning resources for students and their teachers. In English with French subtitles.

Native Dance
A superb multimedia website dedicated to native dance traditions from coast to coast in Canada. Features audio and video clips, in-depth interviews and articles for students, the image research database for scholars, downloadable resource kits for teachers, and more. Produced by Carleton University and The Sumner Group Inc., with the assistance of many other organizations and contributors.

Micmac Nation of Gespeg
The website for the Micmac Nation of Gespeg.

The "conquest" of Acadia, 1710
This site offers online excerpts from "The 'conquest' of Acadia, 1710," a book about the conquest of Port-Royal by British forces in 1710. Relates to Acadian history, native studies, native rights histories, and the socio-political history of the eighteenth century.

Millbrook First Nation
The website for the Millbrook First Nation. Check out the history of this Mi'kmaq community, news about current events, language links, and more.

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