Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 32Carleton University, 2001 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 280
... claiming " , " height of land ” and " to which they have any just claim " . If the original handwritten Treaty is examined , it is evident that the words " to which they have any just claim " were inserted between lines of the Treaty ...
... claiming " , " height of land ” and " to which they have any just claim " . If the original handwritten Treaty is examined , it is evident that the words " to which they have any just claim " were inserted between lines of the Treaty ...
Page 287
... claim . 33 32 Since the 1840s Anderson had described these Chippewa bands as having surrendered their hunting rights . In 1846 Anderson obtained signed consent from the Chippewa Bands to ' give up their hunting " in exchange for a ...
... claim . 33 32 Since the 1840s Anderson had described these Chippewa bands as having surrendered their hunting rights . In 1846 Anderson obtained signed consent from the Chippewa Bands to ' give up their hunting " in exchange for a ...
Page 288
1850. The timing of this claim , if considered in the context of the political leadership changes associated with Naoquaeshick ( and presumably his territorial interests in the same land ) , coincided with a claim by the Rob- inson ...
1850. The timing of this claim , if considered in the context of the political leadership changes associated with Naoquaeshick ( and presumably his territorial interests in the same land ) , coincided with a claim by the Rob- inson ...
Contents
MARIEODILE JUNKER AND LOUISE BLACKSMITH | 258 |
ED KOENIG | 269 |
JOAN LOVISEK | 278 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal Algonquian American Anderson animate appears band boundaries Canada Canadian Carleton University Chief Chippewa claim continue contraction Cree culture derived described Eastern evidence example fact Figure fishery fishing focus focussing four given groups historical hunting important INAN inanimate Indian indicates initial involved Island John John River Journal Lake land language letter lines Linguistics living meaning Mi'kmaq narrative Native North noted nouns object Ojibway Ojibwe Ontario original Ottawa otter particles pattern period Plains population position present Press recorded reference reflection region relations reported River Robinson Saulteaux similar Society stems story structure suffixes suggests territory texts tion Toronto trade traditional Treaty University verb Winnipeg