Acadia

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  • @damageincorporatedmetal43v73
    @damageincorporatedmetal43v73 Рік тому +19

    I'm a registered Micmac Indian, there was no French and Indian War. We lived among these People Peacefully !!!

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive Рік тому +10

      The 'French and Indian War' was not between the French and Indians. It was the French and their Indian allies fighting the British and their Indian allies.

    • @RandyBoBandy9498
      @RandyBoBandy9498 Рік тому +3

      @EdinburghFive you beat me to it. That's why the rest of the world calls it the 7 years war 😂

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive Рік тому +5

      @@RandyBoBandy9498 Good to hear from you. Technically the French and Indian War is a subordinate part of the Seven Years War and of course is confined to that part of the war in North America. The French and Indian War commenced prior to the onset of the wider Seven Years War.
      An aside: I always find it interesting and odd that Americans claim it was George Washington who sparked the Seven Years War (via the French and Indian War). Not so sure I would proud of that fact. Clearly there is either a lack of knowledge or misunderstanding of what was happening between France and Britain after the War of the Austrian Succession and the opening of the Seven Years War.

    • @NotLeftarded1
      @NotLeftarded1 4 місяці тому

      It's Mi'kmaq not Micmac I am doubting your credibility.

    • @MarioDoiron
      @MarioDoiron 4 місяці тому +1

      ...And still good neighbors to this day.

  • @gonzacadian
    @gonzacadian 4 місяці тому +2

    Since I was a little boy growing up on the coast of New Brunswick. My grandfather used to talk to us about this man. Our first ancestors who ever brave the Atlantic. His name was Jacque Bourgeois. The first and only surgeon in Acadie.

    • @lilcajunqueen888
      @lilcajunqueen888 2 місяці тому

      Jacques Bourgeois and his wife Jeanne Trahan are my great grandparents 8xs removed. ❤

  • @jeannettemoyen9278
    @jeannettemoyen9278 2 роки тому +6

    My grandparents : Malvina Boudreau and Alphonse Moyen. Searching down the Boudreau line at the Quebec Archives online led me to Port Royal and the first Boudreau married to an Aucoin! It was facinating !!! I thought I was french Canadian (on my fathers side) but soon discovered we are Acadian !!! what a joy.

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive 2 роки тому +1

      @@mooners544 That is true in the more generic sense of the word 'French' Canadians but that is not how most Canadians us the term. French Canadians being those from Quebec and descended from same, versus the French speaking colonists and their descends from Acadia.

    • @NotLeftarded1
      @NotLeftarded1 4 місяці тому +1

      Interesting my grandmother was named Malvina Boudreau as well . She was married to a guy named Emmanuel La Croix however. Big families in the old days.

    • @NotLeftarded1
      @NotLeftarded1 4 місяці тому

      ​@@EdinburghFiveThat's because the Quebecois see themselves as pure wool and Acadians as burnt wood. A gift from the racist old days. I personally enjoy having a mixed heritage. Racial purity is for idiots because no one is pure.

  • @blaine.666
    @blaine.666 3 місяці тому +1

    Just recently traced my ancestry back to Franćos Savoie and Margaret Boutin. Immigrated from France to Nova Scotia and now we are in Louisiana . Awesome video

  • @twinkiecrunch6344
    @twinkiecrunch6344 3 місяці тому +1

    Im tracing my ancestry now. I just learned my family left France and went to Nova Scotia then to Louisiana. Im so excited to learn more. I inherited an old store coin from that area that I'm going to look into. Its so interesting to see what led to me being here today. Some of us on this thread could be related!

  • @lilcajunqueen888
    @lilcajunqueen888 Місяць тому

    Jacques Bourgeois and his wife, Jeanne Trahan, are my 12th generation grandparents. He was a surgeon and also founded Beaubassin

  • @cthibault8225
    @cthibault8225 4 місяці тому +2

    Maine was part of Acadia too. Named after the province of Maine in France.

    • @NotLeftarded1
      @NotLeftarded1 4 місяці тому +1

      Still has a huge Acadian community there currently too ,I've been there to visit from New Brunswick.

  • @rondesrosier4160
    @rondesrosier4160 Рік тому +4

    I'm a direct ancestor of the Acadians.

  • @jillop2614
    @jillop2614 Рік тому +5

    I'm a direct descendent of the Herbert..Savoie..Guadet family.

    • @jacquesrenou2850
      @jacquesrenou2850 5 місяців тому +1

      I'm a descendant of Louis Hebert and Marie Rollet as well as the Martins and Morin families.Guillaume and Guillaumett Hebert and Coullinard.Im very proud of our history and it's people.⚜️💙

  • @iparipaitegianiparipaitegi4643

    Message to all people being of Acadian ascendance: learn and speak french if your want to be faithful to your ancestors.

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive Рік тому +1

      Did you mean 'descendants'?

    • @iparipaitegianiparipaitegi4643
      @iparipaitegianiparipaitegi4643 Рік тому +1

      @@EdinburghFive Nope. Your ancestors are your ascendants. You’re a descendant of them.

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive Рік тому

      @@iparipaitegianiparipaitegi4643 You are correct. I read the comment too quickly.

    • @NotLeftarded1
      @NotLeftarded1 4 місяці тому +1

      Which French because even in France there is not one standardized French? If you want to be true to your roots and you're an Acadian you're going to have to learn the langue d'oc not the attempts at langue d'oil I hear around Canada. France wasn't exactly France when we left it we were considered Occitan when we left.

    • @beadingbusily
      @beadingbusily 28 днів тому

      ​@@EdinburghFiveLes deux!

  • @geraldthibeaut1618
    @geraldthibeaut1618 2 роки тому +3

    Amazing to learn my family is from Acadia after 64years.

  • @madmartigan7502
    @madmartigan7502 2 роки тому +5

    Coincidentally i was researching the Guidry branch of my family when I stumbled upon your video and was in shock when you began speaking of the people I was researching at the time. Great video and much respect for the amount of time you have clearly spent putting together our family's story.
    Thank you!

    • @bpcj4891
      @bpcj4891 Рік тому

      That's always the best. The ancestors guided you to this video to let you know they are grateful you're finding them to tell their story so their legacy can live on!!!

  • @amycampbell93
    @amycampbell93 Рік тому +2

    We have the same grandparents ❤️

  • @calleerobinson4796
    @calleerobinson4796 Рік тому +1

    We traced our ancestry back to Claude Petitpas when he left La Rochelle with Pierre and Samuel in the 1600’s. So cool to go back that far

  • @tadolph82
    @tadolph82 Рік тому +3

    I feel like if you are watching this, we are probably related;)) Hey!

  • @EdinburghFive
    @EdinburghFive Рік тому +2

    Excellent video.
    Generally you are correct about the region that comprised Acadia with the exception that you need to also include the Gaspé region of Québec and Maine to the Kennebec River.
    The first time Acadia shows up on a map in not Verrazano's 1524 map. He labeled the region around Virginia as 'Arcadia'. One theory is that the 'Arcadia' label over time moved northeastward on maps, evidentially dropping the 'r' and was applied to the French colony. This idea was prompted by nineteenth-century historians, notably Ganong, who tended to ignore Indigenous people in their histories except in very subordinated and prereferral ways. The 'Arcadia" origins completely ignore the word 'acadie' or 'cadie' in the Mi'kmaq language. It was widely used to designate a place, for example Shubenacadie and Benacadie. This is the more likely origin of the name Acadia.
    Some tried to be as "neutral as they could", but a significant number supported the French with men & arms, and allied themselves with the French. They fought against the British in times of war and peace. Hundreds for example were caught at Fort Beauséjour.

  • @dominiquedalbiez
    @dominiquedalbiez 4 роки тому +2

    Émouvant de trouver ici une référence à mon ancêtre Claude Guédry dit Laverdure

  • @dominiquedalbiez
    @dominiquedalbiez 4 роки тому

    Passionnant...

  • @ConstantineofRome
    @ConstantineofRome Рік тому +1

    My family on Belrose and LeBlanc is in the record books:)

  • @jeanlucchasse3571
    @jeanlucchasse3571 4 роки тому +2

    Baie-Verte, 1690-1755, burned 1756. Main entry door from Louisbourg toward Quebec in Winter, and Fort Beausejour.

    • @jeanlucchasse3571
      @jeanlucchasse3571 4 місяці тому

      ua-cam.com/video/2iMbSODndXI/v-deo.htmlsi=ZsEcaJl8afFPKit6

  • @JAlex-dg5mk
    @JAlex-dg5mk 3 роки тому +3

    - St-Jacques-de-l’Achigan changed name for St-Jacques-de-Montcalm
    - St-Jacques-de-l’Achigan/ St-Jacques-de-Montcalm is now 4 different villages (St-Jacques-de-Montcalm, Sainte-Marie-Salomé, Saint-Liguori and Saint-Alexis-de- Montcalm)
    - La « Nouvelle-Acadie » (New-Acadia) in Lanaudière is St-Jacques-de-Montcalm, Sainte-Marie-Salomé, Saint-Liguori and Saint-Alexis-de- Montcalm;
    - At 30:06 it’s a picture of Saint-Alexis-de- Montcalm Church;
    - Pictures of the 4 churches of “Nouvelle-Acadie” (now 1 parish) www.paroisse-notre-dame-de-l-acadie.ca/ (translate with Google)
    - Picture of the Saint-Jacques-de-Montcalm church www.patrimoine-culturel.gouv.qc.ca/rpcq/detail.do?methode=consulter&id=115304&type=bien (translate with Google)
    - In St-Jacques-de-Montcalm, there is 1 of the 16 Acadian Odyssey Monuments. Page down to "Saint-Jacques, Lanaudière" click on « texte commémoratif » acadiensduquebec.org/monuments.php (translate with Google)
    -
    Achigan : means Bass (fish). A First Nation word meaning « the fighting one”
    - Lanaudière is one of the seventeen administrative regions of Québec.
    I’m an Acadian descendant.

  • @glblb3030
    @glblb3030 Рік тому

    had ancestors in grand pre deported in mass,,some came back at saint marys bay

  • @damageincorporatedmetal43v73

    We were a Nomadic People, and as the seasons changed we moved inland to less Hostile regions.

  • @andrelabine6816
    @andrelabine6816 4 роки тому +3

    La fin du nom Labine n'est pas prononcé comme le nom Anglais `wine` mais fini comme le nom Anglais Ìnn'.

    • @JAlex-dg5mk
      @JAlex-dg5mk 3 роки тому

      J'ignore d'où vous êtes mais ceci pourrait vous intéressé. Juste sous " 4. MÉMORIAL ACADIEN DE SAINT-LIGUORI " :
      lanaudiere.ca/fr/blogue-lanaudiere/nouvelle-acadie-territoire-meconnu-lanaudiere/

  • @chouinardfrancais
    @chouinardfrancais 5 місяців тому +1

    acadian
    a cadian
    a cadjan
    a Cajun
    Cajuns

    • @leonceboudreauxwolf
      @leonceboudreauxwolf Місяць тому +1

      Yep, many of our Ancestors ended up in the Bayou Country of Louisiana, my dad was a Boudreaux.

  • @JAlex-dg5mk
    @JAlex-dg5mk 3 роки тому

    A finding for you: Just under " 4. MÉMORIAL ACADIEN DE SAINT-LIGUORI " : lanaudiere.ca/fr/blogue-lanaudiere/nouvelle-acadie-territoire-meconnu-lanaudiere/
    Reminder: St-Jacques-de-l’Achigan/ St-Jacques-de-Montcalm is now 4 different villages (St-Jacques-de-Montcalm, Sainte-Marie-Salomé, Saint-Liguori and Saint-Alexis-de- Montcalm)

  • @damageincorporatedmetal43v73

    What would you do with the current Global Warming Situation?

  • @EdinburghFive
    @EdinburghFive 2 роки тому

    Verrazano used the word Arcadia not Acadia.

    • @bpcj4891
      @bpcj4891 Рік тому

      That was an alternative name back in the day, but it's out of use now.

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive Рік тому

      Hey @J. P. - No, it really wasn't. Verrazano used Arcadia for the region around Virginia. With time the name moved northeastward but it never was used for the region of what is today the Atlantic region of Canada. I believe it was William Francis Ganong who then used Arcadia as the origins of Acadia. This completely ignores the French settled their colony in the lands of the Mi'kmaq who used the term 'acadie' or 'cadie' in many place names. Ganong traces the movement of Arcadia on maps toward the northeast, I do not recall he demonstrated a solid link, but uses a bit of a leap of faith to connect the (European) dots to Acadia.
      European fisherman and fur traders became very familiar with the Mi'kmaq and their language, very quickly understanding Acadia had a meaning describing the place. Not too many of those fisherman and fur traders were likely familiar, given they were largely illiterate, with the word Arcadia let alone what it meant in Greek myths.
      Ganong comes from an era at the height of British imperialism. This was a period in Europe and North America which was highly racists in its views of the world. A society that more often than not ignored the contributions, achievements, and even the presence of the Indigenous people. These antiquarians translated the world around them in European terms.

  • @kaseybryan8715
    @kaseybryan8715 2 роки тому

    At 11:56 I had to stop listening, because this man's mouth parts are so dry you can here the click of the suction of his mouth in HD.