Difference between revisions of "Background"

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The Mi’gmaq people first appeared in their homeland roughly ten thousand years ago. It is believed that their descendants crossed the Bering Straight from Asia into North America around 18,000 years ago. Before contact with Europeans, the Mi'gmaq were a hunter-gatherer people <ref> http://www.heritage.nf.ca/aboriginal/mikmaq_land_use.html </ref>.
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The Mi’gmaq people first appeared in their homeland roughly ten thousand years ago. It is believed that their descendants crossed the Bering Straight from Asia into North America around 18,000 years ago. Before contact with Europeans, the Mi'gmaq were a hunter-gatherer people <ref> http://www.heritage.nf.ca/aboriginal/mikmaq_land_use.html </ref>. The Mi'gmaq people left many traces of their existence. Weapons and tools made of various material has been found as well as ancient burial grounds and stone walls in Nova Scotia that are believed to have been built by the Mi'gmaq people <ref> http://www.danielnpaul.com/Mi'kmaqBurialGround.html </ref>. Ancient petroglyphs left behind give a glimpse of ancient Mi'gmaq history. There are over 500 petroglyphs in [http://www.pc.gc.ca/pn-np/ns/kejimkujik/index.aspx Kejimkujik National Historic Site].
  
 
There are many different hypotheses on the origin of the Mi’gmaq name. It could come from ‘family’, or megamingo, meaning earth, or possibly nigumaach, meaning ‘my brother’ or ‘my friend’. According Ethnologue, Mi’gmaq is spoken by 8960 people in Eastern Canada and 330 people in the northeastern United States. The Mi’gmaq language is an Eastern Algonquian language that is in the same family as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaware_languages Delaware] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powhatan_language Powhatan], to name a couple.  
 
There are many different hypotheses on the origin of the Mi’gmaq name. It could come from ‘family’, or megamingo, meaning earth, or possibly nigumaach, meaning ‘my brother’ or ‘my friend’. According Ethnologue, Mi’gmaq is spoken by 8960 people in Eastern Canada and 330 people in the northeastern United States. The Mi’gmaq language is an Eastern Algonquian language that is in the same family as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaware_languages Delaware] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powhatan_language Powhatan], to name a couple.  

Revision as of 19:42, 18 May 2012

The Mi’gmaq people first appeared in their homeland roughly ten thousand years ago. It is believed that their descendants crossed the Bering Straight from Asia into North America around 18,000 years ago. Before contact with Europeans, the Mi'gmaq were a hunter-gatherer people [1]. The Mi'gmaq people left many traces of their existence. Weapons and tools made of various material has been found as well as ancient burial grounds and stone walls in Nova Scotia that are believed to have been built by the Mi'gmaq people [2]. Ancient petroglyphs left behind give a glimpse of ancient Mi'gmaq history. There are over 500 petroglyphs in Kejimkujik National Historic Site.

There are many different hypotheses on the origin of the Mi’gmaq name. It could come from ‘family’, or megamingo, meaning earth, or possibly nigumaach, meaning ‘my brother’ or ‘my friend’. According Ethnologue, Mi’gmaq is spoken by 8960 people in Eastern Canada and 330 people in the northeastern United States. The Mi’gmaq language is an Eastern Algonquian language that is in the same family as Delaware and Powhatan, to name a couple.

The Mi’gmaq that this wiki will concentrate most on is the Listuguj dialect. Listuguj is located in Eastern Quebec, right on the border of New Brunswick.

References