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The British didn't suddenly change the name of Acadie to Nova Scotia. In fact King James of England gave a Royal Charter to what he referred to as Nova Scotia in 1629. The French and English then fought over it for about 80 years until the issue was settled in 1713; at least with respect to mainland Nova Scotia.
The picture of the slave working in the field was not the case in PEI where most were in servitude as maids and other labour looking after the house of their master and mistress. Their were no farm plantations in PEI. If any people were in near servitude it was the Acadians, the Irish and the Scottish. The indigenous people were simply trying to survive!
To be honest the foundations of PEI are people being pawns of the British. My Scottish ancestors had their land taken away and effectively forced to emigrate to Canada to work for absentee landlords
I'd love to visit and have a series of restaurant dinner nights. The seafood chowder, the scallops and the fish come to mind. Oh yea, the mussels and the the lobster too. I've been to Nova Scotia and experienced much of that.
Maritimers have their own history that is different from that of Central (Quebec and Ontario) and Western Canada (Manitoba west). The sad fact is that most Canadians don't have a clue about this history unless their ancestors come from their; thankfully, their are quite a few of them as one of the great exports from the Maritimes are its people!
You skipped over a few things a bit quick. Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island only became the capital of Acadie after 1713 when what is now mainland Nova Scotia was ceded to England. Until this time, the capital was at Port Royale at the mouth of today's Annapolis River.
The first Scots on PEI were Highlanders who were expelled by the British, sent to PEI to work for absentee landlords and if a child spoke Gallic in school were beat. So there is the real history
For clarity to people who aren't Canadian watching this: PEI is important to literally no one in this country other than elementary school kids who are realizing how borked our country's political borders are in social studies.
And no mention that Mi'kmaq claim the entire island as theirs and telling of their history. Just like any depressing retelling of Canadian lands. It's pathetic you don't tell their story. 0/10.
Please support my content by becoming a PATREON and by being added to the PATREON MAP!
www.patreon.com/geoperspective
ALSO
THANKS TO THESE CHANNELS FOR PROVIDING FOOTAGE:
www.youtube.com/@OurRetiredLife - follow their amazing travels
www.youtube.com/@michaelpoczynek - go here to see real estate in PEI
The British didn't suddenly change the name of Acadie to Nova Scotia. In fact King James of England gave a Royal Charter to what he referred to as Nova Scotia in 1629. The French and English then fought over it for about 80 years until the issue was settled in 1713; at least with respect to mainland Nova Scotia.
The picture of the slave working in the field was not the case in PEI where most were in servitude as maids and other labour looking after the house of their master and mistress. Their were no farm plantations in PEI. If any people were in near servitude it was the Acadians, the Irish and the Scottish. The indigenous people were simply trying to survive!
To be honest the foundations of PEI are people being pawns of the British. My Scottish ancestors had their land taken away and effectively forced to emigrate to Canada to work for absentee landlords
I'd love to visit and have a series of restaurant dinner nights. The seafood chowder, the scallops and the fish come to mind. Oh yea, the mussels and the the lobster too. I've been to Nova Scotia and experienced much of that.
Maritimers have their own history that is different from that of Central (Quebec and Ontario) and Western Canada (Manitoba west). The sad fact is that most Canadians don't have a clue about this history unless their ancestors come from their; thankfully, their are quite a few of them as one of the great exports from the Maritimes are its people!
You skipped over a few things a bit quick. Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island only became the capital of Acadie after 1713 when what is now mainland Nova Scotia was ceded to England. Until this time, the capital was at Port Royale at the mouth of today's Annapolis River.
This video seems like you just asked ChatGPT about p.e.i
The first Scots on PEI were Highlanders who were expelled by the British, sent to PEI to work for absentee landlords and if a child spoke Gallic in school were beat. So there is the real history
2:50 is Auckland, New Zealand 🇳🇿 haha
crap, its annoying when stock video shots get tagged with locations that look similar
I've met a total of one person from PEI. It's the only reason i know it exists.
For clarity to people who aren't Canadian watching this: PEI is important to literally no one in this country other than elementary school kids who are realizing how borked our country's political borders are in social studies.
PEI is still very important to those who were born or chose to live there.
2:15 this is a Eurasian Jay, does not live anywhere close to P.E.I.
i like your accent
And no mention that Mi'kmaq claim the entire island as theirs and telling of their history. Just like any depressing retelling of Canadian lands. It's pathetic you don't tell their story. 0/10.