Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Amelia Douglas Institute (ADI) is the centre for Métis culture and language in British Columbia. Navigate through this website to learn more about Métis arts, history, and language.

  2. Amelia, Lady Douglas (née Connolly; 1 January 1812 – 8 January 1890) was a Métis woman significant in the early history of Canada as the wife of the first governor of the Colony of British Columbia.

    • Canadian
    • Amelia Connolly, 1 January 1812, Manitoba, Canada
    • Amelia Connolly Douglas
    • 13 (6 lived to adulthood), including James W. Douglas
  3. Amelia Douglas was one of the founding mothers of British Columbia - and one of the most well-known women in fur trade society. She was born at Fort Churchill to a furtrader of Irish and French Canadian ancestry called William Connolly, and his Cree wife Miyo Nipiy.

  4. The Amelia Douglas Institute is the centre of Métis culture and language resources and programming in British Columbia. The Institute’s province-wide network is dedicated to educating Métis people and the public about Métis culture and way of life.

  5. Amelia Douglas (1 de enero de 1812 - 8 de enero de 1890) fue una mujer métis importante en la historia temprana de Canadá como esposa del primer gobernador de la Colonia de la Columbia Británica.

  6. The Amelia Douglas Institute (ADI) is the centre for Métis culture and language in British Columbia. Navigate through this website to learn more about Métis arts, history, and language.

  7. 30 de oct. de 2021 · Amelia Douglas' life is a remarkable representation of resilient resistance to the colonial rule of class status. The lives of the Douglas-Connolly family have been traced and linked together by historians through letters and journals of friends and family, records of the Hudson's Bay Company, newspapers, and records from British ...