Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q19893314> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 22 of
22
with 100 triples per page.
- Q19893314 subject Q8475835.
- Q19893314 subject Q8609714.
- Q19893314 abstract "Marriage à la façon du pays ("according to the custom of the country") refers to the practice of common-law marriage between European fur traders and aboriginal or Métis women in the North American fur trade. Rituals surrounding them were based on a mix of European and Indigenous customs, though predominantly the latter. Scholar Sylvia Van Kirk, who studied such marriages, calls them "the basis for a fur trade society."While the presence of women in the factories of present-day Canada had been banned by the Hudson Bay Company as early as 1683, intermarriage was common from the start of the fur trade, and by 1739 the Company overturned its ban. The practice was both a social and a political institution, securing trade relations between Europeans and aboriginals, just as intermarriage between tribes was a political instrument of the aboriginals themselves. These marriages came with the expectation that trade between the woman's relations and the trader would be secured, and that aid would be mutually provided in times of need. It was also the hope of the woman's family that the trader's generosity would increase after the marriage took place. The marriages between these two groups would lead to the creation of the Métis people, who would be considered the offspring of the Fur Trade.".
- Q19893314 thumbnail The_Trappers_Bride.jpg?width=300.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q117191.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q1377445.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q1393765.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q16.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q171529.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q255872.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q392316.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q402587.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q502534.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q5404412.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q682808.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q76039.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q765499.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q8475835.
- Q19893314 wikiPageWikiLink Q8609714.
- Q19893314 comment "Marriage à la façon du pays ("according to the custom of the country") refers to the practice of common-law marriage between European fur traders and aboriginal or Métis women in the North American fur trade. Rituals surrounding them were based on a mix of European and Indigenous customs, though predominantly the latter.".
- Q19893314 label "Marriage 'à la façon du pays'".
- Q19893314 depiction The_Trappers_Bride.jpg.