FACTOID # 128: Peru’s national bird is the Andean cock of the rock (Rupicola peruviana).
 
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Encyclopedia > Métis


For the Métis people of Canada, see Métis people (Canada). The Métis (pronounced MAY tee, IPA: , in French: or ) are an ethnic group of the Canadian prairies, Ontario, Quebec, Labrador, and the Canadian Northwest Territories. ...


A métis is a person born to parents who belong to different groups defined by visible physical differences, chiefly colour of skin. The term is French, and a cognate of mestizo in Spanish. In the Western hemisphere these terms usually describe someone born of a European father and an aboriginal mother, or someone descended from someone born of a European father and an aboriginal mother. Cognates are words that have a common origin. ... Mestizo (Portuguese, Mestiço; Canadian French, Métis: from Late Latin mixtcius, from Latin mixtus, past participle of miscre, to mix) is a term of Spanish origin used to designate the peoples of mixed European and Amerindian racial strain inhabiting the region spanning the Americas, from the Canadian prairies in the north... The Western Hemisphere contains The Americas and nearby islands. ...


In Canada the term usually designates a member of an ethnic group descended from the marriages, before 1870, of English, Scottish, and French men and Cree and Saulteaux women in Rupert's Land. Because it designates an ethnic group, in this sense Métis is capitalized. Cree camp near Vermilion, Alberta The Cree form an aboriginal nation of North America. ... The Saulteaux First Nation of western Canada is a branch of the Ojibwa, Ojibway, or Chippewa people. ... Ruperts Land Ruperts Land was a territory consisting of much of modern Canada. ...


Francophones regularly use the term to mean anyone who is born from two different racial or ethnic groups. As such, the child of an African and a European would also be considered métis. A person with more combinations is often called a "quarteron". A Francophone is a person who speaks French natively or by adoption (i. ...


In Canada today, the term is sometimes used in a broad sense to identify all mixed-blood (aboriginal and European) people and non-treaty members of First Nations. Historically, in the 18th and 19th centuries, the word Métis identified a chiefly north-west society, dating from the seventeenth century, which had its own culture and economic traditions. Confusion about the term persists because there is no generally accepted rule for establishing whether someone is Métis. Métis receive no continuing benefits from the Canadian government like those provided to status members of First Nations, so there has until recently been little reason to establish an official definition. The recent extension of certain collective aboriginal rights to Métis as a result of a Supreme Court of Canada decision may make such a definition necessary, however. The Indian Register is the official record of Status Indians or Registered Indians in Canada. ... First Nations is a common title used in Canada to describe the various societies of indigenous peoples of North America located in what is now Canada, who are not of Inuit or Métis descent. ... The Supreme Court Building in Ottawa The Supreme Court of Canada is Canadas highest court and is located in the capital city of Ottawa. ...


While not universally accepted as an official defintion, the Métis National Council has established the following requirements for those wishing to register as Métis:

  • self-identifies as Métis
  • of historic Métis Nation Ancestry
  • is distinct from other Aboriginal Peoples
  • is accepted by the Métis Nation.


 

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