History
Canada is a young country, whose
recorded history [E1][E2][F1][S1][S2][I1][I2]
goes back
less than 500 years.
The
first inhabitants of the region were diverse Siberian tribes,
arrived
through the Strait of Bering and the Inuit
(Eskimos), natives of Asia. The first European
contacts were through the arrival of the Vikings
explorers but they did not remain for a long time, due especially to
the
aggressive natives that resided in the area.
The natural wealth of the region attracted the attention of the
European,
specially the British and French, who began to explore the country towards the
sixteenth century.
While
explorers like Cabot [E1][F1][I], Cartier [E1][F1][F2][I][S1]
and Champlain [E1][E2][F1]
were looking for a better route to China and
India, by chance they landed on the east coast of North America. They
never
found the passage to Asia they were looking for, but
they found a new land. Permanent
French and British settlement began in the early 1600s and increased
throughout
the century.
In
1608 France established a colony in Quebec. Quebec, also known as New France [E1][E2][F1][I1][S1], became a
French province in 1663. From 1670 on
also English settlers established colonies. Not surprisingly, Britain and France soon became rivals in Canada, especially over the
control of the fur trade with
the Indians.
After
the seven year war between France and the United Kingdom,
France was
forced to cede all its territories to Britain in 1763 (treaty of Paris) [E1][F1][S1] and the whole of Canada became under British
control. The French speaking inhabitants found themselves under British
rule,
but they were allowed to maintain their civil laws, language and
religion.
After
the American War of Independence a large number of English speaking
colonists,
who wanted to remain loyal to the British Crown, left the United States and came up north to
settle in Canada. A steady number of
immigrants began top arrive from Britain and Ireland. Slowly, the land, began
to be inhabited.
In
1849,
the right of Canada to self-government was
recognized.
By the British North America Act of 1867
[E1][F1]
(a
law passed by the British Parliament. The act enumerated the powers of
the
provincial legislatures and gave the residual powers to the dominion.
This act
was superseded by the Canada Act of 1982), the dominion of Canada was created through the
confederation of Upper and Lower Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick.
Three
years later the British government gave the new country the huge
northern and
western territories belonging to the Hudson Bay Company which became
the
provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. British Columbia and Prince Edward Island joined the federation a
few years later.
By the
Statute of Westminster in 1931 [E1][F1] the
British dominions, including Canada, were formally declared to be
partner
nations with Britain, “equal in status, in no way subordinate to each
other,”
and bound together only by allegiance to a common Crown.
Newfoundland became Canada's tenth
province on March 31, 1949, following a plebiscite. Canada also included three
territories—the Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territories, and the newest territory,
Nunavut. The Union was complete:
Canada stretched from sea to sea.
Canada took part in the two world
wars on the side of Britain and the United States. During the Second World
War the country used all its
resources to provide materials and munitions for the allies and this
completed
its transformation into a major industrial nation.
Queen
Elizabeth II signed the Constitution Act (also called the Canada Act) in Ottawa on April 17, 1982 [F1][E1],
thereby cutting the last legal tie between Canada and
Britain. The constitution
retains Queen Elizabeth as queen of Canada and keeps Canada's membership in the
Commonwealth.