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Louis Riel (Extraits)

Revue Possibles, 2016
À la fin du XIXe siècle, le territoire de la rivière Rouge est cédé au Canada, colonie de l’empire britannique. Cependant, les habitants catholiques, métis d’Indiens et de Français n’entendent pas à être gouvernés par la lointaine couronne d’Angleterre.
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The Trial of Louis Riel

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2007
By modern standards, the North-West Rebellion seems no big deal. Canadian forces easily quelled the uprising of a couple of hundred Metis settlers along the South Saskatchewan River. A majority of Metis in the region sat out the fighting, and only about one hundred persons died in the conflict.
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The Trial of Louis Riel: A Study in Canadian Psychiatry

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 1992
Abstract The Riel case in 1885 is one of the most striking cases in the history of forensic psychiatry. On the one hand, Riel was the hero of the underprivileged, French Canadian-Indian halfbreeds whose futile revolt in the Canadian Northwest captured the imaginations of French Canadians in Quebec, for whom he became a hero and a martyr.
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A Footnote to History: Was Louis Riel an American Citizen?

Canadian Historical Review, 1948
The recent announcement of the discovery of a United States naturalization certificate for Louis Riel in the Manitoba Archives was the occasion for a certain amount of comment in the Canadian press. It was stated that there had been no previous evidence to show that Riel had become an American citizen during the period of his residence in Montana ...
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Louis Riel and the Fenian Raid of 1871

Canadian Historical Review, 1923
Just two years ago Joseph Riel, a younger brother of Louis Riel, the famous Metis chieftain of 1869–70 and 1885, died at the old homestead of the Riel family, at St. Vital, near Winnipeg. Until his last breath Joseph Riel resided in the little white house on the east side of the Red River in which his brother had lived.
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A Pathography of Louis Riel*

Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal, 1978
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