The Trial of Louis Riel

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. (Alt...

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Main Author: Linder, Douglas O.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UMKC School of Law Institutional Repository 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://irlaw.umkc.edu/popular_media/69
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spelling ftumissourikcity:oai:irlaw.umkc.edu:popular_media-1069 2023-05-15T16:35:29+02:00 The Trial of Louis Riel Linder, Douglas O. 2007-01-01T08:00:00Z https://irlaw.umkc.edu/popular_media/69 unknown UMKC School of Law Institutional Repository https://irlaw.umkc.edu/popular_media/69 Popular Media Famous Trials Trial Louis Riel Canada Canadian North-West Rebellion John Macdonald Saskatchewan River Metis Hudson Bay Company Regina text 2007 ftumissourikcity 2022-10-19T17:18:58Z 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. (Although that figure of one hundred deaths was significant in this sparsely populated region.) The importance of the North-West Rebellion, apart from establishing the ability of Canadian government to successfully carry out a military action far from its center of power, is symbolic. As has been often noted by historians, the debate over the North-West Rebellion and the subsequent trial of Louis Riel reveals the tensions that continue to distinguish Canada: east versus west, native versus non-native, French-speaking versus English-speaking, American versus Canadian. Over time, Louis Riel has been seen as a demagogic madman, as an innocent victim of Prime Minister John Macdonald's fanaticism, or as a martyred national-liberation leader. None of these characterizations is entirely accurate; each contains some measure of truth. The North-West Rebellion and the trial of Louis Riel is best understood as the product of a particular place and time: the Canadian frontier, in a time when civilization and its institutions confronted the traditions of a more primitive people. Text Hudson Bay Metis UMKC School of Law Institutional Repository (University of Missouri-Kansas City) Canada Hudson Hudson Bay Regina ENVELOPE(154.846,154.846,64.939,64.939)
institution Open Polar
collection UMKC School of Law Institutional Repository (University of Missouri-Kansas City)
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topic Famous Trials
Trial
Louis Riel
Canada
Canadian
North-West Rebellion
John Macdonald
Saskatchewan River
Metis
Hudson Bay Company
Regina
spellingShingle Famous Trials
Trial
Louis Riel
Canada
Canadian
North-West Rebellion
John Macdonald
Saskatchewan River
Metis
Hudson Bay Company
Regina
Linder, Douglas O.
The Trial of Louis Riel
topic_facet Famous Trials
Trial
Louis Riel
Canada
Canadian
North-West Rebellion
John Macdonald
Saskatchewan River
Metis
Hudson Bay Company
Regina
description 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. (Although that figure of one hundred deaths was significant in this sparsely populated region.) The importance of the North-West Rebellion, apart from establishing the ability of Canadian government to successfully carry out a military action far from its center of power, is symbolic. As has been often noted by historians, the debate over the North-West Rebellion and the subsequent trial of Louis Riel reveals the tensions that continue to distinguish Canada: east versus west, native versus non-native, French-speaking versus English-speaking, American versus Canadian. Over time, Louis Riel has been seen as a demagogic madman, as an innocent victim of Prime Minister John Macdonald's fanaticism, or as a martyred national-liberation leader. None of these characterizations is entirely accurate; each contains some measure of truth. The North-West Rebellion and the trial of Louis Riel is best understood as the product of a particular place and time: the Canadian frontier, in a time when civilization and its institutions confronted the traditions of a more primitive people.
format Text
author Linder, Douglas O.
author_facet Linder, Douglas O.
author_sort Linder, Douglas O.
title The Trial of Louis Riel
title_short The Trial of Louis Riel
title_full The Trial of Louis Riel
title_fullStr The Trial of Louis Riel
title_full_unstemmed The Trial of Louis Riel
title_sort trial of louis riel
publisher UMKC School of Law Institutional Repository
publishDate 2007
url https://irlaw.umkc.edu/popular_media/69
long_lat ENVELOPE(154.846,154.846,64.939,64.939)
geographic Canada
Hudson
Hudson Bay
Regina
geographic_facet Canada
Hudson
Hudson Bay
Regina
genre Hudson Bay
Metis
genre_facet Hudson Bay
Metis
op_source Popular Media
op_relation https://irlaw.umkc.edu/popular_media/69
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