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  1. Indigenous city residents. After World War II, with new influxes of both Indigenous peoples and multicultural immigrants into the city, colonial narratives of Toronto history were increasingly challenged and replaced by multiple stories or narrative fragments. Indigenous residents created their

  2. Unpacking Settler Colonialism’s Urban Strategies: Indigenous Peoples in Victoria, British Columbia, and the Transition to a Settler-Colonial City. Solemn Processions and Terrifying Violence: Spectacle, Authority, and Citizenship during the Lachine Canal Strike of 1843. PDF. Abstract.

  3. The city, formerly known as Fort Victoria, was established in 1843 as a Hudson’s Bay Company trading post and later became a British colony in 1858. This colonial legacy is still evident in the city’s architecture, traditions, and cultural practices.

  4. Empire manifested itself most prominently in urban settings, especially in Victoria, British Columbia’s capital city. Nineteenth-century Victoria – like Melbourne, Auckland, and Cape Town – was an entrepôt in a settler-colony linked to the larger networks of global commerce and racialized hierarchies.

  5. Feb 7, 2006 · One does not travel far in Ontario before encountering Victoria Corners, Victoria Square, Victoria Harbour, Victoria Springs, Victoria Lake or just plain Victoria. Evidence of Victoria is less apparent in Québec, although the second-largest place in Canada with her name is in that province.

  6. PDF | On Jan 1, 2010, Victoria Freeman published `Toronto Has No History!' Indigeneity, Settler Colonialism, and Historical Memory in Canada's Largest City | Find, read and cite all the research...

  7. May 31, 2019 · Ottawas isolated location actually helped its chances of selection. At the time, the province of Canada consisted of two colonies: the predominantly French Quebec, and the English Ontario. Ottawa was located on the border between the two, making it a good choice.

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