<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!-- generator="wordpress.com" -->
<urlset xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9" xmlns:image="http://www.google.com/schemas/sitemap-image/1.1" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9 http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9/sitemap.xsd"><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/contributors/</loc><lastmod>2025-07-07T15:15:54+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>weekly</changefreq><priority>0.6</priority></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/about/</loc><lastmod>2025-07-07T15:14:49+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>weekly</changefreq><priority>0.6</priority></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2025/07/06/a-decade-of-conversation/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/picture3.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture3</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/picture1.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/picture2.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture2</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/screenshot-2025-07-03-at-4.47.08e280afpm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screenshot 2025-07-03 at 4.47.08 PM</image:title><image:caption> </image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2025-07-06T18:19:38+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2025/07/11/borealia-and-the-centre-of-canadian-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/3-the-open-road-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>3 the-open-road-1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2025-07-06T04:02:41+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2025/07/09/exceptional-policing-american-perspectives-on-the-cypress-hills-massacre/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/2c-farquharson.jpg</image:loc><image:title>2c Farquharson</image:title><image:caption>James Farquharson Macleod, NWMP, pictured here with Edmund Dalrymple Clark, 1870s. Source: Glenbow Archives NA-2206-1 via Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Macleod was arrested by American authorities when he attempted to extradite Montana residents to Canada on murder charges. </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/2b-cullen.jpg</image:loc><image:title>2b Cullen</image:title><image:caption>Commissioner William E. Cullen. Source: Washington Biographies Project. Born in 1838 Ohio, he moved to Minnesota in 1860 to begin practicing law. He initially worked for a judge at the Supreme Court of Minnesota, and later opened his own practice. </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/2a.jpg</image:loc><image:title>2a</image:title><image:caption>“Artist’s Depiction of the Helena Court House.” Source: Canadian Encyclopedia. Note how the artist has depicted the three men to the left (the accused). They are at ease, hat and cane are placed on the table and leaning back in the chairs. In the background a man waving a cane with his feet on the table. He is either tired or outraged. A clerk takes notes, but is the only representation of an official proceeding. The general atmosphere is mild distraction. Some sit with their backs to the proceedings. There is an audience, but no sign of a judge or police officer. </image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2025-07-06T03:56:16+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2025/07/07/historical-scholarship-pluralism-and-the-possibility-of-sharing-wealth-and-power/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/1-img2016-0267-0250-dm.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG2016-0267-0250-Dm.tif</image:title><image:caption>Musée canadien de l’histoire, Artefacts = Canadian Museum of History, Artefacts</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2025-07-06T03:55:56+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2024/11/23/flattened-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/rock-n-roll-monkey-lephzkqburk-unsplash-scaled-1.webp</image:loc><image:title>rock-n-roll-monkey-LEPhZkQbUrk-unsplash-scaled</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2024-11-23T22:41:36+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2024/08/12/borealia-on-sabbatical-this-year/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/screenshot-2024-07-21-at-3.00.57e280afpm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screenshot 2024-07-21 at 3.00.57 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2024-08-12T20:19:26+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2024/08/06/borealia-as-a-teaching-resource/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/screen-shot-2016-03-13-at-10-26-50-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-03-13-at-10-26-50-pm</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2024-08-06T19:13:39+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/topics-and-themes-for-teaching/</loc><lastmod>2024-08-06T19:10:03+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>weekly</changefreq><priority>0.6</priority></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2024/07/22/reflections-on-space-imagination-and-maritime-safety-in-the-gulf-of-st-lawrence-1820-1839/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/img_1385.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_1385</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/img_1379.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_1379</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/img_1382.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_1382</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2024-07-21T17:50:47+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2024/02/05/re-thinking-where-the-sources-lead-reflecting-on-the-research-and-writing-process/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/image-two-m.-youvilles-letter-example.png</image:loc><image:title>Image Two - M. Youville's Letter Example</image:title><image:caption>One of Mère d'Youville's Letters (1748) - Archives et collections des Sœurs Grises de Montréal (Image by Author)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/image-three-grey-nuns-archive-existing-hospital-wall.png</image:loc><image:title>Image Three - Grey Nuns Archive: Existing Hospital Wall</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/image-one-m.-youville.png</image:loc><image:title>Image One - M. Youville</image:title><image:caption>"Portrait of Mère Marguerite d'Youville" by James Duncan (1825) (McCord Stewart Museum)</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2024-01-30T23:49:31+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/10/23/quebec-tuition-fees-a-personal-reflection/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/screenshot-2023-10-20-at-4.24.25e280afpm.png</image:loc><image:title>screenshot-2023-10-20-at-4.24.25e280afpm</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/1914_0077.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1914_0077</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/20483.jpg</image:loc><image:title>20483</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/screenshot-2023-10-20-at-3.43.17e280afpm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screenshot 2023-10-20 at 3.43.17 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2023-10-27T20:27:16+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/10/26/remembering-elizabeth-mancke-ii/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/elizabeth-mancke-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>elizabeth-mancke-1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2024-03-11T23:11:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/10/24/remembering-elizabeth-mancke-part-i/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/elizabeth-mancke.jpg</image:loc><image:title>elizabeth-mancke</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2023-10-24T19:16:02+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/10/02/the-guianan-foundations-of-newfoundland-colonization/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/guianamap.png</image:loc><image:title>guianamap</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/cns_images_35_full.jpg</image:loc><image:title>cns_images_35_full</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2023-10-01T22:46:09+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/08/23/whats-the-point-in-talking-about-it-community-responses-to-enslavement-in-shelburne-nova-scotia/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/img_0656.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_0656</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/img_0605-e1692711788808.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_0605</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/img_0566.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_0566</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/img_0592.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_0592</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2023-08-22T13:48:17+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/07/24/les-acadiens-et-la-milice-1776-1815/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/m1673.1.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>M1673.1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2023-07-18T23:00:40+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/07/18/la-presence-missionnaire-chez-les-acadiens-du-golf-au-lendemain-de-la-deportation-1760-1830/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/screenshot-2023-07-18-at-7.21.18-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screenshot 2023-07-18 at 7.21.18 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/original.1184.jpg</image:loc><image:title>original.1184</image:title><image:caption>L’évêque Joseph-Octave Plessis a effectué trois visites épiscopales aux Maritimes au début du 19e siècle. BANQ via DCB/DBC.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2023-07-18T22:24:02+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/06/19/underscoring-borderland-blacks-and-the-underground-network-that-undermined-national-lines/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/daniel-broyld-rs-1600x1067-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>daniel-broyld-rs-1600x1067-1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/broyldborderland-web.jpg</image:loc><image:title>broyldborderland-web</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/22004-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>22004-1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/416cydfozcl._sx331_bo1204203200_.jpg</image:loc><image:title>416cydfozcl._sx331_bo1204203200_</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/22004.jpg</image:loc><image:title>22004</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2023-06-19T17:49:39+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/05/09/questions-of-order-confederation-and-the-making-of-modern-canada-a-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/price.png</image:loc><image:title>price</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2023-05-08T19:54:22+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/05/01/recollections-a-podcast-from-parks-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/parks-canada.png</image:loc><image:title>parks canada</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2023-04-29T17:21:51+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2023/01/09/death-restitution-and-legal-pluralism-in-upper-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/indians-and-canoe-at-coldwater-river-september-1844-toronto-reference-librarytitus-hibbert-ware-e1672521680283.png</image:loc><image:title>Indians and Canoe at Coldwater River, September 1844 (Toronto Reference Library,Titus Hibbert Ware)</image:title><image:caption>Indians and Canoe at Coldwater River, September 1844, Titus Hibbert Ware (Toronto Public Library)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/coldwater-in-1832-lac-henry-byam-martin.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Coldwater in 1832 (LAC, Henry Byam Martin)</image:title><image:caption>Coldwater in 1832, Henry Byam Martin, Library and Archives Canada</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/indian-village-at-rama-lake-couchiching-september-1844-toronto-reference-librarytitus-hibbert-ware-e1672521757156.png</image:loc><image:title>Indian Village at Rama, Lake Couchiching, September 1844 (Toronto Reference Library,Titus Hibbert Ware)</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-12-31T21:32:29+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/10/31/miseries-in-the-name-of-liberty/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/taylor.jpg</image:loc><image:title>taylor</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/american-republics-a-continental-history-of-the-united-states-1783-1850.jpg</image:loc><image:title>american-republics-a-continental-history-of-the-united-states-1783-1850</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/51aryftqvfl._sx326_bo1204203200_-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>51aryftqvfl._sx326_bo1204203200_-1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/51aryftqvfl._sx326_bo1204203200_.jpg</image:loc><image:title>51aryftqvfl._sx326_bo1204203200_</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-10-31T10:53:16+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/11/02/a-response-to-miseries-in-the-name-of-liberty/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/american-republics-a-continental-history-of-the-united-states-1783-1850-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>american-republics-a-continental-history-of-the-united-states-1783-1850-1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-10-28T17:35:45+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/10/24/de-sanctifying-written-constitutions/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/91bcxcdnvl._ac_ul600_sr600600_-2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>91bcxcdnvl._ac_ul600_sr600600_-2</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/91bcxcdnvl._ac_ul600_sr600600_-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>91bcxcdnvl._ac_ul600_sr600600_-1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/91bcxcdnvl._ac_ul600_sr600600_.jpg</image:loc><image:title>91bcxcdnvl._ac_ul600_sr600600_</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/40fe7f1b1522c2304dd0f60facd8c533-800.jpg</image:loc><image:title>40fe7f1b1522c2304dd0f60facd8c533-800</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/thumbnail_image.png</image:loc><image:title>thumbnail_image</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-10-24T15:44:42+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/10/26/women-war-and-conflict-on-turtle-island-before-1914-call-for-papers/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/screen-shot-2022-10-21-at-9.11.52-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2022-10-21 at 9.11.52 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-10-22T00:14:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/11/23/settler-colonial-violence-and-the-maritime-fisheries/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/treaty-1752-copy.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Treaty-1752-copy</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/north-shore-pei.jpg</image:loc><image:title>North Shore PEI</image:title><image:caption>North shore of Epekwitk/ PEI, looking west towards Malpeque Bay. In 1851 Bannerman estimated some 1500 American fishers from 250 schooners landed there. Photo by author, June 2020</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/1752-proclamation-of-treaty.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1752 proclamation of treaty</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:25:19+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/10/13/teach-my-research-loyalist-women-and-the-experience-of-revolutionary-exile-in-nova-scotia/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/screen-shot-2020-10-14-at-9.09.08-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-10-14 at 9.09.08 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/screen-shot-2020-10-12-at-1.39.24-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-10-12 at 1.39.24 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/front_cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>front_cover</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/screen-shot-2020-10-12-at-12.58.03-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-10-12 at 12.58.03 PM</image:title><image:caption>Click image for lesson plan materials.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:24:40+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/08/24/the-state-and-organized-rifle-shooting-in-nova-scotia-in-the-1860s/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/screen-shot-2020-08-20-at-10.16.05-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-08-20 at 10.16.05 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/picture6.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture6</image:title><image:caption>Militia and volunteer leaders established a provincial rifle association for Nova Scotia in 1864. Source: Halifax Morning Sun, 17 August 1864.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/picture5.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture5</image:title><image:caption>Military authorities organized the early rifle shooting events in Nova Scotia, including a competition in Truro in 1862. Source: Halifax Morning Sun, 5 September 1862.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/picture4.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture4</image:title><image:caption>Adjutant-General of Nova Scotia, Colonel R. Bligh Sinclair (n.d.) </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/picture3.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture3</image:title><image:caption>Private Richard Lawson of the Chebucto Greys Volunteer Rifle Company in 	full dree uniform with Enfield rifle (c. 1862) Source: </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/picture2.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture2</image:title><image:caption>The constitution of the Scottish Volunteers laid out the process for electing officers and indicated that the rifle company was open to “Scotchmen and the descendants of Scotchmen” residing in the vicinity of Halifax.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/picture1.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture1</image:title><image:caption>The Enfield rifle had a much longer range than smooth-bore muskets.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:23:25+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/07/30/decorous-dispossession-legally-extinguishing-acadian-landholding-rights/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/the_founding_of_halifax_1749._by_charles_w._jefferys.png</image:loc><image:title>The_founding_of_Halifax,_1749._by_Charles_W._Jefferys</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/em-pic.png</image:loc><image:title>EM pic</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:22:49+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/01/08/a-community-of-suffering-the-robie-women-in-loyalist-halifax/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/richard-short-1759-nsa-22the-town-and-harbour-of-halifax-in-nova-scotia-as-it-appears-from-georges-island-looking-up-to-the-kings-yard-and-bason.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Richard Short 1759 NSA The Town and Harbour of Halifax in Nova Scotia As it appears from George's Island looking up to the King's Yard and Bason''</image:title><image:caption>The Town and Harbour of Halifax in Nova Scotia As it appears from George's Island looking up to the King's Yard and Bason by Richard Short, published 1764, Photo Collection Nova Scotia Archives, Places: Halifax: General View.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:21:49+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/18/jamaican-maroons-in-nova-scotia-the-politics-of-climate-and-race/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/screen-shot-2016-05-10-at-1-43-49-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Zilberstein Colley House</image:title><image:caption>House belonging to the Colley family on the site of Governor's Farm, Preston, Gauvin &amp; Gentzel, photographer, 2 October 1934; Nova Scotia Archives Photograph Collection: Places: Preston (scan 200402283). Used with permission.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/screen-shot-2016-05-10-at-1-53-23-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Zilberstein Leonard Parkinson full</image:title><image:caption>"Leonard Parkinson, a captain of the Maroons", Abraham Raimbach, engraver, in B. Edwards, The Proceedings of the Governor and Assembly of Jamaica, in Regard to the Maroon Negroes . . . to which is prefixed an Introductory Account . . . of the Maroons . . . (London, 1796); Nova Scotia Archives Library Collection: F210 Ed9 (scan 200402094). Used with permission.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:20:19+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/12/07/pirates-1726-the-regionalism-of-danger-in-the-early-northeast/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/screen-shot-2015-12-13-at-8-28-08-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-12-13 at 8.28.08 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/screen-shot-2015-12-06-at-5-31-13-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-12-06 at 5.31.13 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/five-persons-title-page.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Montgomery: five persons title page</image:title><image:caption>The Trials of Five Persons for Piracy, Felony and Robery (Boston, 1726). American Antiquarian Society, via Readex.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:19:11+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/11/09/local-and-atlantic-sociability-military-engineer-william-booth/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/black-wood-cutter.jpg</image:loc><image:title>black wood cutter</image:title><image:caption>A Black Wood Cutter at Shelburne, Nova Scotia.
Library and Archives Canada, Acc. No. 1970-188-1090 W.H. Coverdale Collection of Canadiana.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/getfileattachment.jpg</image:loc><image:title>GetFileAttachment</image:title><image:caption>William Booth Journal
Société Jersiaise, Lord Coutanche Library</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:18:12+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/10/21/trafalgar-days-in-nova-scotia/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/747px-horationelson1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>747px-HoratioNelson1</image:title><image:caption>Lemuel Francis Abbott, Horatio Nelson, 1799
National Maritime Museum, London</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/1200px-the_battle_of_trafalgar_by_william_clarkson_stanfield.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1200px-The_Battle_of_Trafalgar_by_William_Clarkson_Stanfield</image:title><image:caption>Clarkson Frederick Stanfield, The Battle of Trafalgar by William Clarkson Stanfield, 1836</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:16:19+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/09/28/settler-science-in-new-brunswick-the-brydone-jack-observatory-and-the-invention/</loc><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:14:01+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/05/18/the-militia-and-civic-community-in-colonial-new-brunswick-part-i-1786-1816/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/screen-shot-2020-05-01-at-6.18.34-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-05-01 at 6.18.34 PM</image:title><image:caption>Header on the first page of Acts of the General Assembly of His Majesty’s Province of New-Brunswick passed in the year 1808 (Saint John, NB: Jacob Mott, 1808), 7.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/screen-shot-2020-05-01-at-6.14.32-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-05-01 at 6.14.32 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/screen-shot-2020-05-01-at-6.16.46-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-05-01 at 6.16.46 PM</image:title><image:caption>From the Frontispiece of Journal of the Votes and Proceedings of the House of Assembly of the Province of New-Brunswick.  Brookville, NB: Christopher Sower, Printer, 1794.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/frontispiece.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Frontispiece</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:07:56+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/03/17/fenianraidnewbrunswick/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/fenianbanner.jpg</image:loc><image:title>fenianbanner</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/omahony-cropped.jpg</image:loc><image:title>omahony cropped</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:05:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/20/the-environmental-and-cultural-history-of-the-st-john-river/</loc><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:04:01+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/07/24/time-and-a-place-an-environmental-history-of-prince-edward-island-a-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/9780773546936.jpg</image:loc><image:title>9780773546936</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/p1180081.jpg</image:loc><image:title>P1180081</image:title><image:caption>French River, PEI. Photo credit: Elizabeth Jewett</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:02:39+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/09/25/north-to-bondage-loyalist-slavery-in-the-maritimes-a-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/screen-shot-2017-09-24-at-2-31-56-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-09-24 at 2.31.56 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/north-to-bondage-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>north-to-bondage-1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:01:25+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/03/19/new-brunswick-lighthouses-and-colonial-spaces-1784-1867/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/p40-6w-gannet-rock-2-copy.jpg</image:loc><image:title>P40-6w Gannet Rock 2 copy</image:title><image:caption>Gannet Rock Lighthouse. Gannet Rock, New Brunswick, [pre-1905]. Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, P40-6.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/p33-181-swallow-tail.jpg</image:loc><image:title>P33-181 Swallow Tail</image:title><image:caption>Swallow Tail Lighthouse, Grand Manan, New Brunswick, 1844. Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, P33-181.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/h2-203-60-1848-harbour-of-st-john-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>METADATA-/scanq/scantofile0003.tif</image:title><image:caption>Harbour of Saint John, 1848</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/p33-182-quaco-copy.jpg</image:loc><image:title>P33-182 Quaco copy</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T21:00:25+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/03/26/teaching-the-politics-and-meaning-of-maps/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/19contshelf.png</image:loc><image:title>19ContShelf</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/18giacomo.png</image:loc><image:title>18giacomo</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/17champlain.png</image:loc><image:title>17champlain</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/16kitchin.png</image:loc><image:title>16kitchin</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/15meachum.png</image:loc><image:title>15meacham</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/14extraction.png</image:loc><image:title>14extraction</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/13coroneli.png</image:loc><image:title>13coroneli</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/12googlemap.png</image:loc><image:title>12googlemap</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/11fun.png</image:loc><image:title>11fun</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/10ns.png</image:loc><image:title>10NS</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:58:29+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/10/31/absence-makes-the-art-go-ponder/</loc><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:57:15+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/11/14/colonizing-st-john-island-a-history-in-maps/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/screen-shot-2018-11-13-at-1-14-58-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-11-13 at 1.14.58 PM</image:title><image:caption>Samuel Holland, A plan of the island of St. John with the divisions of the counties, parishes, &amp;; the lots as granted by government, likewise the soundings round the coast and harbours [Detail] (London, [1775]). From Geography and Map Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/g3426f.ct002331. </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/9.jpg</image:loc><image:title>9</image:title><image:caption>Samuel Holland, A plan of the island of St. John with the divisions of the counties, parishes, &amp; the lots as granted by government, likewise the soundings round the coast and harbours (London, [1775]). From Geography and Map Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/g3426f.ct002331. </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/screen-shot-2018-11-13-at-1-09-31-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-11-13 at 1.09.31 PM</image:title><image:caption>Proprietor Occupations, St. John Island Townships, 1767. [Click image for interactive features.]</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/8.jpg</image:loc><image:title>8</image:title><image:caption>[Egmont Bay], [ca. 1767?], B5300 Shelf UK, Archive of the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office, Taunton, Eng.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/7.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Maps K.Top.119.96</image:title><image:caption>Samuel Holland, “A Map of the Island of St. John in the Gulph of S. Lawrence in North America from an actual Survey made in 1763 By Order of The Right Honourable The Lords Commissioners for Trade and Plantations” 1767, Maps K.Top.119.96.2, the British Library, London, UK, http://primocat.bl.uk/F?func=direct&amp;local_base=ITEMV&amp;doc_number=004987877.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/screen-shot-2018-11-13-at-1-04-23-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-11-13 at 1.04.23 PM</image:title><image:caption>Assessed Land Quality, St. John Island Townships, 1767</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/7a.jpg</image:loc><image:title>7a</image:title><image:caption>[Samuel Holland] and John Lewis, "A Plan of the Island of St. John in the Province of Nova Scotia" 1765, MR 1/1785, The National Archives of the United Kingdom, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, Eng., http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C4560812.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/6.jpg</image:loc><image:title>6</image:title><image:caption>[Samuel] Holland, "Plan of the Island of St John in the Province of Nova Scotia, as surveyed agreeable to the order and instructions of The Lords Commissioners of Trade and Plantations" 1765, CO 700/Prince Edward Island 3, The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, Eng., http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C3478004.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/screen-shot-2018-11-13-at-12-56-47-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-11-13 at 12.56.47 PM</image:title><image:caption>Sample from Thomas Wright Field Book, Public Archives and Record Office of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, PE. </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/5a-index.png</image:loc><image:title>5a index</image:title><image:caption>Thomas Wright, [St. John Island survey sketches], 1765. From Thomas Wright Field Book, Public Archives and Record Office of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, PE. My thanks to Earle Lockerby for his assistance in georeferencing these sketch maps. See his book, co-authored with Douglas Sobey: Samuel Holland: His Work and Legacy on Prince Edward Island (Charlottetown, PE: Island Studies Press, 2015).</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:56:30+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/09/13/calling-the-police-before-the-police-in-newfoundland/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/dogberry.png</image:loc><image:title>dogberry</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/mercer-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Mercer Cover</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:52:07+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/12/22/yule-and-misrule-in-early-newfoundland-and-labrador-why-fires-and-firearms-roared-every-year/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/img_3146.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_3146</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/nets-hay.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Nets Hay</image:title><image:caption>Nets at Battle Harbour, NL. Photo by Stephen Hay.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/e000996320.jpg</image:loc><image:title>e000996320</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:50:41+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/03/28/collecting-the-world-in-newfoundland/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/fig-4.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Fig 4</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/fig-3.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Fig 3</image:title><image:caption>A draw of ceramics belonging to Sara Kirke © Reproduced by permission of Colony of Avalon Foundation</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/fig-2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Fig 2</image:title><image:caption>Brass sugar tongs, from the home of Sara Kirke © Reproduced by permission of Colony of Avalon Foundation</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/fig-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Fig 1</image:title><image:caption>The Pool, Ferryland, in August 2019</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:48:53+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/09/20/policing-and-public-houses-in-newfoundland/</loc><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:48:03+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/11/02/la-revolution-canadienne-la-republique-americaine-et-lesclavage-note-de-recherche/</loc><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:43:46+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/11/02/the-canadian-revolution-the-early-american-republic-and-slavery-research-notes/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/us_slavefree1837.gif</image:loc><image:title>US_SlaveFree1837</image:title><image:caption>Map of the states and territories of the United States showing which areas of the United States did and did not allow slavery between January 1837 to March 1837. Wikimedia Commons.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:42:56+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/04/06/liberal-whig-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/800px-a-block-for-the-wigs-gillray.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>800px-A-Block-for-the-Wigs-Gillray</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:41:36+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/09/14/the-readers-called-methodists-a-review-of-pulpit-press-and-politics/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/mclaren-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>McLaren cover</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/screen-shot-2020-04-21-at-2.05.59-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-04-21 at 2.05.59 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:40:46+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/09/16/the-disappearing-daughters-of-jerusalem-erasing-women-from-early-canadian-methodist-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/screen-shot-2020-06-02-at-9.39.44-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-06-02 at 9.39.44 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/screen-shot-2020-06-02-at-9.39.17-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-06-02 at 9.39.17 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/screen-shot-2020-06-02-at-9.43.00-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-06-02 at 9.43.00 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/screen-shot-2020-06-02-at-9.41.46-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-06-02 at 9.41.46 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/screen-shot-2020-06-01-at-7.28.24-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-06-01 at 7.28.24 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/camp-meeting.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Camp Meeting</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/camp-meeting-2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>camp meeting 2</image:title><image:caption>Camp-meeting, by Hugh Bridport, c. 1829, Library of Congress&#13;
https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/96510018/</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/screen-shot-2020-06-01-at-7.31.57-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-06-01 at 7.31.57 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:38:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/11/19/appraising-affect-in-the-transatlantic-correspondence-of-richard-popham-and-john-large/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/jrr1845.jpg</image:loc><image:title>jrr1845</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/jrr1840.jpg</image:loc><image:title>jrr1840</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/john-large-iou-e1542125097188.jpg</image:loc><image:title>John Large - IOU</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:38:01+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/04/08/not-one-penny-from-an-irishman-the-religious-and-financial-engagement-of-irish-workers-with-the-roman-catholic-church-on-the-rideau-canal-1831/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/2196_cataraqui_bay_1020.jpg</image:loc><image:title>2196_cataraqui_bay_1020</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/rideau-map-colour-cropped.png</image:loc><image:title>rideau-map-colour cropped</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/the_lock_at_lower_brewers_nearing_completion_in_1831.jpg</image:loc><image:title>The_lock_at_Lower_Brewers_nearing_completion_in_1831</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/800px-view_on_the_cataraqui_creek_brewers_upper_mills_in_the_background_1830.jpg</image:loc><image:title>800px-View_on_the_Cataraqui_Creek,_Brewer's_Upper_Mills_in_the_background,_1830</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:37:00+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/04/04/settling-captain-rock/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/screen-shot-2016-04-01-at-2-15-09-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Smith: Irish White Boys</image:title><image:caption>Irish White Boys, from George Lillie Craik and C. MacFarlane, The Pictorial History of England: Being a History of the People as well as a History of the Kingdom, Vol. 5  (London: Charles Knight, 1849), 79. Public Domain via Google Books.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:34:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/10/05/deja-vu-all-over-again-the-upper-canadian-election-of-1836-and-the-canadian-federal-election-of-2015/</loc><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:30:47+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/11/15/the-irish-charter-schools-and-the-long-history-of-residential-schooling-in-the-british-empire/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/screen-shot-2021-11-12-at-9.20.12-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2021-11-12 at 9.20.12 PM</image:title><image:caption>Map of Ireland showing the location of the charter schools and nurseries, from Milne, Irish Charter Schools, p. 172.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/screen-shot-2021-11-12-at-9.06.06-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2021-11-12 at 9.06.06 PM</image:title><image:caption>Seal of the Incorporated Society for Establishing English Protestant Schools in Ireland, from Robert Clayton, The Religion of Labour: A Sermon Preach’d in Christ-Church, Dublin, Before the Incorporated Society for Promoting English Protestant Schools In Ireland (Dublin, 1740), title page.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/royal-charter-school-clontarf.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Royal Charter School, Clontarf</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:23:20+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/05/10/entangling-the-quebec-act-transnational-contexts-meanings-and-legacies-in-north-america-and-the-british-empire-a-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/51582365-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Basic RGB</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/51582365.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Basic RGB</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/quebec-act.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Basic RGB</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:22:49+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/09/21/success-failure-louis-riel-and-the-history-of-policing-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/screen-shot-2020-09-19-at-9.47.52-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-09-19 at 9.47.52 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/screen-shot-2020-09-19-at-9.36.59-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-09-19 at 9.36.59 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/macdonald.jpg</image:loc><image:title>macdonald</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/riel-distress.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Riel Distress</image:title><image:caption>A Case of Riel Distress !
John Wilson Bengough
1886,</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:21:51+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/03/30/quarantine-in-the-northwest-the-hudsons-bay-companys-measures-to-stop-the-1779-1783-smallpox-epidemic/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/omushkegowak-swampy-crees.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Omushkegowak (Swampy Crees)</image:title><image:caption>Matthew Cocking, William Tomison, and other Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) employees primarily sought to protect Omushkegowak (Swampy Crees) from smallpox (Variola) as it rapidly circulated throughout Western North America starting in 1779. Unlike the HBC’s English and Scottish employees who had developed an existing immunity to the disease by adulthood, most Omushkegowak had no prior contact with smallpox and were thus susceptible to microbial attack. Library and Archives Canada, MIKAN no.2835784, Peter Rindisbacher, “A Hunter-family of Cree Indians at York Fort, drawn from nature,” 1821.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/diffusion-of-the-1779-1783-smallpox-epidemic.png</image:loc><image:title>Diffusion of the 1779-1783 smallpox epidemic</image:title><image:caption>The diffusion of the 1779-1783 smallpox epidemic on the Northern Great Plains and the Hudson Bay watershed. Paul Hackett, “Averting Disaster: The Hudson’s Bay Company and Smallpox in Western Canada during the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries,” Bull. Hist. Med., 78 (2004), 578.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/battiste-goods-winter-count-smallpox.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Battiste Good's winter count smallpox</image:title><image:caption>For two consecutive years a Lakota winter count (waníyetu wówaepi) named Battiste Good's winter count recorded smallpox as the most consequential occurrence for both 1779–1780 and 1780–1781. On winter counts chronologies, pictographs were used to designate the year in the calendar and were arranged sequentially in spirals or rows, originally on hide. The winter of 1779-1780 was titled “The eruption and pains in the stomach and bowels; smallpox used them up winter.” Candace S. Greene and Russell Thornton, The Year the Stars Fell: Lakota Winter Counts at the Smithsonian (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2007), 104.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:19:30+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/10/22/property-and-dispossession-natives-empires-and-land-in-early-modern-north-america-a-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/screen-shot-2018-10-21-at-7-16-07-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-10-21 at 7.16.07 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/screen-shot-2018-07-12-at-11-40-39-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-07-12 at 11.40.39 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/9781316613696.jpg</image:loc><image:title>9781316613696</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/9781316613696-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>9781316613696-1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/61yl8qwc6ml-_sx331_bo1204203200_1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>61YL8Qwc6mL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/61yl8qwc6ml-_sx331_bo1204203200_.jpg</image:loc><image:title>61YL8Qwc6mL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:09:53+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/09/21/is-history-too-important-to-be-left-to-historians-a-review-of-canadas-odyssey-a-country-based-on-incomplete-conquests-by-peter-h-russell/</loc><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:08:23+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/09/04/hope-and-despair-in-the-meghalayan-age/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/s.png</image:loc><image:title>s</image:title><image:caption>Stalagmite from the Indian state of Meghalaya, International Commission on Stratigraphy via Emily Chung, “You’re living in a new geologic age, the Meghalayan,” CBC News, 20 July 2018.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/m.png</image:loc><image:title>m</image:title><image:caption>Hoffnung, «Campement autochtone micmac, N.-É.», 20e siècle, Collection de cartes postales, CP956, Centre d’études acadiennes Anselme-Chiasson (CEAAC), Université de Moncton</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/cp.png</image:loc><image:title>CP</image:title><image:caption>Picard, «Le Paradis terrestre,» Collection de photographies d’œuvres de l’artiste Claude Picard, Centre de documentation et d’études madawaskayennes, (CDEM), l’Université de Moncton</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:06:36+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/10/23/britishness-and-whiteness-in-early-canadian-culture/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/richardson.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Richardson</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/tecumseh-copy.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Tecumseh copy</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T20:03:17+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/06/05/colonial-relations-the-douglas-connolly-family-and-the-nineteenth-century-imperial-world-a-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/perry-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Perry Cover</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2017-06-01-at-11-01-50-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-06-01 at 11.01.50 AM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:58:12+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/04/10/canadian-exceptionalism-is-about-land-and-resources/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/progress_of_america_by_domenico_tojetti.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Progress_of_America,_by_Domenico_Tojetti</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/screen-shot-2017-04-09-at-3-06-05-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-04-09 at 3.06.05 PM</image:title><image:caption>A portolan chart drawn by Pierre Desceliers in 1546; Library and Archives Canada NMC 44736, via Historical Atlas of Canada Learning Project.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:57:34+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/01/23/anishnaabeg-in-the-war-of-1812-more-than-tecumseh-and-his-indians/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/screen-shot-2016-04-02-at-8-31-31-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-04-02-at-8-31-31-pm</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/corbiere-chiefs.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Corbiere Chiefs</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:52:26+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/01/30/mookomaanish-the-damn-knife-odaawaa-chief-and-warrior-anishinaabeg-in-the-war-of-1812-part-2/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/1canoe.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1canoe</image:title><image:caption>Musée canadien des civilisations, Artefacts. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Artefacts</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/screen-shot-2017-01-29-at-5-26-05-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2017-01-29-at-5-26-05-pm</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/canoe.gif</image:loc><image:title>canoe</image:title><image:caption>Assiginack’s canoe, Canadian Museum of History</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/mookomaansword2-300x199.jpg</image:loc><image:title>mookomaansword2-300x199</image:title><image:caption>Mookomaanish’s Sword, Image Courtesy of the Ojibwe Cultural Foundation</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/3c-gr05-mookomaanish.jpg</image:loc><image:title>3c-gr05-mookomaanish</image:title><image:caption>Mookomaanish, Beaverbrook Collection of War Art, Canadian War Museum</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:51:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/02/06/jean-baptiste-assiginack-the-starling-aka-blackbird-anishnaabeg-in-the-war-of-1812/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/screen-shot-2017-02-05-at-4-51-55-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2017-02-05-at-4-51-55-pm</image:title><image:caption>Replica of the wampum belt McDouall gave to Assiginack to proclaim the peace</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/assiginack-unknown-artist.jpg</image:loc><image:title>assiginack-unknown-artist</image:title><image:caption>Assiginack, Artist Unknown, c. 1845</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/corbiere-wampum-belt.jpg</image:loc><image:title>corbiere-wampum-belt</image:title><image:caption>Replica of the wampum belt McDouall gave to Assiginack to proclaim the peace</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/assiginack-by-n-point.jpg</image:loc><image:title>assiginack-by-n-point</image:title><image:caption>J.B. Assiginack sketched by Nicolas Point, s.j. (Archives of the Society of Jesus of Upper Canada)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/screen-shot-2017-02-05-at-3-57-10-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2017-02-05-at-3-57-10-pm</image:title><image:caption>Sigennok or "The Blackbird," by Paul Kane, Stark Museum
</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:51:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/02/27/the-importance-of-michilimackinac-anishinaabeg-in-the-war-of-1812-part-4/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/dashwood-mackinac-copy.jpg</image:loc><image:title>dashwood-mackinac-copy</image:title><image:caption>William Dashwood, Michilimackinac on Lake Huron, ca 1820. (Oil painting in the Mackinac State Historic Parks collection)</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:50:48+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/03/06/british-honour-anishinaabeg-in-the-war-of-1812-part-5/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/screen-shot-2017-03-05-at-2-14-59-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2017-03-05-at-2-14-59-pm</image:title><image:caption>"Deputation of Indians from the Mississippi Tribes to the Governor General of British North America, Sir George Prevost. Baronet. Lieut. General, [etc.] in 1814" by Rudolf Von Steiger. Missouri History Museum via Digital Public Library of America</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/screen-shot-2015-02-14-at-1-28-55-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2015-02-14-at-1-28-55-pm</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:49:50+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/03/13/anishinaabe-aspirations-anishinaabeg-in-the-war-of-1812-part-6/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/screen-shot-2015-03-10-at-11-05-15-pm-300x130.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2015-03-10-at-11-05-15-pm-300x130</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/800px-signing_of_treaty_of_ghent_1812.jpg</image:loc><image:title>800px-signing_of_treaty_of_ghent_1812</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:49:25+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/06/26/indigenous-policy-and-silence-at-confederation/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/british_north_america_act_1867.jpg</image:loc><image:title>British_North_America_Act,_1867</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:48:43+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/10/10/new-france-and-indigenous-agency-in-the-hudson-bay-watershed/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/scott_2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>scott_2</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/scott_pic.jpg</image:loc><image:title>scott_pic</image:title><image:caption>La Vérendrye Monument in Winnipeg, Manitoba (La Vérendrye Park, Joseph-Émile Brunet, 1938), photo by Scott Berthelette.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/a27da3f2-f8c5-412d-914c-601ba9522676.jpg</image:loc><image:title>a27da3f2-f8c5-412d-914c-601ba9522676</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:48:16+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/11/14/no-confederation-wasnt-about-freedom/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/screen-shot-2017-11-14-at-8-22-37-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-11-14 at 8.22.37 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/globe-clip.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Globe clip</image:title><image:caption>Clipping from the July 1, 1867 edition of the Toronto Globe, a report celebrating the creation of “a greater Canada, already extending from the ocean to the head waters of the great lakes, and destined ere long to embrace the larger half of this North American continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific.”</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/quebec-bolshevik.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Quebec Bolshevik</image:title><image:caption>The 1917 federal election was notorious for its Francophobic content. In this cartoon, a horrifying “Quebec Bolshevik” is “Doing his bit in the Great War” by trampling on the “Laws of Canada.” </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/canadas-lands.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Canada's lands</image:title><image:caption>Cartoonist Sam Hunter’s defiant commentary on the land given away by British diplomats (and Canadian politicians). (reprinted in Randall White, Fur Trade to Free Trade (Dundurn, 1988).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/screen-shot-2017-11-14-at-7-43-24-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-11-14 at 7.43.24 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/till-2-164x300.png</image:loc><image:title>Till-2-164x300</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/till-1-204x300.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Till-1-204x300</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:46:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/09/17/an-odyssey-or-a-contract-conquests-cessions-constitutions-and-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/sp004745.jpg</image:loc><image:title>SP004745</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/512smveadl-_sx331_bo1204203200_.jpg</image:loc><image:title>512S+mvEADL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:44:18+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/09/26/mapping-land-tenure-pluralism-in-the-st-lawrence-river-valley/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/screen-shot-2018-09-22-at-7-50-31-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-09-22 at 7.50.31 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/de-pincier-odanak-map.jpg</image:loc><image:title>De Pincier Odanak Map</image:title><image:caption>Featured Image: Théodore De Pincier, Plan Des Terres Des Sauvages Abénaquis et Sokokis Du Village St-François, Arpentées et Dessinées, Situées Dans Le Comté de Buckinghamshire, District Des Trois-Rivières Dans La Province Du Bas Canada, Effectué Par Ordre de Son Excellence Robert Prescott, December 25, 1798, Centre d’archives de Québec de BAnQ, Fonds Ministère des Terres et Forêts, Documents Cartographiques, Cote E21,S555,SS1,SSS17,P9.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:39:39+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/04/24/settler-colonialism-and-recipes-in-the-early-modern-maritimes/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/screen-shot-2019-04-23-at-12.06.02-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2019-04-23 at 12.06.02 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/screen-shot-2019-04-23-at-12.00.45-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2019-04-23 at 12.00.45 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/post-2-image-2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Post 2 Image 2</image:title><image:caption>Lafitau. “Planche VII, Maniere de faire le sucre d’Erable.” Moeurs des Sauvages Ameriquans. Tome Second. Paris, 1724. p. 154.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/post-2-image-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Post 2 image 1</image:title><image:caption>Theodor de Bry. Hand-coloured illustration of Theodor de Bry’s engraved illustration of the Native American village of Secoton. A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia. By Thomas Hariot. London, 1590.  Wikimedia Commons.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:38:54+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/07/16/reconciling-chignecto-the-many-stories-of-siknikt/</loc><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:37:42+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/07/13/teach-my-research-food-colonization-and-religion-in-new-france/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/screen-shot-2020-07-11-at-2.59.37-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-07-11 at 2.59.37 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/screen-shot-2020-07-11-at-2.49.08-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-07-11 at 2.49.08 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/screen-shot-2020-07-11-at-2.36.40-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-07-11 at 2.36.40 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/screen-shot-2020-07-11-at-2.34.16-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-07-11 at 2.34.16 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:36:27+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/10/26/teach-my-research-jesuits-and-demons-in-new-france/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/screen-shot-2020-10-25-at-10.11.57-am.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-10-25 at 10.11.57 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/screen-shot-2020-10-25-at-9.54.00-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-10-25 at 9.54.00 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/demons-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>demons cover</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/screen-shot-2020-10-25-at-10.11.57-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-10-25 at 10.11.57 AM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:33:18+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/11/09/a-root-that-our-french-call-rosary-foodways-in-indigenous-and-french-north-america/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/screen-shot-2020-11-09-at-9.20.33-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-11-09 at 9.20.33 AM</image:title><image:caption>Distribution of triploid Apios Americana in Eastern Canada.
Janet A. E. Seabrook et Leo. A. Dionne, in “Studies on the genus Apios.I. Chromosome number and distribution of Apios Americana and A. priceana,” Canadian Journal of Botany, 54 (22), (1976), 2568.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/picture4.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture4</image:title><image:caption>Apios americana, via Wikipedia</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/picture3.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture3</image:title><image:caption>Detail of Mémoire au sujet des neuf familles iroquoises, Archives nationales d’outre-mer (France)
FR CAOM COL C11A 2 fol. 263-269</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/screen-shot-2020-11-09-at-9.16.59-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-11-09 at 9.16.59 AM</image:title><image:caption>Detail of Mémoire au sujet des neuf familles iroquoises, Archives nationales d’outre-mer (France)
FR CAOM COL C11A 2 fol. 263-269</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/picture2.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture2</image:title><image:caption>Detail of Mémoire au sujet des neuf familles iroquoises, Archives nationales d’outre-mer (France)
FR CAOM COL C11A 2 fol. 263-269</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/picture1.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture1</image:title><image:caption>Detail of Mémoire au sujet des neuf familles iroquoises, Archives nationales d’outre-mer (France)
FR CAOM COL C11A 2 fol. 263-269
</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/screen-shot-2020-10-25-at-12.24.28-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-10-25 at 12.24.28 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:30:41+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/11/30/at-a-crossroads-connections-and-family-formation-in-montreal-1700-1750/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/1723-city-plan-of-montreal-wi-th-la-corne-house-location-.png</image:loc><image:title>1723 City Plan of Montre?al wi th La Corne House Location</image:title><image:caption>"Plan of Montréal drafted in 1723 showing the location of Luc de La Corne's residence." Source: Library and Archives Canada - C28399</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/luc-de-la-corne-portrait.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Luc de La Corne Portrait</image:title><image:caption>"Portrait of Luc de La Corne St. Luc." Source: Library and Archives Canada - ID #: 4310457</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/map-of-new-france-and-louisiana-hennepin-1683-banq-with-settlement-indications-.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Map of New France and Louisiana - Hennepin (1683) - BANQ - with settlement indications</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:28:03+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/07/05/a-different-road-to-sainthood-building-a-religious-community-in-eighteenth-century-montreal/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/screen-shot-2021-07-06-at-1.17.07-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2021-07-06 at 1.17.07 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/marie-marguerite-mere-dyouville-portrait-cropped.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Marie-Marguerite, Mere D'Youville Portrait cropped</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/marie-marguerite-mere-dyouville-portrait.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Marie-Marguerite, Mere D'Youville Portrait</image:title><image:caption>portrait of Marie-Marguerite D'Youville. Source: Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec, Québec, "Marie-Marguerite Dufrost Lajemmerais, mère d'Youville," 1880, P560, S2, D1, P1715.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/loucks-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Loucks 1</image:title><image:caption>The entrance to the Grey Nuns Convent, Montreal, a 19th century picture of a far older edifice, one that exists to the present.
ID #10127
Credit: Bohuslav Kroupa / National Archives of Canada / C-113654</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:20:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/07/18/bludgeons-on-the-bay-of-quinte-sovereignty-revolution-and-the-state-in-upper-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/3.-bay-of-quinte-map-detail-1826.png</image:loc><image:title>3. Bay of Quinte map detail (1826)</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/6.-raft-on-the-st.-lawrence-bartlett-newberry.jpg</image:loc><image:title>6. Raft on the St. Lawrence (Bartlett, Newberry)</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/1.-bay-of-quinte-mohawk-village-acland-1860-lac.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1. Bay of Quinte, Mohawk Village (Acland 1860, LAC)</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/screen-shot-2022-07-17-at-3.44.32-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2022-07-17 at 3.44.32 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T19:13:58+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/05/31/unearthing-a-new-acadia/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/17b7c4-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>17B7C4-1</image:title><image:caption>Pair of sleeve buttons, hollow cast brass with connecting link. 17B7C4.1, from the Bourg/Melanson house (Feature 8) at the Melanson site. Photo by author, with thanks to Parks Canada.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/7b17n2-01.jpg</image:loc><image:title>7B17N2-01</image:title><image:caption>Sleeve button, green paste jewel in plated setting. 7B17N2.01, from Beaubassin. Photo by author, with thanks to Parks Canada.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/slide1.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Slide1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T17:53:00+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/06/01/french-colonial-historical-society-ottawa-2016-conference-recap/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/screen-shot-2016-05-28-at-11-18-21-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Fort Anne brochure</image:title><image:caption>Guide to Fort Anne, Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia
(1922), Parks Canada</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/french-colonial-soc.png</image:loc><image:title>French Colonial Soc</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/screen-shot-2016-05-28-at-10-42-42-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Pettigrew Louisbourg journal</image:title><image:caption>Journal du siège et de la reddition de Louisbourg (detail), 1758-59, Library and Archives Canada, R15514-0-4-E</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T17:41:52+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/10/28/ihaf-2015-an-overview-from-an-early-north-americanist/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/ihaf-congress.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IHAF congress</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T17:40:59+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/07/02/the-french-colonial-historical-society-longueuil-2019-a-template-for-early-canadian-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/ordre-desordre-colonial-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>ordre-desordre-colonial</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/ordre-desordre-colonial.jpg</image:loc><image:title>ordre-desordre-colonial</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/screen-shot-2019-06-28-at-3.55.29-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2019-06-28 at 3.55.29 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-07-23T17:17:17+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/06/20/the-quebec-act-two-fights-and-relative-subjecthood/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/premiere_eglise_ville-marie.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Premiere_eglise_Ville-Marie</image:title><image:caption>Premiere Eglise Ville Marie (Notre Dame Church, Place d’Armes, Montreal), Wikimedia Commons</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/m15885-p2-copy.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>M15885-P2 copy</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-06-20T10:06:44+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/04/19/cautionary-tales-the-upper-canada-rebellion-and-the-freedom-convoy/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/francis_bond_head.png</image:loc><image:title>Francis_Bond_Head</image:title><image:caption>Sir Francis Bond Head, Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada. Nelson Cook, painter;  C. Turner, engraver; Fred. C. Capreol, publisher. 1 September 1837. Archives of Ontario, via Wikipedia</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/montgomerys_tavern.png</image:loc><image:title>Montgomery's_Tavern</image:title><image:caption>The Battle of Montgomery’s Tavern, Unknown artist, Canadian Military Heritage, Department of Defence. via Wikipedia.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/montgomerys-tavern.jpg</image:loc><image:title>montgomery's tavern</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-04-18T21:51:29+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/03/14/herring-the-moral-economy-and-the-liberal-order-framework/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/201305217.jpg</image:loc><image:title>201305217</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/nb.1819.ch-16.jpg</image:loc><image:title>NB.1819.ch 16</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-03-13T21:49:48+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/11/05/french-colonial-detroit-aboriginal-presence-a-conference-retrospective/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/screen-shot-2015-11-05-at-10-22-19-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-11-05 at 10.22.19 AM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-03-11T15:17:21+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/02/28/hedging-his-bets-ethan-allen-the-haldimand-negotiations-and-allegiance-in-the-american-revolution/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/statue_of_ethan_allen_by_larkin_goldsmith_mead.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Statue_of_Ethan_Allen_by_Larkin_Goldsmith_Mead</image:title><image:caption>Statue of Ethan Allen by Larkin Goldsmith Mead, via Wikimedia Commons. No contemporary image of Allen is known to be extant.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/frederick-haldimand.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Frederick Haldimand</image:title><image:caption>Frederick Haldimand, circa 1778, by Joshua Reynolds. National Portrait Gallery, via Wikimedia Commons</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/capture_of_fort_ticonderoga_nypl_b12610206-422590.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Capture_of_Fort_Ticonderoga_(NYPL_b12610206-422590)</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2022-03-01T18:35:42+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/02/15/what-would-lord-durham-advise/</loc><lastmod>2022-02-15T17:35:17+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2022/02/07/roughing-it-in-the-bush-the-politics-of-the-book-in-early-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/image1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>image1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/image3.png</image:loc><image:title>image3</image:title><image:caption>Editor Charles Frederick  Briggs (1804-1877), Wikimedia Commons</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/image2.png</image:loc><image:title>Image2</image:title><image:caption>Susanna Moodie (1803-1885), Dictionary of Canadian Biography</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2022-02-07T16:21:27+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/04/11/white-tribism-viking-explorations-and-indigenous-erasures/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/img_3006-e1460309770532.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_3006</image:title><image:caption>Dighton Rock, Berkley, Massachusetts. Photograph by the author, 2013.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/skeletonarmour.png</image:loc><image:title>skeletonarmour</image:title><image:caption>The so-called “Skeleton in Armour” of Fall River, Mass., as illustrated in The American Monthly Magazine, Jan. 1836. It accompanied the article by Harvard historian Jared Sparks that argued it was Phoenician. The burial was a typical Indigenous one of the seventeenth century.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/1200px-wheaton1844_p564_the_dighton_stone_-_1830.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1200px-WHEATON(1844)_p564_The_Dighton_Stone_-_1830</image:title><image:caption>A copy of the symbols or petroclyphes at Dighton Rock, made by the Historical Commission of Providence, Rhode Island, 1830, as published in Henri Wheaton, Histoire des peuples du Nord: ou Danois et des Normands (Paris, 1844). Public domain, via wikimedia.
The European lettering in the image appear to have been a concoction of Carl Christian Rafn and his associate, the Icelandic scholar Finn Magnussén</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-12-22T22:14:01+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/10/24/lile-aux-demons-cartographie-dun-mirage/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/la_nuova_francia.jpg</image:loc><image:title>La_Nuova_Francia</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/ile_marguerite.png</image:loc><image:title>Ile_Marguerite</image:title><image:caption>« L’Isle où une Damoiselle Françoise fut exilee » in Thévet, André, La Cosmographie universelle (Paris, Pierre l’Huillier, 1575). BAnQ</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/ile_focus.png</image:loc><image:title>Ile_focus</image:title><image:caption>« Isola de Demoni » détail de Ramusio, Giovanni Battista, La Nuova Francia (Venise, Giunta, 1556). BAnQ</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-12-22T22:10:55+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/11/28/cabotia-and-fredonia/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/00224059.jpg</image:loc><image:title>00224059</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-11.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 11</image:title><image:caption>“Fredonia Or The United States of North America,” G. Cruchley, 1833.
Excerpt showing the name “Cabotia.” Courtesy of the David Rumsey Map Collection.
</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-101.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 10</image:title><image:caption>“Fredonia Or The United States of North America,” G. Cruchley, 1833.
Detail showing note. Courtesy of the David Rumsey Map Collection
</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-10.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 10</image:title><image:caption>“Fredonia Or The United States of North America,” G. Cruchley, 1833.
Detail showing note. Courtesy of the David Rumsey Map Collection
</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-9.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 9</image:title><image:caption>“Fredonia Or The United States of North America,” G. Cruchley, 1833.
Detail showing title. Courtesy of the David Rumsey Map Collection.
</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-6.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 6</image:title><image:caption>“A Map of Cabotia,” John Purdy, 1814.
Detail showing note. Courtesy of David Rumsey Historical Map Collection
</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-5.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 5</image:title><image:caption>“A Map of Cabotia,” John Purdy, 1814. Detail. Courtesy of David Rumsey Historical Map Collection</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-4.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 4</image:title><image:caption>“A Map of Cabotia,” John Purdy, 1814. Detail. Courtesy of David Rumsey Historical Map Collection.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-3.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 3</image:title><image:caption>“A Map of Cabotia,” John Purdy, 1814. Detail. Courtesy of David Rumsey Historical Map Collection.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image-2.png</image:loc><image:title>IMAGE 2</image:title><image:caption>“A Map of Cabotia,” John Purdy, 1814. Detail. Courtesy of David Rumsey Historical Map Collection.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-12-22T22:10:26+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/06/18/what-peter-fidler-didnt-report/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/colpitts-blog-illustration-2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>colpitts-blog-illustration-2</image:title><image:caption>Peter Fidler’s August 21 entry from 1800</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/colpitts-blog-illustration-4.jpg</image:loc><image:title>colpitts-blog-illustration-4</image:title><image:caption>The HBC Fort Ellice Daybook showing daily transactions in the fur trade, February 20, March 6, 1823.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/colpitts-blog-illustration-3.jpg</image:loc><image:title>colpitts-blog-illustration-3</image:title><image:caption>A district report written from Lesser Slave Lake, 1819-20 sketching navigable rivers and in separate headings of text, its soils, vegetation, animals and climate.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/colpitts-blog-illustration-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>colpitts-blog-illustration-1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/untitled-2.png</image:loc><image:title>Untitled 2</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-12-22T17:56:54+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/01/04/new-brunswicks-militia-and-home-defence-during-the-great-war/</loc><lastmod>2021-12-22T17:55:59+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/10/04/les-miliciens-du-165e-bataillon-le-bataillon-acadien-pendant-la-premiere-guerre-mondiale/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/joseph-t.-doucet.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Joseph T. Doucet</image:title><image:caption>L. C. D'Aigle, Un aperçu historique et un registre photographique du Bataillon "acadien" d'outremer 165ième F. E. C. (Ottawa: The Mortimer Company Limited, 1917).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/officiers-du-165e-bn-acc80-saint-jean.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Officiers du 165e Bn à Saint-Jean</image:title><image:caption>Officers of the 165th Bn is from the fonds 566 archives privées Louis-Cyriaque D'Aigle, Centre d'études acadiennes Anselme-Chiasson. </image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-12-22T14:38:36+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/12/17/ethnicity-nationalism-and-the-irish-networks-of-diaspora-in-early-twentieth-century-northeastern-north-america/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/st-johns-methodist-college.jpg</image:loc><image:title>St John's Methodist College</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/a-land-of-dreams-front.jpg</image:loc><image:title>A Land of Dreams - Front</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/st-johns-harbour-1905.jpg</image:loc><image:title>St John's Harbour 1905</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/sdil-canada-membership-card.jpg</image:loc><image:title>SDIL Canada Membership Card</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/katherine-hughes-e1544208414167.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Katherine Hughes</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-12-22T14:37:11+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/12/14/thomas-davies-and-other-british-military-artists-in-the-atlantic-theater-of-war-1757-1758/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/an_east_view_of_the_great_cataract_of_niagara_-_thomas_davies.jpg</image:loc><image:title>An_East_View_of_the_Great_Cataract_of_Niagara_-_Thomas_Davies</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-12-22T14:31:17+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/11/29/reconstitution-du-parcours-militaire-de-j-ulric-leblanc-soldat-acadien-de-la-premiere-guerre-mondiale-a-partir-des-archives-et-de-google-maps/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/map-trajet-ulric-1915-1919.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Map - Trajet Ulric 1915-1919</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/war-diary-arrival-in-beglium-1919-1-e1636767747155.jpg</image:loc><image:title>War Diary - arrival in beglium - 1919</image:title><image:caption>War Diary, 2nd Divisional Train, CEF (Source : BAC)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/war-diary-arrival-in-beglium-1919.jpg</image:loc><image:title>War Diary - arrival in beglium - 1919</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/inkedletter-feb-2nd-belgium_page-0001_li.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Inkedletter feb 2nd - belgium_page-0001_LI</image:title><image:caption>IMAGE 3 – Ulric LeBlanc à ses parents, le 24 décembre 1916 (Source : CEAAC)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/formulaire-103-ulric.jpg</image:loc><image:title>formulaire 103 - Ulric</image:title><image:caption>Dossier militaire du soldat J. Ulric LeBlanc (BAC)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/soldat.png</image:loc><image:title>soldat</image:title><image:caption>Portrait du soldat J. Ulric LeBlanc (Source : CEAAC)</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-11-13T01:48:20+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/02/08/lets-play-again-recovering-the-losers-of-the-american-revolution-part-i/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/screen-shot-2016-02-07-at-5-08-27-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-02-07 at 5.08.27 PM</image:title><image:caption>Benjamin West, "John Eardley Wilmot," 1812. 
Yale Center for British Art</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-10-29T18:31:40+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/02/29/canadian-fugitive-slave-advertisements-an-untapped-archive-of-resistance/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/screen-shot-2016-02-28-at-8-59-28-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-02-28 at 8.59.28 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/quebec-gazette-january-29-1778.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Quebec Gazette January 29 1778</image:title><image:caption>Quebec Gazette, January 29 1778</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/royal-gazette-hfx-july-10-1792.png</image:loc><image:title>Royal Gazette Hfx July 10 1792</image:title><image:caption>Royal Gazette (Halifax), July 10 1792</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/screen-shot-2016-02-28-at-8-26-28-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-02-28 at 8.26.28 PM</image:title><image:caption>Weekly Chronicle (Halifax), 15 March 1794</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-09-06T01:56:41+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/11/05/colonial-canada-making-the-familiar-dis-comfortingly-strange/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/screen-shot-2018-11-04-at-4-03-25-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-11-04 at 4.03.25 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/detail.jpg</image:loc><image:title>detail</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/portefeuille_131_du_fonds_du_-lhermite_jacques_btv1b5901070m.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>[Portefeuille_131_du_fonds_du_[...]L'Hermite_Jacques_btv1b5901070m</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-08-21T15:19:27+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/06/07/les-officiers-militaires-francais-et-les-miliciens-de-la-nouvelle-france-1755-1760/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/757px-franccca7ois_gaston_de_lecc81vis_stewart_1984-8.jpg</image:loc><image:title>757px-François_Gaston_de_Lévis_(Stewart_1984-8)</image:title><image:caption>François-Gaston, duc de Lévis, (1984.8), huile sur toile, XIXe siècle, Musée Stewart, Montréal, via Wikimedia Commons</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/plainesabraham.jpg</image:loc><image:title>PlainesAbraham</image:title><image:caption>Vue de la Prise de Quebec, le 13 Septembre 1759, une gravure basée sur un croquis réalisé par Hervey Smyth. Library of the Canadian Department of National Defence, via Wikimedia Commons.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/787px-marquis_de_boishecc81bert_-_charles_deschamps_de_boishecc81bert_et_de_raffetot_1753_mccord_museum_mcgill.jpg</image:loc><image:title>787px-Marquis_de_Boishébert_-_Charles_Deschamps_de_Boishébert_et_de_Raffetot_(1753)_McCord_Museum_McGill</image:title><image:caption>Marquis de Boishébert - Charles Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot (1753) McCord Museum McGill</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/archeveche_quebec_1759_richard_short.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Archeveche_Quebec_1759_Richard_Short</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-08-21T15:10:41+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/06/14/pandemic-methodologies-twitter-conference-2021-programme-june-24-25-2021/</loc><lastmod>2021-06-10T18:30:29+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/04/26/wounded-feelings-how-to-sue-for-emotional-distress-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/ezmedmlxqaikhul.jpg</image:loc><image:title>EZmEdmLXQAIKHuL</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/article_4627_cover_en_us.jpg</image:loc><image:title>article_4627_cover_en_US</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-04-26T00:48:23+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/04/13/the-fury-of-the-betrayed-what-attacks-on-capitols-in-montreal-1849-and-washington-2021-tell-us-about-the-long-history-of-anti-democratic-sentiment-in-north-american-political-culture/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/parliament_buildings_montreal_1849.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Parliament_buildings_Montreal_1849</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-04-14T03:50:47+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/04/07/pandemic-methodologies-twitter-conference-2021-call-for-participants/</loc><lastmod>2021-04-07T23:04:39+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/04/07/conference-twitter-sur-les-methodologies-pandemiques-2021-appel-a-participation/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/pandemiclogo-e1617836579410.png</image:loc><image:title>pandemiclogo</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-04-07T23:03:53+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/03/29/la-nouvelle-france-une-societe-du-long-moyen-age-%e2%80%89-partie-2/</loc><lastmod>2021-03-29T10:51:34+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/03/29/was-new-france-a-society-of-the-long-middle-ages-part-2/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/rpcq_bien_94314_295415.jpg</image:loc><image:title>La France apportant la Foi</image:title><image:caption>"La France apportant la foi aux Hurons de la Nouvelle-France," Michel Elie, Centre de conservation du Québec</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/screen-shot-2021-03-28-at-2.44.06-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2021-03-28 at 2.44.06 PM</image:title><image:caption>"La France apportant la foi aux Hurons de la Nouvelle-France," Michel Elie, Centre de conservation du Québec</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-03-29T10:50:43+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/03/15/la-nouvelle-france-une-societe-du-long-moyen-age-%e2%80%89/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/enguerrand-quarton-la-vierge-de-mise-ricorde-de-la-famille-cadard-1452-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Enguerrand Quarton, La vierge de mise ricorde de la famille Cadard, 1452</image:title><image:caption>Vierge de miséricorde de la famille, painted by Enguerrand Quarton in 1452, with the following caption : Dans cette image, la vierge de miséricorde protège de son manteau des croyants issus de tous les ordres de la société médiévale. La vierge est ici une allégorie de l’Église institutionnelle, qui préserve et domine tous les croyants, du pape jusqu’au paysan.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-03-18T19:07:10+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/03/15/was-new-france-a-society-of-the-long-middle-ages/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/81ln55puftl-e1615744878670.jpg</image:loc><image:title>81Ln55pUftL</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/screen-shot-2021-03-14-at-2.30.25-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2021-03-14 at 2.30.25 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/enguerrand-quarton-la-vierge-de-mise-ricorde-de-la-famille-cadard-1452.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Enguerrand Quarton, La vierge de mise ricorde de la famille Cadard, 1452</image:title><image:caption>Vierge de miséricorde de la famille, painted by Enguerrand Quarton in 1452, with the following caption : In this image, the Virgin protects, under her mantle, faithful believers coming from every social strata of medieval society. The virgin is an allegory of the institutional Church, which preserves and dominates all believers, from the pope to the peasant.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-03-15T09:02:00+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/03/01/history-and-memory-of-the-seigneurial-regime-in-quebec/</loc><lastmod>2021-03-06T16:45:07+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/03/01/histoire-et-memoire-du-regime-seigneurial-au-quebec/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/1306182036-histoire_memoire_regime_seigneurial_1.png</image:loc><image:title>1306182036-histoire_memoire_regime_seigneurial_1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/screen-shot-2021-02-28-at-9.58.48-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2021-02-28 at 9.58.48 AM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-02-28T14:05:11+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/02/15/pierre-maisonnat-baptiste-un-corsaire-francais-a-la-riviere-saint-jean-durant-la-guerre-de-la-ligue-daugsbourg-1688-1697/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/flucc82te_royale_franccca7aise_vers_1690-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Flûte_royale_française_vers_1690</image:title><image:caption>Le Profond était une flûte de la Marine royale française lancée en 1685 à Rochefort. Ce navire fut utilisé dans les eaux de la Nouvelle-France lors de combats maritimes, entre autre dans la baie Française (Baie de Fundy) lors de la Guerre de la Ligue d’Augsbourg.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/1014px-le_pecc81lican_dans_la_baie_dhudson_en_1697.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1014px-Le_Pélican_dans_la_baie_d'Hudson_en_1697</image:title><image:caption>Le navire Le Pélican est un navire de guerre français de la fin du 17e siècle, construit à Bayonne. Il fait 500 tonnes et est muni de 44 canons. Il sera commandé par d’Iberville lors de ses campagnes de la Guerre d’Augsbourg en Acadie et à Terre-Neuve. Une bonne partie de son équipage fonctionne selon le système de rémunération corsaire.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/picture1.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture1</image:title><image:caption>Plan du fort de la Rivière Saint-Jean. Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. No d’item, base de données 40430. Date : 20 octobre 1700. Référence : FR CAOM 3DFC40C.  « Rose des vents fleurdelysée. Au verso : « par M. de Willieux ». (Villieu)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/flucc82te_royale_franccca7aise_vers_1690.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Flûte_royale_française_vers_1690</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-03-04T14:31:27+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/02/01/the-problem-of-legacy-john-a-macdonald-and-the-politics-of-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/screen-shot-2021-01-29-at-8.28.42-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2021-01-29 at 8.28.42 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-01-31T17:32:47+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/02/02/debating-canadian-presentism-narrative-nation-and-macdonald-in-2021/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/1ecwhaanxkaakbhx.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1EcWhAANXkAAKBHx</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-01-31T01:57:53+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/01/18/a-summer-paddle-on-a-popular-stream-a-review-of-canoe-and-canvas/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/sp005414-1-e1610846918456.jpg</image:loc><image:title>sp005414</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-01-18T13:52:35+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2021/01/06/debating-american-democracy/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/flag.jpg</image:loc><image:title>flag</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2021-01-07T14:35:58+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/11/05/are-we-there-yet-on-the-pandemic-trumpism-and-the-history-of-anticipation/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/the-open-road-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>the-open-road</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/download.jpg</image:loc><image:title>download</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-11-06T03:03:50+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/front-page/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/borealia-halloween-header-2019-in-use-copy-1.png</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Halloween Header 2019 IN USE copy</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/borealia-halloween-header-2019-in-use-copy.png</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Halloween Header 2019 IN USE copy</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/borealia-header-2019-in-use.png</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Header 2019 IN USE</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/borealia-header-2019-copy-2.png</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Header 2019 COPY</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/borealia-header-2019-copy-1.png</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Header 2019 COPY</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/borealia-header-2019-copy.png</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Header 2019 COPY</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/borealia-header-2019-copy-1.png</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Header 2019 COPY</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/screen-shot-2020-05-25-at-7.48.06-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-05-25 at 7.48.06 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/screen-shot-2020-05-25-at-7.14.22-pm-1.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-05-25 at 7.14.22 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/screen-shot-2020-05-25-at-7.14.22-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-05-25 at 7.14.22 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-11-04T02:26:42+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>weekly</changefreq><priority>0.6</priority></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/10/15/call-for-papers-canadian-coastal-histories/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/coasthistcfp-scaled-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>CoastHistCFP-scaled</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/coasthistcfpbanner.jpg</image:loc><image:title>CoastHistCFPbanner</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-10-16T00:41:53+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/08/27/appel-a-communication-les-histoires-et-conteurs-du-nouveau-brunswick-une-collection-de-la-pre-confederation/</loc><lastmod>2020-10-08T17:04:04+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/08/27/call-for-proposals-new-brunswick-stories-and-storytellers-a-pre-confederation-collection/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/atlantic-digital-scholarship-logo.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Atlantic Digital Scholarship logo</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-10-08T17:03:19+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/06/29/remembering-the-first-world-war/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/mud.jpg</image:loc><image:title>mud</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/screen-shot-2020-06-27-at-9.02.27-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-06-27 at 9.02.27 PM</image:title><image:caption>Canadian War Museum Supply Line First World War Discovery Box. Courtesy of the Canadian War Museum</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/picture2.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture2</image:title><image:caption>Canadian War Museum Supply Line First World War Discovery Box. Courtesy of the Canadian War Museum</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/picture1.png</image:loc><image:title>Picture1</image:title><image:caption>“Mud and barbed wire through which the Canadians advanced during the Battle of Passchendaele.” William Rider-Rider. Canada. Dept. of National Defence. Library and Archives Canada , A-002165</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2020-06-30T20:11:36+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/06/15/une-epopee-corsaire-au-canada-atlantique-durant-le-regime-francais/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/portrait-n.-landry.jpg</image:loc><image:title>portrait N. Landry</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/jurriaen-aernoutsz.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Jurriaen Aernoutsz</image:title><image:caption>Plaque commémoratif de l’attaque de Jurriaen Aernoutsz au Fort Pentagouet, Castine, Maine (Wikipedia)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/champlain-cecc81dant-quecc81bec-acc80-le28099amiral-kirk-le-20-juillet-1629.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Champlain cédant Québec à l’amiral Kirk le 20 juillet 1629</image:title><image:caption>Champlain surrendering Qubec to Admiral Kirke, July 20, 1628, oilette postcard printed in England after the drawing by R. Caton Woodville (Wikipedia)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/carte_de_l_accadie_et_pais_voisins_1757.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Carte_de_l'_Accadie_et_Pais_Voisins_1757</image:title><image:caption>Carte de l’Accadie et Pais Voisins, 1757, Jacques-Nicolas Bellin (Wikipedia)</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-04-15T18:48:15+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/06/08/introducing-loyalist-migrations/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/clineupdated.jpg</image:loc><image:title>ClineUpdated</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/screen-shot-2020-05-30-at-6.31.27-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-05-30 at 6.31.27 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/bender.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Bender</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/map.png</image:loc><image:title>Map</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-08-26T18:57:00+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/07/09/exhibiting-the-acadian-history-of-pointe-sainte-anne/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/lecture-series.jpg</image:loc><image:title>lecture series</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/3228px-a_view_of_the_plundering_and_burning_of_the_city_of_grymross_by_thomas_davies_1758.jpg</image:loc><image:title>3228px-A_View_of_the_Plundering_and_Burning_of_the_City_of_Grymross,_by_Thomas_Davies,_1758</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/image-4.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Image 4</image:title><image:caption>Moses Hazen, a digital recreation by Alan Edwards/Reallusion, NBCCD</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/image-3.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Image 3</image:title><image:caption>Saint John River Campaign Locations</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/image-2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Image 2</image:title><image:caption>Extract from the 1698 census (Source: LAC)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/image-1.png</image:loc><image:title>Image 1</image:title><image:caption>Fort Nashwaak</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2021-02-21T17:06:54+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/07/22/wide-angles-close-quarters-a-human-history-of-the-grand-derangement/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/hodson.archiveimage.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Hodson.archiveimage</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/hodsonphoto.jpg</image:loc><image:title>hodsonphoto</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-05-30T11:59:23+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/05/25/new-books-in-early-canadian-history-may-december-2020/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/radforth.jpg</image:loc><image:title>radforth</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/phillips-outsourcing-empire.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Phillips outsourcing empire</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/jones-shattered-cross.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Jones shattered cross</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/wegmann-englebert-french-connections.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Wegmann Englebert french connections</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/slide1-1.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Slide1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/slide1.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Slide1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/skeehan_fabricofempire.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Skeehan_fabricofempire</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/engler_standonguard.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Engler_standonguard</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/carter_oursbyeverylaw.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Carter_oursbyeverylaw</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/dood.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Dood</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-05-26T13:51:12+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/05/06/women-also-know-loyalists/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/screen-shot-2020-04-29-at-5.45.50-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-04-29 at 5.45.50 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/consequences-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>consequences cover</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/duval-article.jpg</image:loc><image:title>duval article</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/stripped-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Stripped cover</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/screen-shot-2020-04-29-at-5.53.48-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-04-29 at 5.53.48 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-05-08T12:51:08+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/05/04/women-also-know-revolution/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/slide1.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Slide1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-05-08T12:50:29+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/05/13/teach-my-research/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/pexels-photo-289738.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>pexels-photo-289738</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-05-02T00:04:06+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/05/13/call-for-papers-military-service-citizenship-and-political-culture-militia-studies-in-atlantic-canada-1700-2000/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/ieagregg-logos.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IEAGREGG logos</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-05-01T21:08:19+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/05/13/appel-de-textes-service-militaire-citoyennete-et-culture-politique-etudes-des-milices-au-canada-atlantique-1700-2000/</loc><lastmod>2020-05-01T21:07:43+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/01/20/jacksonian-america-and-the-canadian-rebellion-a-review-by-mark-r-cheathem/</loc><lastmod>2020-04-21T17:01:22+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/04/20/canadian-history-after-covid-19/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/1280px-covid-19_outbreak_world_map_per_capita.svg_.png</image:loc><image:title>1280px-COVID-19_Outbreak_World_Map_per_Capita.svg</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/im-166856.jpg</image:loc><image:title>im-166856</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-04-23T14:52:39+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/04/13/great-lives-the-perfect-pandemic-podcast/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/getattachmentthumbnail.jpg</image:loc><image:title>GetAttachmentThumbnail</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/wright-2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Wright 2</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/wright-1.png</image:loc><image:title>Wright 1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-04-19T20:58:54+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/03/23/killer-advertising-how-canadians-were-sold-the-1918-1919-influenza-pandemic/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/screen-shot-2020-03-21-at-8.21.46-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2020-03-21 at 8.21.46 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/pic8.png</image:loc><image:title>pic8</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/pic7.png</image:loc><image:title>pic7</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/pic6.png</image:loc><image:title>pic6</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/pic5.png</image:loc><image:title>pic5</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/pic4.png</image:loc><image:title>pic4</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/pic3.png</image:loc><image:title>pic3</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/pic1.png</image:loc><image:title>pic1</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/pic-2.png</image:loc><image:title>pic-2</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-03-23T15:17:12+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2020/01/13/jacksonian-america-and-the-canadian-rebellion-a-review-by-stephen-r-i-smith/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/revborders.jpg</image:loc><image:title>revborders</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/9780773556652.jpg</image:loc><image:title>9780773556652</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2020-01-19T21:26:52+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/11/27/lhistoire-et-lurgence-climatique-ou-la-tradition-a-la-rescousse-du-progres/</loc><lastmod>2019-11-27T12:51:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/11/27/history-and-the-climate-emergency-or-tradition-to-the-rescue-of-progress/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/moulin_a_vent_de_l_ile_aux_coudres.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Moulin_a_vent_de_l_ile_aux_Coudres</image:title><image:caption>????????????????????????????????????</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2019-11-27T12:50:59+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/11/04/before-canada-avant-le-canada-a-conference-recap/</loc><lastmod>2019-11-03T14:05:25+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/10/23/introducing-the-crkn-canadiana-heritage-digital-collections/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/borealia-heritage-screenshot.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Heritage screenshot</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/borealia-canadiana-screenshot.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Borealia Canadiana screenshot</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/crkn-header-collage.jpg</image:loc><image:title>crkn header collage</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/cocktails-edit_oocihm.9_08953_data_sip_data_files_oocihm.9_08953.0001.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Cocktails EDIT_oocihm.9_08953_data_sip_data_files_oocihm.9_08953.0001</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/mohawk-primer-edit_oocihm.88796_data_sip_data_files_oocihm.88796.15.jp2_.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Mohawk primer EDIT_oocihm.88796_data_sip_data_files_oocihm.88796.15.jp2</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/seigneurie-edit_oocihm.lac_reel_c14031_data_sip_data_files_0017.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Seigneurie EDIT_oocihm.lac_reel_c14031_data_sip_data_files_0017</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/western-canada-edit_oocihm.15589_data_sip_data_files_oocihm.15589.0002.tif_.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Western Canada EDIT_oocihm.15589_data_sip_data_files_oocihm.15589.0002.tif</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2019-10-23T11:46:24+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/09/09/the-business-of-transnational-history-an-editors-perspective/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/cornell-books-collage.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Cornell books collage</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2019-09-08T22:30:24+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/05/30/preview-early-canada-at-congress-2019/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/congress_background_main.jpg</image:loc><image:title>congress_background_main</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2019-05-30T16:20:25+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/04/23/the-early-modern-maritimes-recipe-database-part-i-what-is-a-recipe/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/post-1-image-1-copy.png</image:loc><image:title>Post 1 Image 1 copy</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/post-1-image-2-copy.png</image:loc><image:title>Post 1 Image 2 copy</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2019-04-26T11:47:40+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/04/25/fighting-fungus-with-fungus-mushroom-ketchup-as-food-and-medicine/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/screen-shot-2019-04-18-at-4.36.44-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2019-04-18 at 4.36.44 PM</image:title><image:caption>Catsup recipe, image and transcription, Early Modern Maritimes Recipe database</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/catsup-some-early-18th-and-19th-century-recipes-pasted-on-pages-of-militia-regulations-nsa-mg-100-vol-1-no-5-reel-786.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Catsup, Some Early 18th and 19th Century Recipes pasted on pages of Militia Regulations, NSA MG 100 Vol 1 No 5 Reel 786</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/img_20190410_154117_360.jpg</image:loc><image:title>IMG_20190410_154117_360</image:title><image:caption>Making Mushroom Catsup. Photo by Lyn Bennett</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2019-04-26T11:45:20+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/04/15/immigrant-servant-girls-to-home-children-following-a-thread-in-canada-west/</loc><lastmod>2019-04-28T14:20:39+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/03/11/ordinary-women-jeanne-dugas-of-acadie/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/image3.png</image:loc><image:title>Image3</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/image2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Image2</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/image1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Image1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2019-03-10T23:21:40+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/02/25/joseph-bouchette-copiste/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/4bouchette-copy.jpg</image:loc><image:title>4Bouchette copy</image:title><image:caption>BAnQ, P395S1P1</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/3bouchette-e1551036687999.png</image:loc><image:title>3Bouchette</image:title><image:caption>Archives nationales d’outre-mer, FR ANOM 03DFC473B (même plan, retombe rabattue)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/2bouchette-e1551036591192.png</image:loc><image:title>2Bouchette</image:title><image:caption>Archives nationales d’outre-mer, FR ANOM 03DFC473B</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/1bouchette.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1Bouchette</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2019-02-25T13:50:17+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/02/04/prickly-presbyterianism-a-review-of-boundless-dominion-providence-politics-and-the-early-canadian-presbyterian-worldview/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/screenshot2019-02-01at5.39.27am-1.png</image:loc><image:title>screenshot2019-02-01at5.39.27am</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/boundlesscover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>boundlesscover</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/screenshot2019-02-01at5.39.27am.png</image:loc><image:title>screenshot2019-02-01at5.39.27am</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2019-02-01T09:49:01+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/01/19/appel-a-communications-avant-le-canada-le-nord-du-continent-dans-un-monde-interconnecte-ca-1000-1800-dne/</loc><lastmod>2019-01-19T20:37:59+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2019/01/19/cfp-before-canada-northern-north-america-in-a-connected-world-ca-1000-1800ad/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/amerique_septentrionale_jbf_1688.jpg</image:loc><image:title>amerique_septentrionale_jbf_1688</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2019-01-19T20:35:33+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/12/03/the-hidden-narratives-of-clandestine-communities-digital-history-and-the-religious-minorities-of-new-france%ef%bb%bf/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/header-siege_of_la_rochelle_1881_henri_motte-jpeg.png</image:loc><image:title>header Siege_of_La_Rochelle_1881_Henri_Motte.jpeg</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-12-04T16:56:15+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/11/07/mapping-the-end-of-empire/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/a_map_of_the_british_empire_in_america_with_the_french_and_spanish_settlements_adjacent_thereto_4231929634.jpg</image:loc><image:title>A_map_of_the_British_Empire_in_America_with_the_French_and_Spanish_settlements_adjacent_thereto_(4231929634)</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-11-06T14:57:42+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/10/17/true-interests-environmental-history-and-national-ambition-or-lets-squish-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/c-7710-0001-e1539773108428.jpg</image:loc><image:title>C-7710-000</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/c-7710-000-e1539360370295.jpg</image:loc><image:title>C-7710-000</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/figure-2-map-of-the-northern-and-middle-states-detail.png</image:loc><image:title>Figure 2 Map of the Northern and Middle States, Detail</image:title><image:caption>Figure 2: A Map of the Northern &amp; Middle States (1789), detail</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/figure-3-map-of-the-district-of-main.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Figure 3. Map of the District of Main</image:title><image:caption>Figure 3: Map of the District of Main, in American Universal Geography (1793)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/figure-1-map-of-the-northern-and-middle-states-e1539612233469.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Figure 1 Map of the Northern and Middle States</image:title><image:caption>Figure 1
</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2018-10-17T10:47:01+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/10/16/reply-to-benoit-grenier-and-alain-laberge/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/the_habitant_farm__oil_on_canvas_painting_by_cornelius_krieghoff_1856_national_gallery_of_canada.jpg</image:loc><image:title>'The_Habitant_Farm'_,_oil_on_canvas_painting_by_Cornelius_Krieghoff,_1856,_National_Gallery_of_Canada</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-10-15T01:38:37+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/10/10/early-modern-place-names-in-todays-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/e002140136.jpg</image:loc><image:title>e002140136</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/frederickstown-figure.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Frederickstown Figure</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/huron-figure-e1538586062362.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Huron Figure</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-10-11T14:56:45+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/10/03/la-cartographie-des-routes-imperiales-francaises-le-cas-du-fleuve-saint-laurent-au-xviiie-siecle/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/2663415.jpg</image:loc><image:title>2663415</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/bellinmappalomino-e1537883290250.jpg</image:loc><image:title>bellinmapPalomino</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/map2palomino.png</image:loc><image:title>map2palomino</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/map1palomino.png</image:loc><image:title>map1palomino</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-10-11T14:56:14+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/10/09/beyond-the-system-the-enduring-legacy-of-seigneurial-property/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/banq-p546d3p11.jpg</image:loc><image:title>BANQ P546,D3,P11</image:title><image:caption>Manoir seigneurial de Beauport vers 1850. (La légende identifie erronément le bâtiment au QG de Montcalm en 1759.) BAnQQ : Fonds Fred. C. Würtele (P546, D3, P11)</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2018-10-09T12:27:38+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/09/24/there-was-no-seigneurial-system/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/screen-shot-2018-07-12-at-11-40-39-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-07-12 at 11.40.39 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/screen-shot-2018-07-12-at-11-08-14-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-07-12 at 11.08.14 AM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-09-23T00:30:03+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/09/19/francophone-quebecers-in-canadas-odyssey-pillar-or-passengers/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/1-4.jpg</image:loc><image:title>1-4</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-09-20T15:36:52+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/09/10/the-many-captivities-of-esther-wheelwright-an-interview-with-ann-little/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/screen-shot-2018-07-26-at-9-43-11-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-07-26 at 9.43.11 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/little-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Little cover</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-09-04T13:07:47+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/08/31/continuing-the-journey-where-borealia-is-headed/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/an-escape-at-the-fourth-rapid.jpg</image:loc><image:title>An escape at the fourth rapid</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-08-31T01:31:19+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/06/11/we-will-all-be-early-moderns/</loc><lastmod>2018-06-11T11:54:45+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/06/04/presentism-in-environmental-history-the-view-from-the-sixteenth-century/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/screen-shot-2018-06-04-at-8-54-48-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-06-04 at 8.54.48 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/zeemonsters-random-een-schip-1594.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Zeemonsters-random-een-schip-1594</image:title><image:caption>Ship surrounded by sea monsters, early 16th century.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/visvangst1582.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Visvangst1582</image:title><image:caption>Coastal fishermen in Europe. Visvangst (1582).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/olausmagnusicelandfisherman.png</image:loc><image:title>OlausMagnusIcelandFisherman</image:title><image:caption>Detail from French edition of Olaus Magnus’ A Description of the Northern Peoples, showing fishing ship at Iceland (1555).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/champlantn1.png</image:loc><image:title>ChamplanTN1</image:title><image:caption>Detail of map of North America by Samuel de Champlain, showing the Grand Bank fisheries (1634)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/19429.jpg</image:loc><image:title>19429</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-06-04T11:57:26+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/03/27/a-conversation-about-teaching-early-canadian-history-in-the-united-states-part-1-cross-border-academic-biographies/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/conversation-photo.jpg</image:loc><image:title>conversation photo</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-06-01T13:27:22+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/03/29/a-conversation-about-teaching-early-canadian-history-in-the-united-states-part-2-in-the-classroom/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/screen-shot-2017-03-17-at-9-24-44-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-03-17 at 9.24.44 PM</image:title><image:caption>CARTE DES POSSESSIONS Angloises &amp; Françoises du Continent de l'Amérique Septentrionale (1755), Thomas Kitchin. W. K. Morrison Special Collection, Nova Scotia Community College</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2018-06-01T13:26:00+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/03/31/a-conversation-about-teaching-early-canadian-history-in-the-united-states-part-3-research/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/200603438.jpg</image:loc><image:title>200603438</image:title><image:caption>"Partie Orientale de la Nouvelle France ou du Canada," Par Mr. Bellin Ingenieur du Roy et de la Marine. Pour Servir à l'Intelligence des affaires et de l'état present en Amerique communiqueé au Public par les Keritiers de Homan en l'an 1755. Nova Scotia Archives, Map Collection: 200-1755: loc.3.5.2</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/screen-shot-2017-03-17-at-9-31-22-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-03-17 at 9.31.22 PM</image:title><image:caption>The Taking of Quebec by the English, by Louis Hennepin, A new discovery of a vast country in America, extending above four thousand miles, between New France &amp; New Mexico; with a description of the Great lakes, cataracts, rivers, plants, and animals (London: Henry Bonwicke, 1699), opposite page 151. Public domain via University of Pittsburgh Library at archive.org.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2018-06-01T13:24:47+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/06/01/taking-the-longer-view-environmental-history-as-early-modern-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/washington_crossing_the_delaware_by_emanuel_leutze_mma-nyc_18511.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Washington_Crossing_the_Delaware_by_Emanuel_Leutze,_MMA-NYC,_1851</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/washington_crossing_the_delaware_by_emanuel_leutze_mma-nyc_1851.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Washington_Crossing_the_Delaware_by_Emanuel_Leutze,_MMA-NYC,_1851</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-06-01T13:20:48+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/05/03/history-on-appeal-originalism-and-evidence-in-the-comeau-case/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/67beer.jpg</image:loc><image:title>67beer</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/craft_beer_at_the_taedonggang_microbrewery_no-_3_12329931855.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Craft_Beer_at_the_Taedonggang_Microbrewery_No._3_(12329931855)</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-05-02T02:03:04+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2018/04/09/a-house-in-new-orleans-the-le-moyne-family-and-the-foundation-of-the-crescent-city/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/plan_de_la_nouvelle_orlc3a9ans__btv1b67003079.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Plan_de_la_Nouvelle_Orléans__btv1b67003079</image:title><image:caption>Image: “Plan de La Nouvelle Orléans, 1718,” Bibliothèque National de la France via Gallica</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/moyne.png</image:loc><image:title>Moyne</image:title><image:caption>“Portrait of Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville” Rudolph Bohunek 1907” Louisiana State Museum http://louisianadigitallibrary.org/islandora/object/tahil-aaw%3A1065</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/screen-shot-2018-04-09-at-8-32-39-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2018-04-09 at 8.32.39 AM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2018-04-09T12:02:11+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/12/11/how-to-start-your-thesis/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/car.jpg</image:loc><image:title>car</image:title><image:caption>Illustration from Norman Juster, The Phantom Tollbooth (New York: Random House, 1961).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/screen-shot-2017-12-11-at-8-12-56-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-12-11 at 8.12.56 AM</image:title><image:caption>Foothills of Confusion, Illustration from Norman Juster, The Phantom Tollbooth (New York: Random House, 1961).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/conclusions.gif</image:loc><image:title>conclusions</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/screen-shot-2017-12-11-at-8-08-05-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-12-11 at 8.08.05 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/phantomtollbooth-map.jpg</image:loc><image:title>PhantomTollbooth map</image:title><image:caption>Illustration from Norman Juster, The Phantom Tollbooth (New York: Random House, 1961).</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2018-01-09T17:50:26+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/12/20/legal-pluralism-and-the-search-for-sovereignty-in-post-conquest-quebec/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/800px-seigneuries-du-bas-canada.jpg</image:loc><image:title>800px-seigneuries-du-bas-canada</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/custom_of_paris_as_practised_in_quebec_during_the_french_government.jpg</image:loc><image:title>custom_of_paris_as_practised_in_quebec_during_the_french_government</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-10-21T22:39:02+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/09/11/the-first-book-advice-from-someone-barely-qualified-to-give-it/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/lennox-he-cover.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Lennox H&amp;E Cover</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-09-11T18:52:50+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/07/31/le-defi-du-chercheur-bilingue-dans-un-monde-academique-qui-ne-lest-pas/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/dico-anglo-franco.gif</image:loc><image:title>Dico Anglo-Franco</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-09-27T13:16:06+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/07/12/anguish-in-the-loyalist-archives-part-2/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/land-boards-3.png</image:loc><image:title>Land Boards (3)</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-14-02-30.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-14-02-30</image:title><image:caption>Upper Canada Land Book entry for Henry Anguish, C-10810 Image 2822</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-13-57-40.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-13-57-40</image:title><image:caption>Upper Canada Land Book entry for Henry Anguish, C-10810 Image 2821</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-13-43-06.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-13-43-06</image:title><image:caption>Search Results for Henry Anguish</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-13-35-24.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-13-35-24</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-13-11-32.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-13-11-32</image:title><image:caption>Partial list of Search Results for the surname ‘Anguish’</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-12-00-47.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-12-00-47</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-11-57-14.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-11-57-14</image:title><image:caption>‘[List] of Persons under the Description of Loyalist Specify[ing] … Captain Lewis Geneway Company in the Corps of Rangers’, Haldimand Papers C-1475 Vol. 105 (Image 386), page 385.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/haldimand-papers-3.png</image:loc><image:title>Haldimand Papers (3)</image:title><image:caption>‘[List] of Persons under the Description of Loyalist Specify[ing] … Captain Lewis Geneway Company in the Corps of Rangers’, Haldimand Papers C-1475 Vol. 105 (Image 386), page 385.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2017-07-14T17:46:32+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/07/10/anguish-in-the-loyalist-archives-part-1/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/heir-and-devisee-img-130.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Heir and Devisee Img 130</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/anguish-petition-2.png</image:loc><image:title>Anguish Petition (2)</image:title><image:caption>Excerpt of the Petition of Jacob Anguish to Col. Arent de Peyster, dated 4 August 1784, the Haldimand Papers, H-1448 (p. 419), Image 335.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/jacob-anguish-1.png</image:loc><image:title>Jacob Anguish (1)</image:title><image:caption>Excerpt from the Petition of Jacob Anguish to Lieut. Col. Peyster of Niagara, dated 4 August 1784. The Haldimand Papers, H-1448, 399 (pp. 419-21), Images 335-7.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2017-07-10T00:45:48+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/06/30/the-framers-refuted-originalism-and-constitutional-meaning-after-1867/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/fathers_confederation.jpg</image:loc><image:title>fathers_confederation</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/fathers_of_confederation_lac_c001855.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Fathers_of_Confederation_LAC_c001855</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-09-05T20:06:46+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/06/28/confederation-and-political-reason/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/fake-news.jpg</image:loc><image:title>fake news</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-06-24T20:59:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/06/07/how-to-finish-your-thesis/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/screen-shot-2017-06-07-at-6-56-48-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-06-07 at 6.56.48 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-06-21T13:12:14+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/05/29/the-american-gaze-adam-gopniks-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/newyorker.jpg</image:loc><image:title>newyorker</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/flag-fence.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Flag fence</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/screen-shot-2017-05-29-at-4-10-34-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-05-29 at 4.10.34 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-05-29T22:10:22+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/05/26/preview-early-canada-at-the-cha/</loc><lastmod>2017-05-28T22:56:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/05/20/remembering-michael-bliss/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/michael_bliss.jpg</image:loc><image:title>michael_bliss</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-05-21T01:10:50+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/04/17/refugees-fit-for-rescue-loyalists-maroons-and-mikmaq/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/screen-shot-2017-04-16-at-9-37-32-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2017-04-16 at 9.37.32 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-04-17T01:21:31+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/03/02/danny-vickers-gentle-iconoclast/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/screen-shot-2017-03-02-at-8-13-08-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2017-03-02-at-8-13-08-pm</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-03-03T00:22:12+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/02/18/daniel-vickers-his-life-and-work/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/dv-sitting-final1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>dv-sitting-final</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/the_visit_to_the_farm_by_pieter_brueghel_the_younger_1622.jpg</image:loc><image:title>the_visit_to_the_farm_by_pieter_brueghel_the_younger_1622</image:title><image:caption>The Visit to the Farm, Pieter Brueghel the younger, 1622, 1622 (Wikimedia Commons)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/vickers-young-men.jpg</image:loc><image:title>vickers-young-men</image:title><image:caption>Young Men and the Sea, 2005</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/vickers-farmers.jpg</image:loc><image:title>vickers-farmers</image:title><image:caption>Farmers and Fishermen, 1994</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/dv-sitting-final.jpg</image:loc><image:title>dv-sitting-final</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2017-02-18T18:02:25+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/02/10/remembering-danny-vickers/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/screen-shot-2017-02-10-at-4-27-05-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2017-02-10-at-4-27-05-pm</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/danny-vickers.jpg</image:loc><image:title>danny-vickers</image:title><image:caption>Daniel Vickers (Photo credit: UBC Department of History)</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2017-02-13T01:56:25+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2017/01/09/the-mighty-waters-of-democracy-thomas-chandler-haliburton-on-american-populism/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/screen-shot-2017-01-29-at-8-15-25-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2017-01-29-at-8-15-25-pm</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/populism.jpg</image:loc><image:title>populism</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/haliburton.jpg</image:loc><image:title>haliburton</image:title><image:caption>“Thomas Chandler Haliburton (alias Sam Slick), 1796-1865, bust portrait”, Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. </image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2017-02-05T21:11:13+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/12/06/stewarding-a-canadian-culture-of-comity/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/reception_of_the_american_loyalists.jpg</image:loc><image:title>reception_of_the_american_loyalists</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-12-06T12:57:11+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/11/21/the-wilson-institute-for-canadian-history-introduction-and-vision-of-canadian-history/</loc><lastmod>2016-11-20T23:11:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/11/09/why-national-history-matters/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/screen-shot-2016-11-09-at-1-48-05-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>screen-shot-2016-11-09-at-1-48-05-pm</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-11-16T13:13:44+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/10/24/beyond-borders-a-reflection-on-the-challenges-of-transnational-multidisciplinary-scholarship-in-the-twenty-first-century/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/seat-of-war.jpg</image:loc><image:title>seat-of-war</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-10-24T00:05:35+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/08/29/new-books-in-early-canadian-history-2016-part-2/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/religion.jpg</image:loc><image:title>religion</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/huronia.jpg</image:loc><image:title>huronia</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/screen-shot-2016-08-17-at-8-51-21-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-08-17 at 8.51.21 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/l97828944885841.jpg</image:loc><image:title>L97828944885841</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/mov.jpg</image:loc><image:title>mov</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/subs.jpg</image:loc><image:title>subs</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/9781498531108.jpg</image:loc><image:title>9781498531108</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/sandwell.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Sandwell2</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/51m2p8-1ul-_sx321_bo1204203200_.jpg</image:loc><image:title>51M2p+8-1uL._SX321_BO1,204,203,200_</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/magra-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>magra cover</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-10-19T00:59:19+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/10/04/good-fences-good-neighbours-building-peaceful-relations-amidst-political-unrest-in-the-canada-us-borderland/</loc><lastmod>2016-10-03T18:58:04+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/09/12/skills-for-historians-of-the-future-palaeography/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/shipwreck-deaths-4.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Shipwreck deaths 4</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/senhouse-3.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Senhouse 3</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/land-petition-2.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Land Petition 2</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/notation-declaration-1.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Grandy Notation Declaration 1</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-09-15T18:34:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/09/08/crossing-borders-restructuring-north-american-narratives/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/new_map_of_north_america_1763.jpg</image:loc><image:title>new_map_of_north_america_1763</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-09-07T12:55:31+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/08/15/diversity-and-sovereignty-how-the-quebec-act-enhanced-not-weakened-the-british-empire/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/a_view_of_the_city_of_quebec_the_capital_of_canada_e280a6_by_captain_hervey_smyth_-_vue_de_la_ville_de_quc3a9bec_capitale_du_canada_e280a6_par_le_capt_harvey_smyth_-_p_benazech_sculp-tif.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Willis, A_view_of_the_City_of_Quebec,_the_capital_of_Canada_(…)_by_Captain_Hervey_Smyth_-_Vue_de_la_ville_de_Québec,</image:title><image:caption>A view of the City of Quebec, by Hervey Smyth (1768). Library of Congress.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/the_thistle_reel_lccn2004673309-tif.jpg</image:loc><image:title>The_thistle_reel_LCCN2004673309.tif</image:title><image:caption>"The Thistle Reel." The London Magazine, (February 1775), p. 56. British Cartoon Prints Collection, Library of Congress.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/screen-shot-2016-07-18-at-2-03-38-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Willis, Thistle Reel, detail</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-08-14T23:50:50+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/08/01/bear-years-squirrel-years-and-environmental-politics-on-the-st-lawrence-river-1759-1796/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/stlaw1759.jpg</image:loc><image:title>StLaw1759</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/bostonnewsletter1759.jpg</image:loc><image:title>BostonNewsletter1759</image:title><image:caption>Boston News-Letter, September 8, 1759</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/weldwikimedia.jpg</image:loc><image:title>WeldWikiMedia</image:title><image:caption>Isaac Weld, ca. 1800, via Wikimedia Commons</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2016-08-10T14:47:21+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/03/21/a-northern-chorus-the-canadian-turn-in-early-american-history/</loc><lastmod>2017-01-22T20:56:15+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/06/27/masters-of-empire-great-lakes-indians-and-the-making-of-america-a-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/straits-of-mackinac.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Straits of Mackinac</image:title><image:caption>A north-facing aerial photograph of the Straits of Mackinac. Image Science and Analysis Laboratory, NASA. 1994. Wikimedia Commons</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/screen-shot-2016-06-06-at-3-56-44-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>McDonnell Cover</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-06-25T19:33:13+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/06/13/harriet-tubman-and-andrew-jackson-a-match-made-in-the-u-s-treasury-department/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/jackson-us-20.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Jackson US 20</image:title><image:caption>President Andrew Jackson on United States $20 bill</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/harriet_tubman_by_squyer_npg_c1885-wiki.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Harriet Tubman</image:title><image:caption>Harriet Tubman, 1885, photograph by H. Seymour Squyer. National Portrait Gallery via Wikimedia Commons</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/getfileattachment.png</image:loc><image:title>GetFileAttachment</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-06-14T14:35:24+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/06/06/forgotten-indigenous-figures-early-canadian-biographies-and-course-content/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/screen-shot-2016-06-05-at-2-06-32-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-06-05 at 2.06.32 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/screen-shot-2016-06-05-at-2-03-15-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-06-05 at 2.03.15 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/white-caps-band-detail.png</image:loc><image:title>White Cap's band detail</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-06-17T18:27:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/27/preview-early-canadian-history-at-congress-2016-part-2/</loc><lastmod>2016-05-27T12:37:18+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/26/a-conversation-about-history-blogging-in-canada/</loc><lastmod>2016-05-30T14:41:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/25/early-canadian-environmental-history-a-forum/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/screen-shot-2016-05-22-at-9-35-36-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Niagara Falls by Hennepin</image:title><image:caption>Niagara Falls, in Louis Hennepin, A new discovery of a vast country in America, extending above four thousand miles, between New France &amp; New Mexico; with a description of the Great lakes, cataracts, rivers, plants, and animals (London: Henry Bonwicke, 1699), opposite page 22. Public domain via University of Pittsburgh Library at archive.org.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2016-05-25T00:19:27+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/24/preview-early-canadian-history-at-congress-2016-part-1/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/congress-2016-rgb-federation.jpg</image:loc><image:title>congress-2016-rgb-federation</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-05-24T01:29:16+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/23/who-was-the-king-of-the-beasts-in-new-france/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/codex_canadensis_p-_28.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Codex_canadensis,_p._28</image:title><image:caption>Tiré de l'exposition virtuelle Codex canadensis de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada (BAC), en collaboration avec le Gilcrease Mu</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/codex-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Codex cover</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-05-22T15:12:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/16/early-canadian-environmental-history-series-introduction-essential-reading/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/harris.jpg</image:loc><image:title>harris</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/hackett.jpg</image:loc><image:title>hackett</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/binnema.jpg</image:loc><image:title>binnema</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/head_of_the_lake_elizabeth_simcoe_1796.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Head_of_the_Lake,_Elizabeth_Simcoe,_1796</image:title><image:caption>"Head of the Lake, Lake Ontario," Elizabeth Simcoe, 1796. Archives Ontario.
</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2016-05-19T15:20:37+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/05/02/empire-by-collaboration-a-collaborative-review/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/screen-shot-2016-05-02-at-8-30-15-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-05-02 at 8.30.15 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/morrissey-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Morrissey cover</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-05-08T18:46:53+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/05/25/on-the-menu/</loc><lastmod>2016-04-20T23:32:29+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/04/18/settler-colonialism-and-the-future-of-canadian-history/</loc><lastmod>2016-11-09T18:52:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/03/14/dartmouth-college-and-canada-the-problem-of-national-historiographies/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/screen-shot-2016-03-13-at-10-26-50-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-03-13 at 10.26.50 PM</image:title><image:caption>James Peachey, A Primer for the Use of the Mohawk Children, 1786, via Wikimedia Commons </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/screen-shot-2016-03-13-at-9-56-15-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-03-13 at 9.56.15 PM</image:title><image:caption>Eleazar Wheelock and the Founding of Dartmouth College (Detail), Frontispiece to The letters of Eleazar Wheelock's Indians, edited from the originals by James Dow McCallum (Hanover: Dartmouth College Publications, 1932). Public Domain via The Indian Converts Collection</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/screen-shot-2016-03-13-at-9-42-32-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-03-13 at 9.42.32 PM</image:title><image:caption>Aboriginal Students Timeline (detail), by Thomas Peace</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/eleazar_wheelock.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Eleazar_Wheelock</image:title><image:caption>A painting of en:Eleazar Wheelock, founder and first president of en:Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. Painted c. 1793-1796 by Joseph Steward (1753-1822) public domain
wikipedia</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/800px-joseph_brant_by_gilbert_stuart_1786_oil_on_canvas.jpg</image:loc><image:title>800px-Joseph_Brant_by_Gilbert_Stuart_1786_oil_on_canvas</image:title><image:caption>Joseph Brant by Gilbert Stuart 1786 oil on canvas.jpeg public domain
wikipedia</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/moors-charity-school.jpg</image:loc><image:title>OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA</image:title><image:caption>Moor's [sic] Charity School
Historic Buildings of Connecticut

http://historicbuildingsct.com/?p=798</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2016-03-14T14:27:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/03/07/overlooked-loyalists/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/henry_sandham_-_the_coming_of_the_loyalists.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Henry_Sandham_-_The_Coming_of_the_Loyalists</image:title><image:caption>The Coming of the Loyalists, painting by Henry Sandham showing a romanticised view of the Loyalists' arrival in New Brunswick</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/220px-gathering_for_the_parade_loyalist_centennial_saint_john_new_brunswick.jpg</image:loc><image:title>220px-Gathering_for_the_Parade,_Loyalist_Centennial,_Saint_John,_New_Brunswick</image:title><image:caption>Gathering for the Loyalist Centennial Parade in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1883</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2016-03-10T13:25:45+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/02/22/drums-bugles-and-bagpipes-in-the-seven-years-war/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/laxer-bagpipes-copy.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Laxer bagpipes copy</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/tamboursettrompettes.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Tambours+et+Trompettes</image:title><image:caption>Michel Brenet, La Musique Militaire. Collection des Musiciens célèbres. Henri Laurens, éditeur. Paris, Librairie Renouard, 6, rue de Tournon. No date (19th century).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/laxer-tambours.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Laxer Tambours</image:title><image:caption>Michel Brenet, La Musique Militaire. Collection des Musiciens célèbres. Henri Laurens, éditeur. Paris, Librairie Renouard, 6, rue de Tournon. No date (19th century).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/laxer-bagpipes.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Laxer bagpipes</image:title><image:caption>Archibald K. Murray, History of the Scottish Regiments in the British Army  (Ward, 1862). Public domain.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2020-05-17T21:34:57+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/02/15/donald-creightons-early-canada-and-ours/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/screen-shot-2016-02-13-at-10-23-12-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2016-02-13 at 10.23.12 AM</image:title><image:caption>Donald Wright, Donald Creighton: A Life in History (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2015).</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/creighton-collage-3.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Creighton collage 3</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/creighton-cdn-enyclopedia.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Creighton Honorary Degree 1974</image:title><image:caption>Donald Creighton, Receiving an honorary degree, 1974.
Library and Archives Canada (123984), via The Canadian Encyclopedia</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2016-02-21T01:51:26+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/02/01/violence-in-early-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/saint-eustache-patriotes.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Saint-Eustache-Patriotes</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-02-09T14:06:10+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/01/25/after-1755-archives-and-acadian-identity/</loc><lastmod>2016-01-28T14:08:32+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/01/18/file-m-and-the-straightness-of-the-settler-state-in-early-canada/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/image-ii.png</image:loc><image:title>Henderson Letter Image II</image:title><image:caption>One of the two anonymous letters Toronto penned to colonial officials on the sexual habits and dubious character of George Markland in the summer of 1838. 
Credit: LAC, RG1 E3, Vol. 50, File M. </image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2016-01-21T15:10:02+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/01/20/new-books-in-early-canadian-history-2016-preview-part-1/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/cover-collage-jan-2016.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Cover Collage Jan 2016</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-01-21T14:18:20+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/01/12/colonial-history-in-the-age-of-digital-humanities/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/vdp_logo.jpg</image:loc><image:title>VDP_Logo</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/featured-image.jpeg</image:loc><image:title>Featured Image</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/dig_hum_englebert_ii.jpg</image:loc><image:title>dig_hum_englebert_II</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/dig_hum_englebert_i.jpg</image:loc><image:title>dig_hum_englebert_I</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2016-02-12T19:10:36+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2016/01/04/settlers-diaries-online-experience-daily-life-in-the-backwoods/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/screen-shot-2015-12-31-at-1-12-48-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-12-31 at 1.12.48 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/jpeg_sunter_008.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Rural diaries project: Sunter Diary</image:title><image:caption>William Sunter’s Diary, Wellington County, 1857 
Archival and Special Collections, University of Guelph</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2015-12-31T17:56:33+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/12/14/english-chairs-and-english-desks-rethinking-material-culture-in-new-france/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/halbert-oval-leaf-table-e1449800758881.png</image:loc><image:title>Halbert Oval Leaf Table</image:title><image:caption>Oval-leaf table 
Boston, circa 1720-1740 
Maple, red oak, yellow pine 
Concord Museum (F116)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/halbert-english-candlestand.png</image:loc><image:title>Halbert English candlestand</image:title><image:caption>An “English” candlestand coexists with a French os de mouton side chair in the reconstructed commissaire ordonnateur’s house in Louisbourg, Parks Canada</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/halbert-fauteuil-c3a0-la-capucine.png</image:loc><image:title>Halbert Fauteuil à la capucine</image:title><image:caption>Fauteuil à la capucine, Canada, 18th century, Maple, hickory, straw. &#13;
Yale University Art Gallery, Mabel Brady Garvan Collection (1965.20)&#13;
This armchair, known as a fauteuil à la capucine, showcases the conservative style common in French Canadian furniture. Its turnings help to envision it being used alongside an “English” chair like one from Boston seen above.   </image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/halbert-side-chair.png</image:loc><image:title>Halbert Side chair</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2015-12-16T04:58:59+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/12/14/chaises-a-langlaise-et-bureaux-anglais-ou-repenser-la-culture-materielle-en-nouvelle-france/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/halbert-english-candlestand1.png</image:loc><image:title>Halbert English candlestand</image:title><image:caption>Conçu pour tenir un bougeoir, un « candlestand » de la Nouvelle-Angleterre côtoie une chaise française ou canadienne dite « os de mouton » dans la maison du commissaire ordonnateur à Louisbourg, Parcs Canada</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/halbert-desk-21.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Halbert Desk 2</image:title><image:caption>Bureau « slant-front », John Goddard (1723/24-1785), Newport, 1745, acajou, pin blanc, châtaignier, laiton.
The Chipstone Foundation (1971.11)</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/halbert-fauteuil-c3a0-la-capucine1.png</image:loc><image:title>Halbert Fauteuil à la capucine</image:title><image:caption>Fauteuil à la capucine 
Canada, XVIIIe siècle, érable, caryer, paille
Yale University Art Gallery, Mabel Brady Garvan Collection (1965.20)
Avec ses montants tournés, ce fauteuil dit « à la capucine » présente l’aspect plutôt conservateur du mobilier canadien et se rapproche à la chaise précédente.</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/halbert-side-chair1.png</image:loc><image:title>Halbert Side chair</image:title><image:caption>Chaise, Boston, vers 1720-1740, érable, chêne rouge d’Amérique, cuir
Yale University Art Gallery, Mabel Brady Garvan Collection (1930.2658)
L’on pourrait substituer cette chaise « anglaise » aux sièges inventoriés à Louisbourg chez le notaire Desmarest en 1741 et le gouverneur Duquesnel en 1744.</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2015-12-13T18:33:53+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/09/21/sources-for-loyalist-studies/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/screen-shot-2015-09-08-at-11-03-34-am.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-09-08 at 11.03.34 AM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/loyalist-petition-copy.png</image:loc><image:title>loyalist petition copy</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/williams-burg-crop.png</image:loc><image:title>Williams Burg crop</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/williams-burg.png</image:loc><image:title>Williams Burg</image:title><image:caption>Figure 2: "The Alternative of Williams-Burg," British Museum</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/loyalist-petition.png</image:loc><image:title>loyalist petition</image:title><image:caption>Figure 1: Nonimportation agreement, Boston (1767), Houghton Library, Harvard University</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2015-12-11T14:08:59+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/12/11/loyalists-in-the-classroom-students-reflect-on-historical-sources/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/screen-shot-2015-12-10-at-8-25-38-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-12-10 at 8.25.38 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/screen-shot-2015-12-10-at-7-35-23-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-12-10 at 7.35.23 PM</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2015-12-11T15:05:54+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/12/02/re-narrating-canadian-history-after-the-truth-and-reconciliation-commission/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/trc-canadian-history.png</image:loc><image:title>TRC Canadian History</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/trc-report.jpg</image:loc><image:title>TRC report</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2015-12-02T00:54:55+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/11/30/making-home-writing-home-letters-diaries-and-self-fashioning/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/town-and-harbour-of-st-johns-lac.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Duffett - Town and Harbour of St John's LAC</image:title><image:caption>The Town and Harbour of St. John's, 1831 (Artist unknown)
Library and Archives Canada, Acc. No. 1989-520-6</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2015-11-30T00:48:41+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/11/23/the-future-of-loyalist-studies/</loc><lastmod>2016-03-04T15:13:36+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/11/16/religious-encounters-an-early-american-case-study/</loc><lastmod>2015-11-16T15:09:21+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/09/14/evaluating-our-assumptions-rethinking-literacies-in-canadian-history/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/kimzowi-awighigan-title-page.png</image:loc><image:title>Kimzowi Awighigan - Title Page</image:title><image:caption>Pierre Paul Wzokhilain's Abenaki spelling book, 1830</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2015-11-24T13:08:46+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/09/28/being-part-of-something-larger-a-review-of-imprinting-britain/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/screen-shot-2015-09-24-at-6-37-20-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-09-24 at 6.37.20 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/screen-shot-2015-09-24-at-4-38-00-pm.png</image:loc><image:title>Screen Shot 2015-09-24 at 4.38.00 PM</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/eamon.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Eamon</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2015-11-07T01:21:46+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/10/19/betting-on-the-continental-armys-canadian-campaign/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/quebec1775frenchmap.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Quebec1775FrenchMap</image:title><image:caption>Georges Louis Le Rouge, 1777
Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division</image:caption></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerfc_chs_cfjournal.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Christopher French Journal</image:title><image:caption>Christopher French Journal, 1776, American Revolution Collection 
Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford, Connecticut</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2015-11-07T01:20:17+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/10/12/unrest-violence-and-the-search-for-social-order-in-british-north-america-and-canada-1749-1876/</loc><lastmod>2015-11-07T01:16:17+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/11/04/urbanites-geography-culture-and-urban-spaces-at-ihaf-2015/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/sweeny-cover.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Sweeny cover</image:title></image:image><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/boulevard.png</image:loc><image:title>Paris 1705 Map detail</image:title><image:caption>Detail: Huitième Plan de Paris divisé en ses Vingts Quartiers / Par N. de Fer, ... ; pour servir au Traité de la Police pour M.L.C.D.L.M.; Nicolas de Fer (1647?-1720), Cartographe du modèle; Nicolas de La Mare (1639-1723), Cartographe, 1705.
Bibliothèque nationale de France 


</image:caption></image:image><lastmod>2015-11-03T14:13:24+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/10/26/the-emerging-histories-of-the-early-modern-french-atlantic-conference-an-early-modern-canadianist-perspective/</loc><image:image><image:loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/omohundro-logo.jpg</image:loc><image:title>Omohundro logo</image:title></image:image><lastmod>2015-10-25T19:53:52+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/2015/05/25/borealia-a-prospectus/</loc><lastmod>2015-05-25T18:59:46+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>monthly</changefreq></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca/copyright/</loc><lastmod>2015-04-25T19:06:28+00:00</lastmod><changefreq>weekly</changefreq><priority>0.6</priority></url><url><loc>https://earlycanadianhistory.ca</loc><changefreq>daily</changefreq><priority>1.0</priority><lastmod>2025-07-07T15:15:54+00:00</lastmod></url></urlset>
