Skip to main content

Quebec Contents Leaving Canada | History of Quebec | Quiet Revolution | Government | Navigation menue

Quebec1867 establishments in Canada


provinceCanadaCanada's ten provincessizenumber of peopleOntarioSaint Lawrence RiverFrenchCanadian Frenchofficial languageculturenewspapersmagazinesmoviestelevisionradioFranceanglicisationEnglish-speakinggovernmentcapitalQuebec CityNorth AmericaMontrealnatural resourcesjobscompaniesinformationcommunicationaerospacebiotechnologyhealthindustriesNortheastern United StatesNew FranceBritish controlleave CanadacountrydemocraticvotesAboriginalInuitIroquoiansmaizehunted whaleswarredVikingslongboatsScandinaviaBasqueFrenchJacques CartiercolonySamuel de ChamplainCatholicmissionariescanoesKing Louis XIII of FranceRoman CatholicsJesuitclericsconvertpopulationOhioBritish ParliamentCatholic religionrightsAmerican RevolutioninvasionAmerican Continental ArmyGreat Lakesconservativepoliticseconomyhydro-electricterroristbombingsrobberiesJames CrosskidnappedassassinatedPierre LaportePaul RosePrime MinisterprotestsParti QuébécoisRené LévesqueQuebec CityPierre DuchesnePhilippe Couillard












Quebec




From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia






Jump to navigation
Jump to search




Quebec (in orange) in Canada (in light yellow)




Flag-map of Quebec.


Quebec (spelled Québec in French) is a province in Eastern Canada. It is the largest of Canada's ten provinces by size. It also has the second-highest number of people, after Ontario. Most of Quebec's inhabitants live along or close to the banks of the Saint Lawrence River. Not many people live in the north part of the province.


Unlike the other provinces, most people in Quebec speak French (Canadian French) and French is the only official language. There is a strong French-language culture, which includes French-language newspapers, magazines, movies, television and radio shows. Their culture and language, though, is different from that of France mainly because of anglicisation, having words that come from the larger English-speaking parts of Canada.


The government of Quebec has its offices in the capital, Quebec City, which is one of the oldest cities in North America. But the city with the most people in the province is Montreal, which is also the second-largest city in all of Canada.


Quebec has many natural resources that are used to create jobs. Quebec also has many companies that create products for information and communication technologies, aerospace, biotechnology, and health industries. It has also developed close relations with the Northeastern United States.




Contents





  • 1 Leaving Canada


  • 2 History of Quebec


  • 3 Quiet Revolution


  • 4 Government




Leaving Canada |


Quebec was part of New France until 1760, then under British control. Quebec became a province in the Canadian Confederation in 1867. Since then, some people in Quebec have wanted to leave Canada. Since Quebec is a mainly French-speaking province, most of the people there feel that it is very different from the rest of Canada, and want to keep it that way. Some feel that for this to happen, Quebec must leave Canada and become its own country. However, the people of Quebec are still divided as to its place in Canada.


Quebec held democratic votes in 1980 and 1995 to decide whether to leave Canada. In 1995, the people of Quebec chose to stay in Canada by a 1% margin.



History of Quebec |


Aboriginal people and Inuit groups were the first peoples who lived in what is now Québec. These Aboriginal people lived by hunting, gathering, and fishing. Some of the Aboriginal people, called Iroquoians, planted squash and maize. The Inuit fished and hunted whales and seals for fur and food. Sometimes they warred with each other.


Vikings came in longboats from Scandinavia in 1000 AD. Basque whalers and fishermen traded furs with Aboriginal people throughout the 1500s.


The first French explorer to reach Quebec was Jacques Cartier. He sailed into the St. Lawrence River in 1534 and established a colony near present-day Quebec City.


Samuel de Champlain came from France and traveled into the St. Lawrence River. In 1608, he founded Quebec City as a permanent fur trading outpost. Champlain signed trading and military agreements with the Aboriginal people. Voyageurs, coureurs des bois, and Catholic missionaries used river canoes to explore the interior of the North American continent.


After 1627, King Louis XIII of France made a rule that only Roman Catholics could go to live in New France. Jesuit clerics tried to convert New France's Aboriginal people to Catholicism. New France became a Royal Province of France in 1663. The population grew from about 3,000 to 60,000 people between 1666 and 1760. Colonists built farms on the banks of St. Lawrence River.


In 1753 France began building a series of forts in the British Ohio Country. Britain asked the French to remove the forts, and the French refused. By 1756, France and Britain were at war. In 1758, the British attacked New France by sea and captured the French fort at Louisbourg.


In 1759, British General James Wolfe defeated General Louis-Joseph de Montcalm outside Quebec City. France gave its North American land to Great Britain in 1763. In 1764, New France was renamed the Province of Quebec.


In 1774, the British Parliament passed the Quebec Act, giving recognition to French law, Catholic religion, and French language in the colony. The Quebec Act gave the Quebec people their first Charter of rights. The Quebec Act made American colonists angry, so they launched the American Revolution. A 1775 invasion by the American Continental Army was stopped at Quebec City. In 1783, Quebec gave the territory south of the Great Lakes to the new United States of America. In 1867 the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed the British North America Act, which brought most of the provinces together.



Quiet Revolution |


The conservative government of Maurice Duplessis dominated Quebec politics from 1944 to 1960 with the support of the Catholic Church. The Quiet Revolution was a period of social and political change. During the Quiet Revolution, English Canadians lost their control over the Quebec economy, the Roman Catholic Church became less important, and the Quebec government took over the hydro-electric companies.


In 1963, a terrorist group that became known as the Front de Libération du Québec (FLQ) began doing bombings, robberies and attacks on government offices. In 1970 the FLQ kidnapped James Cross, the British trade commissioner to Canada. The FLQ also kidnapped and assassinated Pierre Laporte, Minister of Labour and Deputy Premier of Québec. Laporte's body was found in the trunk of Paul Rose's car, on the South Shore of Montreal on October 17 1970. Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau invoked the War Measures Act, and 497 people were arrested.


The Quiet Revolution was so named because it was not marked by protests or violence.


In 1977, the newly elected Parti Québécois government of René Lévesque introduced the Charter of the French Language. Often known as Bill 101, it defined French as the only official language of Quebec.



Government |


The government is based in the provincial capital, Quebec City. The government is led by a lieutenant-governor (pronounced "lef-") who represents the Crown. As of 2014, he is Pierre Duchesne. The political leader of the province is the premier. He is Philippe Couillard of the Quebec Liberal Party (PLQ), elected in 2014.










Retrieved from "https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quebec&oldid=6514286"










Navigation menu


























(RLQ=window.RLQ||[]).push(function()mw.config.set("wgPageParseReport":"limitreport":"cputime":"0.100","walltime":"0.147","ppvisitednodes":"value":215,"limit":1000000,"ppgeneratednodes":"value":0,"limit":1500000,"postexpandincludesize":"value":18772,"limit":2097152,"templateargumentsize":"value":10,"limit":2097152,"expansiondepth":"value":5,"limit":40,"expensivefunctioncount":"value":1,"limit":500,"unstrip-depth":"value":0,"limit":20,"unstrip-size":"value":0,"limit":5000000,"entityaccesscount":"value":0,"limit":400,"timingprofile":["100.00% 83.669 1 -total"," 62.08% 51.944 1 Template:Nosources"," 56.51% 47.280 1 Template:Ambox"," 37.59% 31.453 1 Template:Provinces_and_territories_of_Canada"," 33.68% 28.184 1 Template:Navbox_Canada"," 14.62% 12.234 2 Template:Icon"],"scribunto":"limitreport-timeusage":"value":"0.029","limit":"10.000","limitreport-memusage":"value":1177441,"limit":52428800,"cachereport":"origin":"mw1327","timestamp":"20190626125033","ttl":2592000,"transientcontent":false););"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"Article","name":"Quebec","url":"https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec","sameAs":"http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q176","mainEntity":"http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q176","author":"@type":"Organization","name":"Contributors to Wikimedia projects","publisher":"@type":"Organization","name":"Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.","logo":"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://www.wikimedia.org/static/images/wmf-hor-googpub.png","datePublished":"2003-08-21T05:56:49Z","dateModified":"2019-04-24T16:04:42Z","image":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/Carte_du_Qu%C3%A9bec_au_sein_du_Canada.svg","headline":"province of Canada"(RLQ=window.RLQ||[]).push(function()mw.config.set("wgBackendResponseTime":149,"wgHostname":"mw1251"););

Popular posts from this blog

Category:9 (number) SubcategoriesMedia in category "9 (number)"Navigation menuUpload mediaGND ID: 4485639-8Library of Congress authority ID: sh85091979ReasonatorScholiaStatistics

Circuit construction for execution of conditional statements using least significant bitHow are two different registers being used as “control”?How exactly is the stated composite state of the two registers being produced using the $R_zz$ controlled rotations?Efficiently performing controlled rotations in HHLWould this quantum algorithm implementation work?How to prepare a superposed states of odd integers from $1$ to $sqrtN$?Why is this implementation of the order finding algorithm not working?Circuit construction for Hamiltonian simulationHow can I invert the least significant bit of a certain term of a superposed state?Implementing an oracleImplementing a controlled sum operation

Magento 2 “No Payment Methods” in Admin New OrderHow to integrate Paypal Express Checkout with the Magento APIMagento 1.5 - Sales > Order > edit order and shipping methods disappearAuto Invoice Check/Money Order Payment methodAdd more simple payment methods?Shipping methods not showingWhat should I do to change payment methods if changing the configuration has no effects?1.9 - No Payment Methods showing upMy Payment Methods not Showing for downloadable/virtual product when checkout?Magento2 API to access internal payment methodHow to call an existing payment methods in the registration form?