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Nova Scotia (Latin for New Scotland; “Alba Nuadh”
in Scottish Gaelic, French la Nouvelle-Écosse) is a
Canadian province on the North Atlantic coast. Nova Scotia
has an area of 55,500 km² and a population of about 940,000
(Nova Scotians). Its capital is Halifax.
Contents [showhide]
1 Geography
2 History
3 Map
4 See also
[edit]
Geography
The province's mainland is a peninsula surrounded by the Atlantic
Ocean and includes several bays and estuaries. Cape Breton
Island, a large island to the northeast of the Nova Scotian
mainland, is also part of the province, as is Sable Island,
a small island notorious for its shipwrecks, approximately
175 km from the province's southern coast. Nova Scotia is
Canada's second smallest province (after Prince Edward Island),
and no point in Nova Scotia is more than 56 km from the sea.
See below for a map.
[edit]
History
The native population of the province are collectively known
as the Mi'kmaq.
Although first visited by the explorer John Cabot, an Italian
sailing for England, in 1497, Nova Scotia was first settled
by the Acadian French under Sieur de Monts. They made their
first capital, after a failed attempt in 1604 on Île
Ste. Croix in present-day New Brunswick, in 1605 at Port Royal,
later renamed by the British to Annapolis Royal, which is
located at the head of the Annapolis Basin, Nova Scotia.
In 1620, the Plymouth Council for New England, under James
I of England/James VI of Scotland designated the whole shorelines
of Acadia and the Mid-Atlantic colonies south to the Chesapeake
Bay, New England. In the later 1620s, a group of Scots was
sent by Charles I of England and Scotland to set up the colony.
(The Latin name was so stated in Sir William Alexander's 1621
land grant.) However owing to the signing of a peace treaty
with France, the territory was given to the French and the
Scots ordered to abandon their mission before their colony
was properly established. The French fortress at Louisbourg
on Cape Breton Island was established to guard the sea approaches
to Quebec. This fortress was captured by American colonial
forces, then returned by the British to France, then ceded
again after the French and Indian War.
The British were very concerned about how dominated the colony
was by the French-speaking and Catholic Acadians. In 1750
a large number of foreign Protestants, mostly Germans, were
imported and settled along the South Shore. The colony was
still mostly Acadian, however, and the British decided to
forcibly expel the Acadians this became known as the Great
Expulsion.
Scots emigration to Cape Breton Island in the north of the
province took place in the late 18th and early 19th century.
Some Scottish Gaelic is still spoken there, and some Scots
is spoken across Nova Scotia.
In 1763 Nova Scotia encompassed almost all of Acadia (except
the Magdalen Islands), the present Canadian Maritimes. In
1769 St. John's Island (now Prince Edward Island) was separated.
In 1784 the western, mainland portion of the colony was separated
and became the province of New Brunswick, and Cape Breton
also was a separate province from 1784 to 1820. These changes
reflected the grievances of United Empire Loyalists who settled
there after being expelled from the USA following the defeat
of the British in the American Revolutionary War.
Nova Scotia was one of the four original provinces of Confederation,
along with New Brunswick, Quebec, and Ontario.
The Bluenose, which appears on the Canadian ten-cent piece
(dime) was built in Lunenburg, a town on the South Shore.
In April 2004 936,510 people lived in Nova Scotia.
[edit]
Map
[edit]
See also
Cape Breton Island
Sable Island
Bay of Fundy - known for the world's highest tides
List of Nova Scotia counties
List of communities in Nova Scotia
List of Nova Scotia rivers
Nova Scotia House of Assembly
List of Nova Scotia lieutenant-governors
List of Nova Scotia premiers
Canada
List of cities in Canada
List of Canadian provincial and territorial symbols
Sunday shopping
Same-sex marriage in Nova Scotia
Provinces and territories of Canada
Provinces: British Columbia | Alberta | Saskatchewan | Manitoba
| Ontario | Quebec | New Brunswick | Nova Scotia | Prince
Edward Island | Newfoundland and Labrador
Territories: Yukon | Northwest Territories | Nunavut
This article is licensed
under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia
article "Nova Scotia".
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