Tableau chronologique

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1800-1809     1810-1819     1820-1829     1830-1839     1840-1849     1850-1859     1860-1869     1870-1879     1880-1889     1890-1899

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Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
Forces Armées
Stratégie et Tactique
Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
Politique et Société

1860: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1860: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1860: Forces Armées
1860: Stratégie et Tactique
1860: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1860: Politique et Société
1861: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1861: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1861: Forces Armées
1861: Stratégie et Tactique
1861: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1861: Politique et Société
1862: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1862: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1862: Forces Armées
1862: Stratégie et Tactique
1862: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1862: Politique et Société
1863: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1863: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1863: Forces Armées
1863: Stratégie et Tactique
1863: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1863: Politique et Société
1864: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1864: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1864: Forces Armées
1864: Stratégie et Tactique
1864: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1864: Politique et Société
1865: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1865: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1865: Forces Armées
1865: Stratégie et Tactique
1865: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1865: Politique et Société
1866: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1866: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1866: Forces Armées
1866: Stratégie et Tactique
1866: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1866: Politique et Société
1867: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1867: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1867: Forces Armées
1867: Stratégie et Tactique
1867: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1867: Politique et Société
1868: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1868: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1868: Forces Armées
1868: Stratégie et Tactique
1868: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1868: Politique et Société
1869: Soldats, Guerriers et Leaders
1869: Guerres, Batailles et Conflits
1869: Forces Armées
1869: Stratégie et Tactique
1869: Armes, Équipements et Fortifications
1869: Politique et Société

Date > 1800 > 1860-1869

Sir Wilfrid Laurier National Historic Site of Canada: End of a Long Reign

Type:

Wilfrid Laurier's penchant for compromise allowed him to remain in power for 15 years, earning him the nickname of the "Great Conciliator". But in 1911, this talent proved inadequate to the task of winning elections.

Site:

British iron guns mounted on iron carriages, circa 1815

Type:

Iron carriages were introduced in the British artillery in 1810. They were to be placed ‘in such parts of fortifications as are least exposed to the enemy’s fire’ as it was feared they would shatter if hit by enemy artillery. The examples seen in this photograph are found at the Fortifications of Quebec National Historic Site.

Site:

Sir Wilfrid Laurier National Historic Site of Canada: Compromise, Laurier's Approach to Solving Conflicts

Type:

Throughout his career, compromise would remain the main political strategy Laurier used to settle conflicts. A staunch defender of national unity, he was called on to solve a series of major controversies which set Canadians against one another.

Site:

Riel House National Historic Site of Canada: Historic Themes

Type:

Louis Riel was born in Saint Boniface in 1844 and was educated in Montréal. When he returned to the Red River Settlement in 1868, he found the community anxious and divided over its political future.

Site:

Sir Wilfrid Laurier National Historic Site of Canada

Type:

The Sir Wilfrid Laurier National Historic Site of Canada is located in Saint-Lin-Laurentides, a town 50 km north of Montreal. The site commemorates one of the most important figures in Canadian political history, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the man often referred to as the father of modern Canada.

Site:

British iron mortar, circa 1810

Type:

Mortars were designed to shoot an exploding shell at a very high angle, 45 degrees or more. They were used in the siege and defence of fortifications. An explosive shell was fired up into the air and arced downwards to drop within the enemy defences. When the shell's fuse burned down, it exploded. These projectiles are the 'bombs bursting in air' mentioned in the American national anthem, where they were being fired from a British fleet attacking Baltimore.

Site:

Weapons

Type:

This section illustrates a selection of firearms and bladed weapons used by British and Canadian military units during the 18th and 19th centuries.

Site:

Riel House National Historic Site of Canada: The Métis

Type:

The term Métis, like the 'mestizo', has its origins in the Latin word 'mixticius' which means a person of mixed racial ancestry. Métis, however, describes more than race-it refers to a culture and a nation that played a significant role in the history of the Canadian West and is now a proud part of the Canadian mosaic.

Site:

Map of Halifax, 1865

Type:

Starting in the late 1820s, the fortifications of Halifax were developed into a formidable defence complex. The new Citadel on the hill dominated the city’s landscape with batteries dotting the coast to provide crossfire against enemy ships. George’s Island was also heavily fortified to block the passage leading into Bedford basin. This 1865 map of Halifax shows these defences were woven into the layout of the city. (Library and Archives Canada, NMC 48125-6/6)

Site:

The Military Art of the American Northwest

Type:

War in the Pacific Northwest centred around the canoe, which could be up to 20 metres long. Flotillas of canoes would attack enemy villages, hoping to capture prisoners to keep as slaves. Coastal forts of cedar logs were to be found, used to help control and tax maritime trade.

Site: