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Subject Item
n2:
rdfs:label
Nova Scotia (Empire of Newfoundland)
rdfs:comment
Nova Scotia was already home to the Mi'kmaq people when French colonists established Port Royal, Nova Scotia, the first permanent European settlement in North America north of Florida in 1605. Almost one hundred and fifty years later, the first English and German settlers arrived with the founding of Halifax (1749). The first Scottish migration was on the Hector (1773) and then the first Black migration happened after the American Revolution (1783). Despite the diversity of the cultural heritage of Nova Scotia, much of the twentieth-century tourism efforts focused primarily on all things Scottish. Many recent tourism efforts embrace and showcase Nova Scotia's diversity.
dcterms:subject
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Halifax
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Newfoundland
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Dartmouth, Sydney
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Canada
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Darrell Dexter
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1897
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Jason Michael I
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1900
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Count
n8:wikiPageUsesTemplate
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n21:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n22:
n29:
Empire of Newfoundland
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Countship of Nova Scotia
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Constitutional monarchy and parliamentary democracy
n6:
.ns.nf
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English
n25:
Count's Parliament
n33:
Nova Scotian
n18:
+693, area code 902
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n14: n39:
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n12: n16:
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n35: n38:
n15:
Premier
n36:abstract
Nova Scotia was already home to the Mi'kmaq people when French colonists established Port Royal, Nova Scotia, the first permanent European settlement in North America north of Florida in 1605. Almost one hundred and fifty years later, the first English and German settlers arrived with the founding of Halifax (1749). The first Scottish migration was on the Hector (1773) and then the first Black migration happened after the American Revolution (1783). Despite the diversity of the cultural heritage of Nova Scotia, much of the twentieth-century tourism efforts focused primarily on all things Scottish. Many recent tourism efforts embrace and showcase Nova Scotia's diversity. In 1817 Nova Scotia was one of the four founding provinces of the Canadian Confederation.