In this Issue
Established in 1971, Acadiensis is a journal of regional history devoted to the study of Atlantic Canada, the northeast, and the Atlantic World from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. The essential source for reading and research on the region, Acadiensis is one of Canada’s leading scholarly journals. It contains both English and French research articles (with bilingual abstracts), review essays, forums, historiographic comments, and research notes and documents.
published by
University of New Brunswick, Department of Historyviewing issue
Volume 53, Number 1, Spring 2024Table of Contents
-
View "He is sent to this place, and good will result to the cause of God": Young Richard Preston, Race, and Religion in Early-19th-Century Nova Scotia
-
Download
"He is sent to this place, and good will result to the cause of God": Young Richard Preston, Race, and Religion in Early-19th-Century Nova Scotia
- Save "He is sent to this place, and good will result to the cause of God": Young Richard Preston, Race, and Religion in Early-19th-Century Nova Scotia
-
View Putting Port Royal on the Map: Jean de Labat's Early-18th-Century Cartographic Construction of Port Royal
-
Download
Putting Port Royal on the Map: Jean de Labat's Early-18th-Century Cartographic Construction of Port Royal
- Save Putting Port Royal on the Map: Jean de Labat's Early-18th-Century Cartographic Construction of Port Royal
-
View Historians as Expert Witnesses in Indigenous Land Claims Litigation: Examining the Role Played by Elizabeth Mancke and Bill Parenteau in Madawaska Maliseet First Nation v The Queen
-
Download
Historians as Expert Witnesses in Indigenous Land Claims Litigation: Examining the Role Played by Elizabeth Mancke and Bill Parenteau in Madawaska Maliseet First Nation v The Queen
- Save Historians as Expert Witnesses in Indigenous Land Claims Litigation: Examining the Role Played by Elizabeth Mancke and Bill Parenteau in Madawaska Maliseet First Nation v The Queen
Previous Issue
Next Issue
| ISSN | 1712-7432 |
|---|---|
| Print ISSN | 0044-5851 |
| Launched on MUSE | 2024-12-19 |
| Open Access | No |
Copyright
Copyright © Department of History, University of New Brunswick




