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The effects of white contact upon Blackfoot culture with special reference to the rôle of the fur trade.Lewis, Oscar, January 1900 (has links)
Issued also as Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University. / "Centennial anniversary publication, the American ethnological society, 1842-1942." "Selected bibliography": p. 70-73.
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The effects of white contact upon Blackfoot culture with special reference to the rôle of the fur trade.Lewis, Oscar, January 1900 (has links)
Issued also as Thesis (Ph. D.) Columbia University. / "Centennial anniversary publication, the American ethnological society, 1842-1942." "Selected bibliography" : p. 70-73.
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The New England fur trade, 1602-1660,Longfellow, Julia Belle. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of California, Dec. 1921. / Typewritten (carbon copy). Description based on print version record. Bibliography: p. [73]-78.
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Der sibirische Pelzhandel und seine Bedeutung für die Eroberung Sibiriens ...Klein, Jos, January 1906 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Bonn. / Lebenslauf. "Litteratur": p. 204-206.
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Der Rauchwarenhandel ...Pabst, Fritz Heinrich Gottlieb, January 1902 (has links)
Inaug.-Dis.--Leipzig. / Lebenslauf. "Benutzte Litteratur": p. [1].
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American maritime otter diplomacyBarragy, Terrence J. January 1974 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1974. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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Fort Hall on the Oregon trailGrant, Louis Seymour January 1938 (has links)
No abstract included. / Arts, Faculty of / History, Department of / Graduate
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Scots in the Hudson's Bay Company, c.1779 - c.1821Rigg, Suzanne January 2008 (has links)
This dissertation examines Scottish involvement in the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC), c.1779 to c.1821. It surveys the Company's recruitment practices, and the national and regional contribution of Scots to the HBC, demonstrating that Orkneymen were disproportionately numerous throughout the entire period under examination. This study explores their motivation for entry to the HBC, and the various routes (and obstacles) to advancement of salary and station. It also seeks to establish whether Scottish networks operated in the fur trade, and the utility of such connections. Although Scots encountered many opportunities for betterment in Rupert's Land, they were also confronted with the challenge of working in a commercially competitive and remote wilderness environment. Extreme climatic conditions, insufficient food/medicinal supplies, laborious work duties, and violent trade rivalry meant that illness, disability, and death were common occurrences. The extent to which the paternalistic directors endeavoured to mitigate such hardships, and tended to the welfare of employees and their dependents, is assessed. Finally, the social, cultural and economic impact of Scots on both their temporary and home residences is explored. This discussion includes the significance of 'Scottishness' in the fur trade and the importance of 'home' to temporary migrants. In addition, this study highlights the difficulties of remitting savings and domestic support money to dependents in Scotland, and the successes of employees who fulfilled their personal ambitions on their return to Orkney, and climbed onto the property ladder.
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Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory applicationBobbie, Lisa Corinne 18 September 2012 (has links)
A significant change has occurred over the last forty years in the way archaeological and historical studies have perceived the way Aboriginal groups participated in the Western fur trade, from outdated portrayal of subordinate to a more accurate role as equal partner. A diachronic examination of Fort Churchill Trade Shop (IeKn-61) in northern Manitoba will provide a case study through which the Dene contributed to the market economy of the fur trade while maintaining their traditional modes of subsistence based around the migratory caribou herds of the subarctic.
Employing world-systems theory, which attempts to relive the old patterns of thinking, would indicate that the Dene would abandon their central socio-economic on the caribou in favour of the new market economy focused on fur-bearers and European trade goods. However, aspects of this theory show the interconnectedness of the system from which follows that a partnership and control could be held by peripheral groups.
A comprehensive analysis using historical, ethnographical and archaeological data sets are employed to determine the presence and degree of participation of the Dene at Fort Churchill through the 19th century. This examination using multiple lines of evidence provides an opportunity for a deeper understanding of Dene decision-making processes.
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Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory applicationBobbie, Lisa Corinne 18 September 2012 (has links)
A significant change has occurred over the last forty years in the way archaeological and historical studies have perceived the way Aboriginal groups participated in the Western fur trade, from outdated portrayal of subordinate to a more accurate role as equal partner. A diachronic examination of Fort Churchill Trade Shop (IeKn-61) in northern Manitoba will provide a case study through which the Dene contributed to the market economy of the fur trade while maintaining their traditional modes of subsistence based around the migratory caribou herds of the subarctic.
Employing world-systems theory, which attempts to relive the old patterns of thinking, would indicate that the Dene would abandon their central socio-economic on the caribou in favour of the new market economy focused on fur-bearers and European trade goods. However, aspects of this theory show the interconnectedness of the system from which follows that a partnership and control could be held by peripheral groups.
A comprehensive analysis using historical, ethnographical and archaeological data sets are employed to determine the presence and degree of participation of the Dene at Fort Churchill through the 19th century. This examination using multiple lines of evidence provides an opportunity for a deeper understanding of Dene decision-making processes.
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