Manitoba

   

Manitoba
Flag of Manitoba Coat of Arms of Manitoba
(In Detail) (In Detail)
Motto: Gloriosus et Liber (Glorious and free)
image:provmap-mb.png
CapitalWinnipeg
Largest CityWinnipeg
Area

 - Total
 - % fresh water
8th largest
(6th lgst prov.)

647 797 km²
14.5%
Population


 - Total (2003)


 - Density
Ranked 5th


1 162 800


1.78/km²
Admittance into
Confederation


 - Date


 - Order

Split off
from NWT

12 May 1870


5
Time zone UTC -6
Postal information (http://www.canadapost.ca)


Postal abbreviation
Postal code prefix

 
MB
R
ISO 3166-2CA-MB

Parliamentary
representation


 House seats
 Senate seats

 

14

6
PremierGary Doer (NDP)
Lieutenant-GovernorJohn Harvard
Government of Manitoba (http://www.gov.mb.ca)

Manitoba is one of Canada's provinces and was the fifth province to join Canada (in 1870). Its population is 1,162,800 (Manitobans).

Its capital is Winnipeg. Other towns and cities include Brandon, Thompson, Dauphin, Neelin, Churchill, The Pas, and Portage la Prairie.

Geography

Manitoba is located in the longitudinal centre of Canada, one of the Prairie Provinces. It borders on Saskatchewan to the west, Ontario to the east, Nunavut to the north, and the American states of North Dakota and Minnesota to the south.

The province has a coast with Hudson Bay, and contains the very large Lakes Winnipeg, Manitoba (its namesake), and Winnipegosis. Important watercourses include the Red River, Assiniboine River, Nelson River, and Churchill River.

The Manitoban climate is severe, though the southern latitudes support extensive agriculture. The northern reaches of the province range through coniferous forests, muskeg, and up to tundra in the far north.

History

Manitoba was settled by members of the Ojibwa and Assiniboine tribes. The first European to reach present-day Manitoba was Thomas Button, who visited the Nelson River in 1612. Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, Sieur de la Vérendrye visited the Red River Valley in the 1730s as part of opening the area for French exploration and exploitation. An important French-Canadian population (Franco-Manitobains) still lives in Manitoba, especially in the Saint-Boniface district of Winnipeg.

The territory was won by Britain in 1763 as part of the French and Indian War and became part of Rupert's Land, the immense monopoly territory of the Hudson's Bay Company.

The founding of the first agricultural community in 1811 by Lord Selkirk, near modern Winnipeg, resulted in conflict between the white colonists and the Métis who lived near there. A battle in 1816 saw 20 colonists killed by the Métis, including the governor.

When Rupert's Land was ceded to Canada in 1869 (it would become the Northwest Territories), a lack of attention to Métis concerns would lead their leader Louis Riel to establish a provisional government. Negotiations between this government and the Canadian government resulted in the creation of the province of Manitoba and its entry into Confederation in 1870.

Originally the province was only 1/18 of its current size and square in shape - it was known as the "postage stamp province." It grew progressively, absorbing land from the Northwest Territories until it attained its current size by reaching 60°N in 1912.

Map

image:manmap.PNG


See also



  Manitoba Communities Flag of Manitoba

Manitoba Cities: Brandon | Dauphin | Flin Flon | Portage la Prairie | Selkirk | Steinbach | Thompson | Winkler | Winnipeg

Manitoba Regions: Winnipeg Capital Region | Central Plains | Eastman | Interlake | Northern | Parkland | Pembina Valley | Westman



Manitoba also was formerly the artist name of electronic musician Dan Snaith, who now goes by the stage name Caribou.

da:Manitoba de:Manitoba es:Manitoba eo:Manitobo fr:Manitoba it:Manitoba la:Manitoba no:Manitoba ja:マニトバ州 pl:Manitoba


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