Nationalism
French Revolution/Napoleon
Charter of Rights and Freedoms
Quebec Nationalism
Contending Loyalties
100

The collective, shared sense of belonging of people who identify themselves as a nation.

Nationalism 

100

The three main causes of the French Revolution

Political, Social, Economic

100

The right to life liberty, and security of the person

Legal rights

100

French Speaking Canadians

Francophone

100

two opposing loyalties would be considered 

Contending Loyalties

200
Language fits in this classification of nationalism

Linguistic

200

The people that belonged to the Third Estate

Peasants, Bourgeoisie, Workers

200

The right to vote

Democratic Rights

200

Members share a similar values, beliefs, and internalized feelings

Collective Consciousness 

200

Government provided special privileges for certain religious groups

Conscientious Objection 

300

A love for a nation that relates to pride.

Patriotic Nationalism 

300

What was responsible for the death of King Louis the XVI

The Guillotine 

300

Everyone is equal before and under the law

Equality Rights

300

A series of reforms that occurred during the 1960's

The Quiet Revolution

300

A contending loyalty to the environment 

Environmentalism 

400

Songs, speeches, political actions, artwork, multimedia fall into this category. 

Expressions of nationalism 

400

Equality before the Law

Napoleonic code

400

The right to be educated in your primary language in Canada

Minority Language Educational Rights
400

A direct vote by the electorate on a specific proposal, often related to a major political or constitutional injury. 

Referendum

400

loyalties towards a political party and their views on refuges is an example of what contending loyalty 

Political vs. Humanitarian 

Humanitarian 

500

The Metis, Quebecois belong to this form of Nationalism.

Ethnic Nationalism 

500

The Jacobins were 

A radical group that was prominent during the Reign of Terror

500

Freedom of thought, belief, opinion, including freedom of the press and other media of communication

Fundamental freedoms

500

The Bloc Quebecois is trying to achieve political autonomy through things such as referendums. People that support this would be called.

Sovereigntists 

500

A case study we explored. Religious vs. Civic Loyalties 

Hutterites and their phots being taken to be put on a drivers license