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Canadian Ethnic Studies= Etudes Ethniques au Canada 20.3 (1988): 42+. Bassler, Gerhard P. The German Canadian Mosaic Today and Yesterday. Identities, Roots, and Heritage (Ottawa: German-Canadian Congress, 1991). Bausenhart, Werner A. (1972). "The Ontario German Language Press and Its Suppression by Order-in-Council in 1918". Canadian Ethnic ...
[1] According to the 2021 Canadian census, over 450 "ethnic or cultural origins" were self-reported by Canadians. [2] The country's ten largest self-reported specific ethnic or cultural origins in 2021 were Canadian [a] (accounting for 15.6 percent of the population), followed by English (14.7 percent), Irish (12.1 percent), Scottish (12.1 percent), French (11.0 percent), German (8.1 percent ...
Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 14. University of Toronto/Université Laval. Archived from the original on 16 May 2021; Rose, George Maclean (1886). A Cyclopæedia of Canadian biography. Rose Publishing Company. Tötösy de Zepetnek, Steven (1998). "Rittinger, John Adam". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 14.
Category: Canadian people of German descent. 21 languages. ... This page lists Canadian citizens of full or partial ethnic German ancestry or national German origin.
European Canadians are Canadians who can trace their ancestry to the continent of Europe. [2] [3] They form the largest panethnic group within Canada.In the 2021 Canadian census, 19,062,115 people or 52.5% of the population self-identified ethnic origins from Europe.
The country's ten largest self-reported specific ethnic or cultural origins in 2021 were Canadian [c] (accounting for 15.6 percent of the population), followed by English (14.7 percent), Irish (12.1 percent), Scottish (12.1 percent), French (11.0 percent), German (8.1 percent), Indian (5.1 percent), [d] Chinese (4.7 percent), Italian (4.3 ...
The decline in Canadian ethnic origin responses in 2021 is largely due to changes in the format of the ethnic origin question in the census. Each census questionnaire between 1996 and 2016 included a list of examples of ethnic origins to enter, all with "Canadian" as the first example listed, except in 1996 when it was the fifth example.
German-Canadian history in British Columbia began with the onset of the Fraser Gold Rush in 1858, when Germans, Austrians, Swiss Germans and other German-ethnic men arrived in British Columbia en masse as part of the migration to the new Colony of British Columbia from the California goldfields. [1]