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Louis David Riel ( October 22, 1844 - November 16, 1885), sometimes called the "Father of Manitoba", was a Canadian politician and leader of the Métis, an ethnic group of mixed Cree, Ojibway, Saulteaux, French Canadian, and British descent. He led a Resistance movement against the Canadian government in the Canadian Northwest which ended in his arrestChicago Police Department arrest a man An arrest is the action of police or other authority, or even in some circumstances a private civilian, to apprehend and take under guard a person who is suspected of committing a crime. The term is Frankish in origi and executionCapital punishment also referred to as the death penalty is the judicially ordered execution of a prisoner as a punishment for a serious crime, often called a capital offence or a capital crime''. Some jurisdictions that practice capital punishment restri for treasonIn law, treason is the crime of disloyalty to one's nation. A person who reneges on an oath of loyalty or a pledge of allegiance, and in some way willfully cooperates with an enemy, is considered to be a traitor . Oran's Dictionary of the Law ( 1983) defi. He is the subject of controversyA controversy is a contentious dispute, a disagreement over which parties are actively arguing. Controversies can range from private disputes between two individuals to large-scale social upheavals. It is the nature of controversies that they cannot be co to this day.


1 Early Life

The eldest son in a French Canadian-Métis family, Louis David Riel was born in the Red River Settlement (now the area around Winnipeg, Manitoba) in 1844 to Louis Riel Sr . and Julie Lagimodière. His father, Louis Riel Sr. (père) was a prominent member of the Métis community in Red River, who helped organize the group that supported Guillaume Sayer . His mother, Julie, was the daughter of Jean-Baptiste Lagimodière and Marie Gaboury , one of the the earliest whiteWhites is a broad term used to describe people of ethnic European descent, especially those with fair skin. The term Caucasian is sometimes used with much the same meaning in the USA. It is often used in contrast with other racial color terms, such as bla families to settle in the Red River Settlement in 1806. He married Marguerite Monet dit Bellehumeur in 1881 and had three children: Jean-Louis, Marie-Angélique and a third child who died in infancy.

He was first educated by priests at St. Boniface and at age 13 he won a scholarship to study in Montreal, Quebec to join the priesthood. After a failed romance (the family of his fiancée Marie-Julie Guernon opposed the marriage because he was half-blood) and his father's early death in 1864, Riel lost interest in the priesthood and withdrew from college to work as a law clerk in the Montreal office of Rodolphe Laflamme . He returned to Red River in 1868, after working odd jobs in Chicago, Illinois and St. Paul, Minnesota.



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