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  1. #11
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    Well, my Dad says we're supposed to have a little French blood, but I haven't found it yet. Even if I do, it's just a couple of drops.:rolleyes:
    We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance. - Japanese Proverb

  2. #12
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    les gaulois

    Quote Originally Posted by The Supreme Canuck
    Acadien on my mother's side of the family, Scottish on my father's. All in all, a good mix, I think.
    Can't argue with that! That's my mix!

    It's all good. The French were a mix of Celts, Franks who took on the language of the Roman soldiers anyways. (Anyone else grow up on the comic strip Astérix et Obélix?)

  3. #13
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    Et moi, je suis québécois. Et c'est pourquoi je ne porterai jamais
    le tartan Maple Leaf...

  4. #14
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    It's interesting how surnames may not accurately reflect your nationality. My last name is French - DuVall, yet my French ancestor came over to the US in the 1650s. Through tracing my ancestry, marriage to English women (and one Scots-Irish) make me more English than French and my Mother is is full-blooded Slovak/Slovenian. I have as much claim, by blood, to Scots-Irish as I do French, but I have the French name. So that makes me a mutt with a French surname.

    Sest la Vi!

    Dale
    --Working for the earth is not a way to get rich, it is a way to be rich

    The Most Honourable Dale the Unctuous of Giggleswick under Table

  5. #15
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    gotta love these combos!

    Quote Originally Posted by cajunscot
    That's what I call our marriage, "The Auld Alliance"! :mrgreen:

    Cheers,

    Todd
    That ROCKS. lol. I'm dating one who's a first gen. US citizen... what would you call the union of a Scot/Cajun and someone whose family was from the Celtic region of Spain? (Be nice, gents. :rolleyes: )
    Last edited by jjoseph; 30th March 06 at 07:54 AM.

  6. #16
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    favorite names and bluebonnets

    Quote Originally Posted by Sylvain
    Et moi, je suis québécois. Et c'est pourquoi je ne porterai jamais
    le tartan Maple Leaf...
    ah, I've always thought that Tartan looked great though. I like the one for Nova Scotia too. I lived in Chicoutimi-Nord, Québec for a while when I was (much) younger... I've been in Texas a long while now and while I adore bluebonnets, I'm not much for the Texas Bluebonnet tartan.

    BTW, I figured with a name like Sylvain you had to be un bon québecois. It's always been a favorite name of mine. Figured if I ever had a son, that would be one of the names in the hat to choose from.

  7. #17
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    dreaming, tradition, sowing seed abroad

    Quote Originally Posted by Moosehead
    ...et moi, je suis courament bilingue.
    Of the ten of us siblings, I have one sister who is fluent in both languages. I can manage in French, but it's been twenty years since I stopped dreaming in both languages. The rest of us are English only. sigh.....

    I love the fact that Eastern Canada has such a mix of both French and Scottish cultures. Auld Alliance indeed! It makes me glad to see a tribe of folk out there who bring the old French and Scottish styles forward and express them in the present. There is something solid and comforting about seeing traditions take on new life and new expression in the places far from where they began.

  8. #18
    macwilkin is offline
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    tartans...

    I've always thought that Tartan looked great though. I like the one for Nova Scotia too. I lived in Chicoutimi-Nord, Québec for a while when I was (much) younger... I've been in Texas a long while now and while I adore bluebonnets, I'm not much for the Texas Bluebonnet tartan.
    When my wife and I first started dating, I bought her a Nova Scotia tartan sash to wear to our first Burns Supper; this year I bought her and the MIL sashes in the Louisiana tartan -- have you considered it? It's a nice one:

    http://www.csbr.org/latartan1.htm

    I love the fact that Eastern Canada has such a mix of both French and Scottish cultures. Auld Alliance indeed! It makes me glad to see a tribe of folk out there who bring the old French and Scottish styles forward and express them in the present. There is something solid and comforting about seeing traditions take on new life and new expression in the places far from where they began.
    Same here. My wife and I have both said out children will be taught about their Cajun and Scottish ancestry equally.

    Cheers,

    Todd

  9. #19
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    Auld alliance... The first Scots came here with the British army, and Scots have always be seen like some kind of British. Never been on the French side... The Auld Alliance is indeed very old...

  10. #20
    macwilkin is offline
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    Auld Alliance...

    Quote Originally Posted by Sylvain
    Auld alliance... The first Scots came here with the British army, and Scots have always be seen like some kind of British. Never been on the French side... The Auld Alliance is indeed very old...
    But remember, the Auld Alliance refers to European history -- from the late 1200's to the early 1500's, when Scotland went Protestant in the Reformation. The Alliance, at its height, saw Scottish troops serving with French forces (most notably Joan of Arc) in the Hundred Year's War. Scots mercenaries also served as bodyguards to the French monarch, and there was sort of a "dual citizenship between Scotland and France -- not to mention the many cultural links between the two countries. During the Jacobite Rebellions, France harbored many exiled Stuart supporters, and one, the Chevalier de Johnstone (sic?) was one of Montcalm's generals at Quebec.

    My wife's late grandmother (may she rest in peace) used to tease me about being Scottish, how "my people kicked her people out of Nova Scotia", but I would always point out that it was New England Yankees that kicked the French out, the Scots came after the Acadiens were gone! :mrgreen: She loved that!

    Cheers,

    Todd

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