This is a list of subjects related to the Quebec independence movement .
New France – The Conquest – Province of Quebec – Constitutional Act of 1791 – Lower Canada – Declaration of Independence – Republic of Lower Canada – Act of Union – Canada East – Confederation – Quebec – Reference re Secession of Quebec – More...
Assemblée des six-comtés – Patriotes Rebellion – Francoeur Motion – Quiet Revolution – Vive le Québec libre speech – October Crisis – Le 15 novembre – 1980 Quebec referendum – Patriation of the Constitution – Night of the Long Knives – Demise of the Meech Lake Accord – Charlottetown Accord referendum – 1995 Quebec referendum
Classical liberalism – Republicanism – Responsible government – Secularism – Anti-imperialism – Nation-state – Self-determination – Separatism – Decolonization – Direct action – Socialism – Social democracy – Keynesian economics – Welfare state – Supranational union – Cultural diversity
Quebec nationalism – Sovereigntism – Sovereignty-Association – Pur et dur – Beau risque – The Three Periods
Parti patriote – Fils de la liberté – Frères Chasseurs – Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society – Alliance laurentienne – Rassemblement pour l'indépendance nationale – Front de libération du Québec – Parti Québécois – Bloc Québécois – Québec solidaire
Declaration of independence of Lower Canada – Pour la patrie – La fatigue culturelle du Canada français – Prochain épisode – Pourquoi je suis séparatiste – Nègres blancs d'Amérique – Égalité ou indépendance – An Option for Quebec – FLQ Manifesto – The Black Book of English Canada
Comfort and Indifference (Le confort et l'indifférence) — Corbo - February 15, 1839 (15 février 1839) - Elvis Gratton - The Long Winter (Quand je serai parti... vous vivrez encore) - October 1970 - Octobre - Orders (Les Ordres)
Un Canadien errant – Gens du pays – Il me reste un pays – Mon Pays
Patriote Flag – Flag of Quebec – Le Vieux de '37 – Colonne de la liberté – L'Assemblée des six-comtés – Speak White
Marquis de Montcalm – Louis-Joseph Papineau – Ludger Duvernay – Jean-Olivier Chénier – Chevalier de Lorimier – Wolfred Nelson – Robert Nelson – Honoré Mercier – Raymond Barbeau – Marcel Chaput – René Lévesque – Pierre Bourgault – Daniel Johnson, Sr – Lise Payette – Guy Bouthillier – Jean Dorion – Jacques Parizeau – Lucien Bouchard – Bernard Landry – More...
André D'Allemagne – Andrée Ferretti – François-Albert Angers – Michel Seymour – Michel Venne
Henri Julien – Jules-Paul Tardivel – Hubert Aquin – Gilles Vigneault – Gaston Miron – Michèle Lalonde – Jean Duceppe – Paul Piché – Claude Gauthier – Pierre Falardeau – Loco Locass
Pierre Vallières – Paul Rose – Raymond Villeneuve – Jacques Lanctôt
Henri Bourassa – Olivar Asselin – André Laurendeau – Camillien Houde
Lester B. Pearson – Pierre Elliott Trudeau – Brian Mulroney – Jean Chrétien – Stéphane Dion
James Wolfe – Jeffrey Amherst – Queen Victoria – Lord Aylmer – Lord Seaton – Lord Durham – Charles Hindelang – Charles de Gaulle – Michel Rocard – Elizabeth II – Philippe Séguin – Jacques Chirac – Bill Clinton
Durham Report – Rebellion Losses Bill – War Measures Act – Partition of Quebec – Option Canada – Calgary Declaration – Quebec bashing – Sponsorship scandal – Clarity Act
Age of Enlightenment – French Revolution – American Revolution – Irish nationalism – Upper Canada Rebellion – Decolonization of the Americas – Decolonization of Africa – Black nationalism – European Union – Velvet Divorce
The Parti Québécois is a sovereignist and social democratic provincial political party in Quebec, Canada. The PQ advocates national sovereignty for Quebec involving independence of the province of Quebec from Canada and establishing a sovereign state. The PQ has also promoted the possibility of maintaining a loose political and economic sovereignty-association between Quebec and Canada. The party traditionally has support from the labour movement, but unlike most other social democratic parties, its ties with organized labour are informal. Members and supporters of the PQ are nicknamed péquistes, a French word derived from the pronunciation of the party's initials in Quebec French.
The Lower Canada Rebellion, commonly referred to as the Patriots' War in French, is the name given to the armed conflict in 1837–38 between rebels and the colonial government of Lower Canada. Together with the simultaneous rebellion in the neighbouring colony of Upper Canada, it formed the Rebellions of 1837–38.
Jacques Parizeau was a Canadian politician and Québécois economist who was a noted Quebec sovereigntist and the 26th premier of Quebec from September 26, 1994, to January 29, 1996.
The Quebec sovereignty movement is a political movement whose objective is to achieve the independence of Quebec from Canada. Sovereignists suggest that the people of Quebec make use of their right to self-determination – a principle that includes the possibility of choosing between integration with a third state, political association with another state or independence – so that Québécois, collectively and by democratic means, give themselves a sovereign state with its own independent constitution.
The politics of Quebec are centred on a provincial government resembling that of the other Canadian provinces, namely a constitutional monarchy and parliamentary democracy. The capital of Quebec is Quebec City, where the Lieutenant Governor, Premier, the legislature, and cabinet reside.
Quebec nationalism or Québécois nationalism is a feeling and a political doctrine that prioritizes cultural belonging to, the defence of the interests of, and the recognition of the political legitimacy of the Québécois nation. It has been a movement and a central issue in Quebec politics since the beginning of the 19th century. Québécois nationalism has seen several political, ideological and partisan variations and incarnations over the years.
This section of the Timeline of Quebec history concerns the events in British North America relating to what is the present day province of Quebec, Canada between the time of the Constitutional Act of 1791 and the Act of Union 1840.
This section of the Timeline of Quebec history concerns the events between the Quiet Revolution and the patriation of the British North America Act.
The Société des Fils de la Liberté was a paramilitary organization founded in August 1837 in Lower Canada.
The Parti canadien or Parti patriote was a primarily francophone political party in what is now Quebec founded by members of the liberal elite of Lower Canada at the beginning of the 19th century. Its members were made up of liberal professionals and small-scale merchants, including François Blanchet, Pierre-Stanislas Bédard, John Neilson, Jean-Thomas Taschereau, James Stuart, Louis Bourdages, Denis-Benjamin Viger, Daniel Tracey, Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan, Andrew Stuart and Louis-Joseph Papineau.
Pierre Bourgault was a politician and essayist, as well as an actor and journalist, from Quebec, Canada. He is most famous as a public speaker who advocated sovereignty for Quebec from Canada.
National Patriots' Day is a statutory holiday observed annually in the Canadian province of Quebec, on the Monday preceding 25 May. The holiday was established by the Lieutenant Governor of Quebec-in-Council in 2003, according to the Parti Quebecois premier Bernard Landry: "to underline the importance of the struggle of the patriots of 1837–1838 for the national recognition of our people, for its political liberty and to obtain a democratic system of government." Before 2003, the Monday preceding 25 May of each year was unofficially the Fête de Dollard, a commemoration initiated in the 1920s to coincide with Victoria Day, a federal holiday occurring annually on the same date.
The Black Sheep is a Quebec documentary produced in 1992 by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB). Jacques Godbout directed and starred in the film. Its style belongs to the Quebec cinéma vérité school of filmmaking.
The History of the Quebec sovereignty movement covers various movements which sought to achieve political independence for Quebec, which has been a province of Canada since 1867. Quebec nationalism emerged in politics c. 1800. The terms sovereignty and sovereignism were introduced by the modern Quebec sovereignty movement which began during the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s. Pro-sovereignty political parties have represented Quebec at the provincial and federal level, and have held two referendums on sovereignty which were both defeated. Additionally, two accords to amend the Canadian Constitution on issues of concern to Quebecers were also defeated.
Anti-Quebec sentiment is a form of prejudice which is expressed toward the government, culture, and/or the francophone people of Quebec. This prejudice must be distinguished from legitimate criticism of Quebec society or the Government of Quebec, though the question of what qualifies as legitimate criticism and mere prejudice is itself controversial. Some critics argue that allegations of Quebec bashing are sometimes used to deflect legitimate criticism of Quebec society, government, or public policies.
The Assembly of the Six Counties was an assembly of Patriote leaders and approximately 6,000 followers held in Saint-Charles, Lower Canada on October 23 and October 24, 1837, despite the June 15 Proclamation of the government forbidding public assemblies.
The patriotes movement was a political movement that existed in Lower Canada from the turn of the 19th century to the Patriote Rebellion of 1837 and 1838 and the subsequent Act of Union of 1840. The partisan embodiment of the movement was the Parti patriote, which held many seats in the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada.
L'Assemblée des six-comtés, also known as Manifestation des Canadiens contre le gouvernement anglais, à Saint-Charles, en 1837, is a large oil painting executed on canvas by Ontario artist Charles Alexander Smith in 1890.
Jean Garon was a politician, lawyer, academic and economist in Quebec, Canada.
The constitution of Quebec comprises a set of legal rules that arise from the following categories: