Tabagie is a Mi'kmaq word, often found in historical descriptions of solemn feasts in Quebec and Maritime Canada. A tribal unit would call a tabagie to observe a solemn event, such as (but not limited to) the imminent death of a senior tribal member. The term is also found in The Voyages of Samuel De Champlain, as Algonquins prepare to "put to death their prisoners in a festive tabagie". On 27 May 1603, a solemn tabagie or "feast" held at Tadoussac "reunited the Frenchmen Gravé du Pont and Champlain with the Montagnais, the Algonquins, and the Etchimins," and marked the beginning of an enduring alliance between these peoples. The term may be derived from tabac (tobacco), which was smoked as an essential element of the ceremony of the feast.
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| - Tabagie (festin) (fr)
- Tabagie (feast) (en)
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| - Tabagie is a Mi'kmaq word, often found in historical descriptions of solemn feasts in Quebec and Maritime Canada. A tribal unit would call a tabagie to observe a solemn event, such as (but not limited to) the imminent death of a senior tribal member. The term is also found in The Voyages of Samuel De Champlain, as Algonquins prepare to "put to death their prisoners in a festive tabagie". On 27 May 1603, a solemn tabagie or "feast" held at Tadoussac "reunited the Frenchmen Gravé du Pont and Champlain with the Montagnais, the Algonquins, and the Etchimins," and marked the beginning of an enduring alliance between these peoples. The term may be derived from tabac (tobacco), which was smoked as an essential element of the ceremony of the feast. (en)
- Une tabagie est un mot micmac, que l'on trouve dans les descriptions solennelles de festins en Nouvelle-France et qui a pu subsister par la suite. Les tribus autochtones organisaient des tabagies pour souligner des événements importants, tels la mort imminente d'un de leurs chefs ou une grande victoire. « Quand Champlain et ses compagnons arrivèrent sur la Pointe, les Indiens étaient en train de faire tabagie. Ils fêtaient une récente victoire remportée sur les Iroquois [...] Puis, le festin se continua : on mangea, on chanta et l'on dança jusques près du matin. » — Damase Potvin (fr)
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| - Tabagie is a Mi'kmaq word, often found in historical descriptions of solemn feasts in Quebec and Maritime Canada. A tribal unit would call a tabagie to observe a solemn event, such as (but not limited to) the imminent death of a senior tribal member. The term is also found in The Voyages of Samuel De Champlain, as Algonquins prepare to "put to death their prisoners in a festive tabagie". On 27 May 1603, a solemn tabagie or "feast" held at Tadoussac "reunited the Frenchmen Gravé du Pont and Champlain with the Montagnais, the Algonquins, and the Etchimins," and marked the beginning of an enduring alliance between these peoples. The term may be derived from tabac (tobacco), which was smoked as an essential element of the ceremony of the feast. (en)
- Une tabagie est un mot micmac, que l'on trouve dans les descriptions solennelles de festins en Nouvelle-France et qui a pu subsister par la suite. Les tribus autochtones organisaient des tabagies pour souligner des événements importants, tels la mort imminente d'un de leurs chefs ou une grande victoire. « Quand Champlain et ses compagnons arrivèrent sur la Pointe, les Indiens étaient en train de faire tabagie. Ils fêtaient une récente victoire remportée sur les Iroquois [...] Puis, le festin se continua : on mangea, on chanta et l'on dança jusques près du matin. » — Damase Potvin « [...] Le festin de la victoire se poursuivit et l’on consomma de huit à dix grandes marmites de viande d’orignal, d’ours, de phoque, de castor et de gibier d’eau. Le lendemain, Anadabijou transporta ses gens en canots jusqu’à Tadoussac où, quelque deux semaines plus tard, ils recommencèrent la fête en compagnie de leurs alliés algonquins et etchemins. » (fr)
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