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by flakes
987 days ago
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On the note of our acronym: After being a territory of Brittan, Newfoundland was its own country for a brief period of time. Much earlier before this point, Brittan conquered Labrador from the french (which used to be called "New France"), and the ownership over the land was disputed between Quebec and the self-governing colony of Newfoundland for quite some time. The dispute lasted into the mid 1920's, leaving the upper portion of the land in Newfoundland control. Some islands remain to this day under French governance, such as Saint Pierre & Miquelon. When we joined Canada in 1949, we retained Labrador, but were still named Newfoundland, having the acronym NFLD. In the early 2000's we decided to change the name to Newfoundland and Labrador to better reflect our province, and as part of this change, redefined the acronym as NL. |
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Still. Check that border map according to what Quebec thinks vs official maps of Canada.