M tis nation of ontario genealogical chart 2025

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We have answers to the most popular questions from our customers. If you can't find an answer to your question, please contact us.
Contact us
Update your contact information by emailing info@mnoregistry.ca, by calling the MNO Registry at 1-855-798-1006 or fill out and submitting the Change of Address Form (PDF). You can also update your contact information online at the link below.
Local and State Level - It is often helpful to check town, school, church, and county courthouse records for information. Historical and genealogical information also can be found in other civil records at local courthouses such as deeds, wills, land or other property conveyance documents.
SELF-IDENTIFICATION It is not enough to self-identify as Mtis, but that identification must have an ongoing connection to a historic Mtis community.
Genealogical Records To prove Mtis ancestry, the Registry needs to document the generation-to-generation connections that link the applicant to a historic Mtis ancestor who lived in the Mtis Homeland sometime during the 19th century (1800-1901) and was recognized in primary historical documents as Mtis.
Mtis means a person who self-identifies as Mtis, is distinct from other Indigenous peoples, is of historic Mtis Nation ancestry, and who is accepted by the Mtis Nation. Mtis people are a post-contact Indigenous nation, born from the unions of European fur traders and First Nations women in the 18th century.
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The Mtis National Council General Assembly adopted the following National Definition in 2002: Mtis means a person who self-identifies as Mtis, is distinct from other Aboriginal peoples, is of historic Mtis Nation Ancestry and who is accepted by the Mtis Nation.
Who are the Mtis? The Mtis are a distinct Indigenous people with a unique history, culture, language, and way of life. The Mtis Nation is comprised of descendants of people born of relations between First Nations women and European men. The offspring of these unions were of mixed ancestry.
As per the MNO Registry Policy, applicants must prove Historical Mtis Nation ancestry by providing evidence of a genealogical connection to a documented Mtis ancestor who lived in the Historic Mtis Nation Homeland after 1750.

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