Saint Pierre and Miquelon - Introduction

Saint Pierre and Miquelon (officially: Saint Pierre and Miquelon) is a country in Americas, precisely in North America, with a population of about N/A inhabitants today (2024-06-28). The capital city of Saint Pierre and Miquelon is Saint-Pierre, and the official country TLD code is .pm. Saint Pierre and Miquelon has cca2, cca3, cioc, ccn3 codes as PM, SPM, N/A, 666 respectively. Check some other vital information below.

Saint Pierre and Miquelon , Coat of Arms
Names
Common Saint Pierre and Miquelon
Official Saint Pierre and Miquelon
Common (Native) Saint Pierre and Miquelon
Official (Native) Saint Pierre and Miquelon
Alternative spellings PM, Collectivité territoriale de Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon
Translations ⬇️
Languages
fra French
Geography
User Country Flag

Flag

Saint Pierre and Miquelon is located in North America and has a total land area of 242 km². It is bounded by and the capital city is Saint-Pierre

Region/Continent North America
Subregion North America
TimeZone UTC-03:00
Capital city Saint-Pierre
Area 242 km²
Population 2024-06-28 N/A
Bordered Countreies
Demonym
eng Male: Saint-Pierrais, Miquelonnais / Female: Saint-Pierrais, Miquelonnais
fra Male: Saint-Pierrais, Miquelonais / Female: Saint-Pierraise, Miquelonaise
Lat/Lng 46.83333333, -56.33333333
Historical data and more
The National Flag of Saint Pierre and Miquelon

Historyedit

Saint-Pierre, Quai La Roncière, 1887
Saint-Pierre in 1921

Before 1900edit

Archaeological evidence indicates that Indigenous peoples, such as the Beothuk, visited St Pierre and Miquelon, but it is not thought that they settled on the islands permanently. On 21 October 1520, the Portuguese explorer João Álvares Fagundes landed on the islands and named the St. Pierre island group the 'Eleven Thousand Virgins' (Portuguese: ilhas das Onze Mil Virgens), as the day marked the feast day of St. Ursula and her virgin companions. In 1536 Jacques Cartier claimed the islands as a French possession on behalf of the King of France, Francis I. Though already frequented by Mi'kmaq people and by Basque and Breton fishermen, the islands were not permanently settled until the end of the 17th century: four permanent inhabitants were counted in 1670, and 22 in 1691.

In 1670, during Jean Talon's second tenure as Intendant of New France, a French officer annexed the islands after he discovered a dozen fishermen from France encamped there, naming them Saint-Pierre and Miquelon. During King William's War and Queen Anne's War, English forces launched multiple attacks against French colonial settlements on the islands, and by the early 18th century the colonists had abandoned Saint-Pierre and Miquelon altogether. In the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, which ended the War of the Spanish Succession, France ceded the islands to Britain. The British renamed the island of Saint-Pierre to Saint Peter, and small numbers of colonists from Great Britain and Britain's American colonies began to settle on the islands.

Under the terms of the 1763 Treaty of Paris, which put an end to the Seven Years' War, France ceded all its North American possessions to Britain, though the British granted fishing rights to French fishermen along the Newfoundland coast, and as part of that arrangement returned Saint-Pierre and Miquelon to France's control. After France entered the American Revolutionary War on the side of the United States and declared war on Britain, a British force invaded Saint-Pierre and Miquelon and briefly occupied them, destroying all colonial settlements on the islands and deporting 2,000 colonists back to France. In 1793, during the French Revolutionary Wars, another British force landed in Saint-Pierre and, in the following year, again deporting the French colonial population, and tried to establish a community of Anglophone settlers.

The nascent British colony was in turn attacked by the French Navy in 1796. The Treaty of Amiens of 1802 returned the islands to France, but Britain reoccupied them when hostilities recommenced the next year. The 1814 Treaty of Paris gave the islands back to France, though the UK occupied them yet again during the Hundred Days War in 1815. France then reclaimed the now uninhabited islands, in which all structures and buildings had been destroyed or fallen into disrepair. The islands were resettled in 1816. The settlers, mostly Basques, Bretons and Normans, were joined by various other peoples, particularly from the nearby island of Newfoundland. Only around the middle of the century did increased fishing bring a certain prosperity to the little colony.

1900–1945edit

In 1903, the colony toyed with the idea of joining the United States, but in the end nothing came of the idea. During the early 1910s the colony suffered severely as a result of unprofitable fisheries, and large numbers of its people emigrated to Nova Scotia and Quebec. The draft imposed on all male inhabitants of conscript age after the beginning of World War I in 1914 crippled the fisheries, as their catch could not be processed by the older men or the women and children. About 400 men from the colony served in the French military during World War I (1914–1918), 25% of whom died. The increase in the adoption of steam trawlers in the fisheries also contributed to the reduction in employment opportunities.

Smuggling had always been an important economic activity in the islands, but it became especially prominent in the 1920s with the institution of Prohibition in the United States from January 1920. In 1931, the archipelago was reported by The New York Times to have imported 1,815,271 U.S. gallons (1,511,529 imperial gallons; 6,871,550 liters) of whisky from Canada in 12 months, most of it to be smuggled into the United States. The end of Prohibition in 1933 plunged the islands once more into economic depression.

During World War II, despite opposition from Canada, Britain, and the United States, Charles de Gaulle's forces seized the archipelago from Vichy France, to which the local administrator had pledged its allegiance, in December 1941. In referendums on both islands, the population endorsed the takeover by Free France by over 98%.

After 1945edit

The colony became a French Overseas Territory in 1946. After the 1958 French constitutional referendum, the territory of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon was asked to choose one of three options: becoming fully integrated with France, becoming a self-governing state within the French Community, or preserving the status of an overseas territory; it decided to remain a territory. The archipelago became an overseas territory in 1946, then an overseas department on 19 July 1976, before it acquired the status of territorial collectivity on 11 June 1985, thus withdrawing from the European Communities.

Currency
Name Euro
Code EUR
Symbol
Other info
Idependent no, officially-assigned
UN Member country no
Start of Week monday
Car Side right
Codes
ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 PM
ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 SPM
ISO 3166-1 numeric 666
International calling code +508
FIFA 3 Letter Code
All Important Facts about Saint Pierre and Miquelon

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Saint Pierre and Miquelon is found in North America