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・ Jean-Baptiste Delestre
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・ Jean-Baptiste Accolay
・ Jean-Baptiste Akassou
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・ Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
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・ Jean-Baptiste Anet
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・ Jean-Baptiste Annibal Aubert du Bayet
・ Jean-Baptiste Arban
Jean-Baptiste Assiginack
・ Jean-Baptiste Audebert
・ Jean-Baptiste Azéma
・ Jean-Baptiste Badeaux
・ Jean-Baptiste Bagaza
・ Jean-Baptiste Bailly
・ Jean-Baptiste Barbé
・ Jean-Baptiste Barla
・ Jean-Baptiste Baronian
・ Jean-Baptiste Barrière
・ Jean-Baptiste Barré
・ Jean-Baptiste Barsalou
・ Jean-Baptiste Baskouda
・ Jean-Baptiste Baudin
・ Jean-Baptiste Baudoin


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Jean-Baptiste Assiginack : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean-Baptiste Assiginack
Jean-Baptiste Assiginack (1768 - 3 Nov. 1866) was an Ojibwe leader in the early 19th-century. He was also known as 'Blackbird'.
Assiginack is thought to have been at what is now Harbor Springs, Michigan. Early in life he studied at a Sulpician school in lower Canada where he became a Catholic. He seems to have fought with the British at Michilimackinac and Praries du Chien during the War of 1812. In July 1813, Assiginack and Captain Matthew Elliott led a band of Ottawas to the Niagara peninsula. There they added to the British infantry and fought in the Beaver Dams battle. Possibly, Assiginack was subsequently honored with medals for his role in the war.〔 Starting in 1815 he was an interpreter for the British Government on Drummond Island. Starting in 1827 he returned to Harbor Springs to work as a Catholic missionary, hoping a priest would soon join him, but had to carry out the efforts of Catholicizing the local Ojibwe population all on his own.
After the war, in 1815, the Indian Department at Drummond Island hired Assiginack as an interpreter. There he met Captain Thomas Gummersall Anderson, and a long friendship grew between the two men. Assiginack's command of several Indian dialects proved a crucial asset for the Indian Department’s operations in the northern Great Lakes area.〔
After the 1828 transfer of Drummon Island to the United States Assiginack lead a large number of Ojibwe to relocate to Penetanguishene. In 1832 he relocated to Coldwater, Ontario. He had continued his Catholic evangelizing activities, and at Coldwater convinced John Aisance to switch from being a Methodist to being a Catholic. Starting in 1836 Assiginack was the leading Ojibwe in the area around Manitowaning. He generally supported various British treaties over the coming years.
In 1862 he was the leading spokesman for the British treaty while one of his sons, Edowishkosh, was a leading spokesman for the opposition faction based around Wikwemikong.
==Sources==

*(Douglas Leighton, ''Canadian Biographical Encyclopedia online'' article on Jean-Baptiste Assiginack )

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