The only white island, refusing to intermarry other races, a unique ethnic group in Europe, maintaining racial purity
In this era of advanced information and information, it is too difficult to find a person with pure skin color and pure race, even on a sparsely populated island. Canada's province of Quebec is a purely Caucasian island, with more than 12,600 people, most of whom are Caucasian European merchants, and only 5 percent of the population speaks English, but in order to survive, they have lived together for hundreds of years.
In 1534, a Frenchman, Jacques Cartier, loaded with grain, left the Gulf of St. Lawrence, but after three days of sailing, he had to drop anchor on the nameless island. After the heavy rains, Jacques was so frightened by the seals' "nest" that they decided to take the island for themselves and named it "Seal Island" for future hunting. However, when the captain returned to Walrus Island, he was captured by a nobleman for the Battle of Hugueno (also known as the "Battle of the Faith"), and when his grandson followed the map to Walrus Island, he found that it had fallen into the hands of someone else.
The first couple on the archipelago to be hit by a typhoon were François and his wife Madeleine, who built their first house on Amherst Island out of wood floating on a boat, and both England and France made their houses their property. The couple named the island Magdalen (meaning "son" in Irish), and although they had three children, they remained until the third child was 73 years old, and the French Acadia family, better known as the "seal family".
In 1763, the British colonists began to expand their North American colonies, and the Quebec Act incorporated the Magdalen Islands into the province of Quebec, and Canada became a Canadian territory after gaining independence, but the archipelago has been neglected because it often suffers from hurricanes and shipwrecks. In 1847, Edward, the second man in command of the British fleet, led a fleet to Canada, but when a cargo ship carrying 446 Irish soldiers docked in the islands, roads and ports were built.
Twenty years later, he wrote to his commander about his experience and that of his soldiers, and asked the British Navy to help build the lighthouse, after all, more than 500 European sailors had to stay here in the last twenty years due to shipwrecks. The pioneers of Europe fought and envied each other for their fortune, and Edward settled on nine small islands divided by language and ethnicity.
No one knows how many shipwrecks they have experienced around the Magdalen Islands, but they only occasionally see people rescued ashore and settle down there, and in view of the Anglo-French rivalry on the seas, Edward decided to settle the English speakers in Corfu, the smallest of the islands, where most of the sailors came from England, Scotland and Ireland, and now grew into a town of about 550 people.
According to official Canadian statistics for 2018, there are 12,600 people in the archipelago, the vast majority of whom are French-speaking French, Brittany, Corsican and Alsatian. Others are Dutch, Austrian, Swiss, Spanish, and the races on each island have a common characteristic, that is, "Caucasians", in addition to this, their lifestyles and holiday Xi are completely different from their own.
The Magdalen Islands, once a "high incidence of genetic similarity" in Canada, have even mandated that marriageable islanders must intermarry with foreign races until the threat of "genetic similarity" is eliminated in order to prevent the emergence of a variety of genetic diseases.
However, centuries of isolation have strengthened their sense of community, even if they are willing to marry other white people, and they are not willing to have any intercourse with non-white people, let alone have children. On Magdalen Island, this situation continued until 198, when the Canadian Shipping Festival began, and foreign groups were gradually able to live on the island, but inter-ethnic groups were still very rare.