Who were the first people to live in Canada?
📖 In-depth explanation
Background, key points, and common pitfalls
Question
Who were the first people to live in Canada?
📚 Background context
The official answer to this foundational question is Aboriginal peoples. The Discover Canada guide and the Oath of Citizenship recognize that long before settlers and immigrants began arriving, the land that is now called Canada was already home to distinct Indigenous nations. The Oath itself binds every new Canadian citizen to faithfully observe the laws of Canada, including the Constitution which recognizes and affirms the Aboriginal and treaty rights of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples. This wording is not decorative — it is the legal centrepiece of how Canada formally acknowledges who was here first.
The guide groups Aboriginal peoples into three constitutionally recognized categories: First Nations, Inuit, and Métis. These three groups appear together every time Aboriginal peoples are referenced in the Oath, in the French version (Premières Nations, Inuits et Métis), and in the constitutional framework Canada inherits. Test-takers must remember all three names, in this order, because the citizenship test frequently asks candidates to identify the constitutionally recognized Aboriginal peoples of Canada.
The guide places Aboriginal peoples chronologically before the settler era. It states that for 400 years, settlers and immigrants have contributed to the diversity and richness of our country. That 400-year window describes only the post-contact settler period — Aboriginal peoples were already established across the territory long before that window opens. Their presence is the historical baseline upon which every later wave of newcomers was layered, and the reason the Constitution treats Aboriginal and treaty rights as pre-existing rights, not granted privileges.
🌎 Why this matters today
Understanding that Aboriginal peoples were the first inhabitants is essential because their rights are entrenched in the highest law of the country. Every citizenship candidate swears an oath that explicitly recognizes the Aboriginal and treaty rights of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples. This connects directly to other test topics: the Constitution, the Oath of Citizenship, the responsibilities of citizenship, and Canada's shared commitment to the rule of law. New citizens are not merely told a historical fact — they are asked to take on, as part of their duties, an ongoing constitutional acknowledgement that Aboriginal peoples occupied this land before settlers arrived and that their rights continue to be recognized today.
📜 From Discover Canada
"the Constitution which recognizes and affirms the Aboriginal and treaty rights of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples"
⚠️ Common misconceptions
Some candidates assume the answer is the French or English settlers because the guide emphasizes 400 years of immigration; that 400-year period describes only the settler era and explicitly came after Aboriginal peoples were already living here.
Others answer only "First Nations" — but the Constitution and the Oath recognize three groups together: First Nations, Inuit and Métis. Naming only one is incomplete.
A common error is to confuse "Aboriginal peoples" with a single nation or tribe. The term is a constitutional umbrella covering the three distinct groups recognized in the Oath of Citizenship.
Some think Aboriginal rights are granted by the government as a favour. The Oath wording — "recognizes and affirms" — makes clear these are pre-existing rights that Canada acknowledges, not rights it created.
Candidates sometimes skip the French term Métis because it is unfamiliar; the citizenship test expects candidates to recognize all three constitutionally named groups equally.
✅ Key points to remember
- Correct answer:
- Aboriginal peoples
- Three recognized groups:
- First Nations, Inuit and Métis
- Source of recognition:
- The Constitution of Canada
- Constitutional language:
- "recognizes and affirms" Aboriginal and treaty rights
- Where it appears in test prep:
- The Oath of Citizenship
- Settler timeline:
- Settlers and immigrants have contributed for 400 years — after Aboriginal peoples
- French equivalents:
- Premières Nations, Inuits et Métis
- Citizenship duty:
- New citizens swear to observe laws including the Constitution that affirms these rights
💡 Memory tip
Aboriginal peoples were the first to live in what is now Canada. The Constitution recognizes and affirms the Aboriginal and treaty rights of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples. Settlers and immigrants have contributed to Canada for 400 years — but only after Aboriginal peoples were already here. Every new citizen swears the Oath of Citizenship, which explicitly acknowledges these three constitutionally recognized Aboriginal groups.
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