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・ Settlement Music School
・ Settlement of Great Britain and Ireland
・ Settlement of Iceland
・ Settlement of the Americas
・ Settlement of the Thousand
・ Settlement offer
・ Settlement Plan
・ Settlement Proposal
・ Settlement risk
・ Settlement school
・ Settlements and bankruptcies in Catholic sex abuse cases
・ Settlements of the Cucuteni–Trypillian culture
・ Settlements on the A38
・ Settlemire
・ Settlemyer House
Settler
・ Settler (Asimov)
・ Settler (disambiguation)
・ Settler colonialism
・ Settler society
・ Settler Swahili
・ Settler Town, Sierra Leone
・ Settler's Cabin Park
・ Settlers Dam
・ Settlers Hospital
・ Settlers House
・ Settlers Landing (RTA Rapid Transit station)
・ Settlers Ridge
・ Settlers' Ghost Golf Club
・ Settlers' Green Outlet Village


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Settler : ウィキペディア英語版
Settler

A settler is a person who has migrated to an area and established permanent residence there, often to colonize the area. Settlers are generally from a sedentary culture, as opposed to nomads who share and rotate their settlements with little or no concept of individual land ownership.
== Historical usage ==

One can witness how settlers very often occupied land previously home to long-established peoples, designated as indigenous (also called "natives", "Aborigines" or, in the Americas, "Indians"). In some cases (such as Australia), as colonialist mentalities and laws change, the legal ownership of some lands is contested by indigenous people, who either claim or seek restoration of traditional usage, land rights, native title and related forms of legal ownership or partial control.
The word "settler" was not originally usually used in relation to unfree labour immigrants, such as slaves (e.g. in the United States), indentured labourers (such as in Colonial America),〔(Indentured Servitude in Colonial America )〕 or convicts (such as in British America, ''c''. 1615–1775; Australia 1788-1868).
In the figurative usage, a "person who goes first or does something first" also applies to the American English use of "pioneer" to refer to a settler—a person who has migrated to a less occupied area and established permanent residence there, often to colonize the area; as first recorded in English in 1605.〔() Online Etymological Dictionary〕 In United States history it refers to those people who helped to settle new lands.
In this usage, pioneers are usually among the first to an area, whereas settlers can arrive after first settlement and join others in the process of human settlement. This correlates with the work of military pioneers who were tasked with construction of camps before the main body of troops would arrive at the designated camp site.
In Imperial Russia, the government invited Russians or foreign nationals to settle in sparsely populated lands.〔Robert Greenall, (Russians left behind in Central Asia ), BBC News, 23 November 2005.〕 These settlers were called "colonists".<-- article due --> See, e.g., articles Slavo-Serbia, Volga German, Volhynia, Russians in Kazakhstan.
Although they are often thought of as traveling by sea—the dominant form of travel in the early modern era—significant waves of settlement could also use long overland routes, such as the Great Trek by the Boer-Afrikaners in South Africa, or the Oregon Trail in the United States.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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