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New France

New France (French: Nouvelle-France) was the area colonized by France in North America, beginning with the exploration of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence by Jacques Cartier in 1534 and ending with the cession of New France to Great Britain and Spain in 1763 under the Treaty of Paris.

New France
Nouvelle-France (French)
1534–1763
Motto: 
Anthem: 
Location of New France (green) maximal expansion in 1712, before Treaty of Utrecht.
StatusViceroyalty of the Kingdom of France
CapitalQuebec
Common languagesFrench
Religion
Catholicism
GovernmentMonarchy
King of France 
• 1534–1547
Francis I (first)
• 1715–1763
Louis XV (last)
Viceroy of New France 
• 1534–1541
Jacques Cartier (first; as Governor of New France)
• 1755–1760
Pierre de Rigaud de Vaudreuil (last)
LegislatureSuperior Council
Historical eraColonial/French and Indian War
• Exploration of Canada begins with Jacques Cartier
24 July 1534
• Foundation of Quebec by Samuel de Champlain
3 July 1608
• Cardinal Richelieu creates the Compagnie de la Nouvelle-France, responsible for colonizing the country.
29 April 1627
• Louis XIV integrated New France into the royal domain, endowed it with a new administration and founded the French West India Company.
18 September 1663
• By the Treaty of Utrecht, France ceded most of Acadia to the Kingdom of Great Britain as well as its claims on Newfoundland and Hudson's Bay.
11 April 1713
• Beginning of the Seven Years' War in America
28 May 1754
• Defeat of the French led by Louis-Joseph de Montcalm at the "Plains of Abraham", near Quebec
13 September 1759
• By the Treaty of Paris, Louis XV cedes New France to Great Britain
10 February 1763
Area
[6]8,000,000 km2 (3,100,000 sq mi)
CurrencyLivre tournois
Today part ofCanada
United States
Saint Pierre and Miquelon

The vast territory of New France consisted of five colonies at its peak in 1712, each with its own administration: Canada, the most developed colony, was divided into the districts of Québec, Trois-Rivières, and Montréal; Hudson Bay; Acadie in the northeast; Terre-Neuve (Plaisance) on the island of Newfoundland; and Louisiane.[7][8] It extended from Newfoundland to the Canadian Prairies and from Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico, including all the Great Lakes of North America.

In the 16th century, the lands were used primarily to draw from the wealth of natural resources such as furs through trade with the various indigenous peoples. In the seventeenth century, successful settlements began in Acadia and in Quebec. In the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, France ceded to Great Britain its claims over mainland Acadia, Hudson Bay, and Newfoundland. France established the colony of Île Royale on Cape Breton Island, where they built the Fortress of Louisbourg.[9][10]

The population rose slowly but steadily. In 1754, New France's population consisted of 10,000 Acadians, 55,000 Canadiens, and about 4,000 settlers in upper and lower Louisiana; 69,000 in total.[11] The British expelled the Acadians in the Great Upheaval from 1755 to 1764, which has been remembered on July 28 each year since 2003. Their descendants are dispersed in the Maritime provinces of Canada and in Maine and Louisiana, with small populations in Chéticamp, Nova Scotia and the Magdalen Islands. Some also went to France.

After the Seven Years' War (which included the French and Indian War in America), France ceded the rest of New France to Great Britain and Spain in the Treaty of Paris of 1763 (except the islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon). Britain acquired Canada, Acadia, and French Louisiana east of the Mississippi River, except for the Île d'Orléans, which was granted to Spain with the territory to the west. In 1800, Spain returned its portion of Louisiana to France under the secret Treaty of San Ildefonso, and Napoleon Bonaparte sold it to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, permanently ending French colonial efforts on the American mainland.

New France eventually became absorbed within the United States and Canada, with the only vestige of French rule being the tiny islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon. In the United States, the legacy of New France includes numerous place names as well as small pockets of French-speaking communities.

Early exploration (1523–1650s)

Around 1523, the Florentine navigator Giovanni da Verrazzano convinced King Francis I to commission an expedition to find a western route to Cathay (China).[12] Late that year, Verrazzano set sail in Dieppe, crossing the Atlantic on a small caravel with 50 men.[13] After exploring the coast of the present-day Carolinas early the following year, he headed north along the coast, eventually anchoring in the Narrows of New York Bay.[13]

The first European to visit the site of present-day New York, Verrazzano named it Nouvelle-Angoulême in honour of the king, the former count of Angoulême.[14] Verrazzano's voyage convinced the king to seek to establish a colony in the newly discovered land. Verrazzano gave the names Francesca and Nova Gallia to that land between New Spain (Mexico) and English Newfoundland.[15]

 
A map of New France made by Samuel de Champlain in 1612

In 1534, Jacques Cartier planted a cross in the Gaspé Peninsula and claimed the land in the name of King Francis I.[16] It was the first province of New France. The first settlement of 400 people, Fort Charlesbourg-Royal (present-day Quebec City), was attempted in 1541 but lasted only two years.[17]

French fishing fleets continued to sail to the Atlantic coast and into the St. Lawrence River, making alliances with Canadian First Nations that became important once France began to occupy the land. French merchants soon realized the St. Lawrence region was full of valuable fur-bearing animals, especially the beaver, which were becoming rare in Europe. Eventually, the French crown decided to colonize the territory to secure and expand its influence in America.[citation needed]

Another early French attempt at settlement in North America took place in 1564 at Fort Caroline, now Jacksonville, Florida. Intended as a haven for Huguenots, Caroline was founded under the leadership of René Goulaine de Laudonnière and Jean Ribault. It was sacked by the Spanish led by Pedro Menéndez de Avilés who slaughtered every Protestant there and then established the settlement of St. Augustine on 20 September 1565.[18]

Acadia and Canada (New France) were inhabited by indigenous nomadic Algonquian peoples and sedentary Iroquoian peoples. These lands were full of unexploited and valuable natural resources, which attracted all of Europe. By the 1580s, French trading companies had been set up, and ships were contracted to bring back furs. Much of what transpired between the indigenous population and their European visitors around that time is not known, for lack of historical records.[16]

Other attempts at establishing permanent settlements were also failures. In 1598, a French trading post was established on Sable Island, off the coast of Acadia, but was unsuccessful. In 1600, a trading post was established at Tadoussac, but only five settlers survived the winter.[16]

In 1604, a settlement was founded at Île-Saint-Croix on Baie François (Bay of Fundy), which was moved to Port-Royal in 1605.[16] It was abandoned in 1607, re-established in 1610, and destroyed in 1613, after which settlers moved to other nearby locations, creating settlements that were collectively known as Acadia, and the settlers as Acadians.[16]

Foundation of Quebec City (1608)

 
Champlain's Habitation c. 1608

In 1608, King Henry IV sponsored Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Mons and Samuel de Champlain as founders of the city of Quebec with 28 men. This was the second permanent French settlement in the colony of Canada.[19][20][21] Colonization was slow and difficult. Many settlers died early because of harsh weather and diseases. In 1630, there were only 103 colonists living in the settlement, but by 1640, the population had reached 355.[22]

Champlain allied himself with the Algonquin and Montagnais peoples in the area, who were at war with the Iroquois, as soon as possible. In 1609, Champlain and two French companions accompanied his Algonquin, Montagnais, and Huron allies south from the St. Lawrence Valley to Lake Champlain. He participated decisively in a battle against the Iroquois there, killing two Iroquois chiefs with the first shot of his arquebus. This military engagement against the Iroquois solidified Champlain's status with New France's Huron and Algonquin allies, enabling him to maintain bonds essential to New France's interests in the fur trade.[23]

 
A map of western New France, including the Illinois Country, by Vincenzo Coronelli, 1688

Champlain also arranged to have young French men live with local indigenous people, to learn their language and customs and help the French adapt to life in North America. These coureurs des bois ("runners of the woods"), including Étienne Brûlé, extended French influence south and west to the Great Lakes and among the Huron tribes who lived there. Ultimately, for the better part of a century, the Iroquois and French clashed in a series of attacks and reprisals.[23]

During the first decades of the colony's existence, only a few hundred French people lived there, while the English colonies to the south were much more populous and wealthier. Cardinal Richelieu, adviser to Louis XIII, wished to make New France as significant as the English colonies. In 1627, Richelieu founded the Company of One Hundred Associates to invest in New France, promising land parcels to hundreds of new settlers and to turn Canada into an important mercantile and farming colony.[24] He named Champlain as the Governor of New France and forbade non-Roman Catholics to live there. Consequently, any Protestant emigrants to New France were forced to convert to Catholicism, prompting many of them to relocate to the English colonies instead.[24]

The Roman Catholic Church, and missionaries such as the Recollets and the Jesuits, became firmly established in the territory. Richelieu also introduced the seigneurial system, a semi-feudal system of farming based on ribbon farms that remained a characteristic feature of the St. Lawrence valley until the 19th century. While Richelieu's efforts did little to increase the French presence in New France, they did pave the way for the success of later efforts.[24]

Simultaneously, the English colonies to the south began raiding the St. Lawrence Valley, also capturing and holding Quebec until 1632.[25] Champlain returned to Canada that year and requested that Sieur de Laviolette found another trading post at Trois-Rivières, which Laviolette did in 1634. Champlain died in 1635.

On 23 September 1646, under the command of Pierre LeGardeur, Le Cardinal arrived to Quebec with Jules (Gilles) Trottier II and his family. Le Cardinal, commissioned by the Communauté des Habitants, had arrived from La Rochelle, France. Communauté des Habitants at the time of Trottier traded fur primarily. On 4 July 1646, by Pierre Teuleron, sieur de Repentigny, granted Trottier land in La Rochelle to build and develop New France, under the authorization Jacques Le Neuf de la Poterie.

Royal takeover and attempts to settle

 
The Merchant Flag of France (1689 design), inspiration for the flag of Quebec

In 1650, New France had seven hundred colonists and Montreal had only a few dozen settlers. Because the First Nations people did most of the work of beaver hunting, the company needed few French employees. The sparsely-populated New France almost fell to hostile Iroquois forces completely as well. In 1660, settler Adam Dollard des Ormeaux led a Canadian and Huron militia against a much larger Iroquois force; none of the Canadians survived, although they did turn back the Iroquois invasion.

In 1627, Quebec had only eighty-five French colonists and was easily overwhelmed two years later when three English privateers plundered the settlement. In 1663, New France finally became more secure when Louis XIV made it a royal province, taking control away from the Company of One Hundred Associates. In the same year the Société Notre-Dame de Montréal ceded its possessions to the Seminaire de Saint-Sulpice.[26]

The Crown paid for transatlantic passages and offered other incentives to those willing to move to New France as well, after which the population of New France grew to three thousand.[27]

In 1665, Louis XIV sent a French garrison, the Carignan-Salières Regiment, to Quebec. The colonial government was reformed along the lines of the government of France, with the Governor General and Intendant subordinate to the French Minister of the Marine. In 1665, Jean Talon Minister of the Marine accepted an appointment from Jean-Baptiste Colbert as the first Intendant of New France. These reforms limited the power of the Bishop of Quebec, who had held the greatest amount of power after the death of Champlain.

Talon tried reforming the seigneurial system by forcing the seigneurs to reside on their land and limiting the size of the seigneuries, intending to make more land available to new settlers. Talon's attempts failed since very few settlers arrived and the various industries he established failed to surpass the importance of the fur trade.

Settlers and their families

 
One group of King's Daughters arrives at Quebec, 1667

The first settler was brought to Quebec by Champlain – the apothecary Louis Hébert and his family, of Paris. They came expressly to settle, stay in one place to make the New France settlement function. Waves of recruits came in response to the requests for men with specific skills, like farming, apothecaries, blacksmiths. As couples married, cash incentives to have large families were put in place, and were effective.

To strengthen and make the colony the centre of France's colonial empire, Louis XIV decided to send single women, between 15 and 30 years old and known as the King's Daughters, or, in French, les filles du roi, to New France. He also paid for their passages and granted goods or money as their dowries if or when they married. Approximately 800 girls and women went there during 1663–1673. The King's Daughters found husbands among the male settlers new lives for themselves within two years of their respective immigrations. They came on their own choice, many because they could not contract favorable marriages in the French social hierarchy. Primarily, they came from Parisian, Norman, and west-central commoner families. By 1672, the population of New France had risen to 6,700 people, a marked increase from the population of 3,200 people in 1663.[28]

 
Political map of the northeastern part of North America in 1664

At the same time, the government encouraged marriages with the indigenous peoples and welcomed indentured servants, or engagés sent to New France. The women there contributed to establishing family life, civil society, and rapid demographic growth significantly.[29] There was a high demand for children since they contributed to farmers' prosperity from an early age and they could receive abundant food supplies. Women there also bore about 30% more children than comparable women who remained in France. Landry says, "Canadians had an exceptional diet for their time. This was due to the natural abundance of meat, fish, and pure water; the good food conservation conditions during the winter; and an adequate wheat supply in most years."[29]

Besides household duties, some women participated in the fur trade, the major source of money in New France. They worked at home alongside their husbands or fathers as merchants, clerks, and provisioners. Some were widows who took over their husbands' roles. Some even became independent and active entrepreneurs.[30]

Settlements in Louisiana

 
Respectable young women known as the King's Daughters were transported at government expense to Louisiana as brides for the colonists

The French extended their territorial claim to the south and to the west of the American colonies late in the 17th century, naming it for King Louis XIV, as La Louisiane. In 1682, René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle explored the Ohio River Valley and the Mississippi River Valley, and he claimed the entire territory for France as far south as the Gulf of Mexico.[31]

La Salle attempted to establish the first southern colony in the new territory in 1685, but inaccurate maps and navigational issues led him to instead establish his Fort Saint Louis in what is now Texas. The colony was devastated by disease, and the surviving settlers were killed in 1688, in an attack by the area's indigenous population.[32] Other parts of Louisiana were settled and developed with success, such as New Orleans and southern Illinois, leaving a strong French influence in these areas long after the Louisiana Purchase.

Many strategic forts were built there, under the orders of Governor Louis de Buade de Frontenac. Forts were also built in the older portions of New France that had not yet been settled.[33] Many of these forts were garrisoned by the Troupes de la Marine, the only regular soldiers in New France between 1683 and 1755.[34]

Growth of the settlements

 
Jean Talon, count of Orsainville, first intendant of New France.

The European population grew slowly under French rule,[35] thus remained relatively low as growth was largely achieved through natural births, rather than by immigration.[36] Most of the French were farmers, and the rate of natural increase among the settlers themselves was very high.[37] The women had about 30 per cent more children than comparable women who remained in France.[29] Yves Landry says, "Canadians had an exceptional diet for their time."[38] The 1666 census of New France was the first census conducted in North America.[39] It was organized by Jean Talon, the first Intendant of New France, between 1665 and 1666.[39] According to Talon's census there were 3,215 people in New France, comprising 538 separate families.[40] The census showed a great difference in the number of men at 2,034 versus 1,181 women.[40]

By the early 1700s the New France settlers were well established along the Saint Lawrence River and Acadian Peninsula with a population around 15,000 to 16,000.[41] The first population figures for Acadia are from 1671, which enumerated only 450 people.[42]

After the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, New France began to prosper. Industries such as fishing and farming, which had failed under Talon, began to flourish. A "King's Highway" (Chemin du Roy) was built between Montreal and Quebec to encourage faster trade. The shipping industry also flourished as new ports were built and old ones were upgraded. The number of colonists greatly increased. By 1720, Canada had become a self-sufficient colony with a population of 24,594.[43] Mainly due to natural increase and modest immigration from Northwest France (Brittany, Normandy, Île-de-France, Poitou-Charentes and Pays de la Loire) the population of Canada increased to 55,000 according to the last French census of 1754.[44] This was an increase from 42,701 in 1730.[45] By 1765, the population approached 70,000.[43]

By 1714, the Acadian population had expanded to over 2,500 and to about 13,000 people by the end of the 1750s.[42] This was mostly from natural increase rather than immigration that affected other French settlements.[42]

European population of Louisiana is estimated at around 5,000 by the 1720s.[46] This would dramatically change in the mid-1730s with the loss of 2,000 French settlers and the introduction of African slaves.[47] Enslaved men, women and children represented approximately 65 percent of the 6,000 non-indigenous population of Louisiana by the end of French rule.[47]

Fur trade and economy

 
Card money in New France had the same currency value in the colony as minted currency. c.1714

According to the staples thesis, the economic development of New France was marked by the emergence of successive economies based on staple commodities, each of which dictated the political and cultural settings of the time. During the 16th and early 17th centuries New France's economy was heavily centered on its Atlantic fisheries. This would change in the later half of the 17th and 18th centuries as French settlement penetrated further into the continental interior.[48] Here French economic interests would shift and concentrate itself on the development of the North American fur trade. It would soon become the new staple good that would strengthen and drive New France's economy, in particular that of Montreal, for the next century.

The trading post of Ville-Marie, established on the current island of Montreal, quickly became the economic hub for the French fur trade. It achieved this in great part due to its particular location along the St. Lawrence River. From here a new economy emerged, one of size and density that provided increased economic opportunities for the inhabitants of New France. In December 1627 the Company of New France was recognized and given commercial rights to the gathering and export of furs from French territories.[49] By trading with various indigenous populations and securing the main markets its power grew steadily for the next decade. As a result, it was able to set specific price points for furs and other valuable goods, often doing so to protect its economic hegemony over other trading partners and other areas of the economy.

The fur trade itself was based on a commodity of small bulk but high value. Because of this it managed to attract increased attention and/or input capital that would otherwise be intended for other areas of the economy. The Montreal area witnessed a stagnant agricultural sector; it remained for the most part subsistence orientated with little or no trade purposes outside of the French colony. This was a prime example of the handicapping effect the fur trade had on its neighbouring areas of the economy.[50]

 
Company of New France building in present-day Quebec City

Nonetheless, by the beginning of the 1700s the economic prosperity the fur trade stimulated slowly transformed Montreal. Economically, it was no longer a town of small traders or of fur fairs but rather a city of merchants and of bright lights. The primary sector of the fur trade, the act of acquiring and the selling of the furs, quickly promoted the growth of complementary second and tertiary sectors of the economy. For instance a small number of tanneries was established in Montreal as well as a larger number of inns, taverns and markets that would support the growing number of inhabitants whose livelihood depended on the fur trade. Already by 1683 there were well over 140 families and there may have been as many as 900 people living in Montreal.

The founding of the Compagnie des Indes in 1718, once again highlighted the economic importance of the fur trade.[51] This merchant association, like its predecessor the Compagnie des Cent Associes, regulated the fur trade to the best of its abilities imposing price points, supporting government sale taxes and combating black market practices. However, by the middle half of the 18th century the fur trade was in a slow decline.[52]

The natural abundance of furs had passed and it could no longer meet market demand. This eventually resulted in the repeal of the 25 percent sales tax that had previously aimed at curbing the administrative costs New France had accumulated. In addition, dwindling supply increased black market trading. A greater number of indigenous groups and fur traders began circumventing Montreal and New France altogether; many began trading with either British or Dutch merchants to the south.[52]

By the end of French rule in New France in 1763, the fur trade had significantly lost its importance as the key staple good that supported much of New France's economy for more than the last century. Even so, it did serve as the fundamental force behind the establishment and vast growth of Montreal and the French colony.

Coureurs des bois and voyageurs

 
The arrival of Radisson in an Amerindian camp in 1660

The coureurs des bois were responsible for starting the flow of trade from Montreal, carrying French goods into upper territories while indigenous people were bringing down their furs. The coureurs traveled with intermediate trading tribes, and found that they were anxious to prevent French access to the more distant fur-hunting tribes. Still, the coureurs kept thrusting outwards using the Ottawa River as their initial step upon the journey and keeping Montreal as their starting point.[53] The Ottawa River was significant because it offered a route that was practical for Europeans, by taking the traders northward out of the territory dominated by the Iroquois. It was for this reason that Montreal and the Ottawa River was a central location of indigenous warfare and rivalry.

Montreal faced difficulties by having too many coureurs out in the woods. The furs coming down were causing an oversupply on the markets of Europe. This challenged the coureurs trade because they so easily evaded controls, monopolies, and taxation, and additionally because the coureurs trade was held to debauch both French and various indigenous groups. The coureur debauched Frenchmen by accustoming them to fully live with indigenous, and indigenous by trading on their desire for alcohol.[53]

The issues caused a great rift in the colony, and in 1678, it was confirmed by a General Assembly that the trade was to be made in public so as to better assure the safety of the indigenous population. It was also forbidden to take spirits inland to trade with indigenous groups. However these restrictions on the coureurs, for a variety of reasons, never worked. The fur trade remained dependent on spirits, and increasingly in the hands of the coureurs who journeyed north in search of furs.[53]

As time passed, the Coureurs des bois were partially replaced by licensed fur trading endeavors, and the main canoe travel workers of those endeavors were called voyageurs.

Indigenous peoples

The two factions, Iroquois and French, were constantly at war with one another until the Great Peace of Montréal in 1701. The relationship between the Iroquois and the French first began in 1609. The relationship between the French and Iroquois began violently. As Samuel De Champlain travelled from the St. Lawrence Valley, accompanied by his Algonquin, Montagnais, and Huron allies, the killing of three Iroquoian chiefs on Lake Champlain was Champlain’s way of fortifying his stance with these other tribal allies. These alliances were in the interest of the fur trade.[54]

The French and Algonquins first encountered one another in 1603 after Samuel de Champlain established France's first permanent North American settlement along the St. Lawrence River. In 1610, the Algonquins continued to solidify their relations with the French by guiding Étienne Brûlé into the interiors of Canada.

The relationship between the Iroquois and the French first began in 1609, where Samuel De Champlain engaged in battle against the Iroquois. Champlain travelled from the St. Lawrence Valley, accompanied by his Algonquin, Montagnais, and Huron allies, to kill three Iroquoian chiefs on Lake Champlain with the first shots of his arquebus. The two factions (Iroquois and French) were constantly at war with one another until the Great Peace of Montréal in 1701.[55]

 
Map showing the approximate location of major tribes and settlements[56]

The French were interested in exploiting the land through the fur trade as well as the timber trade later on. Despite having tools and guns, the French settlers were dependent on Indigenous people to survive in the difficult climate in this part of North America. Many settlers did not know how to survive through the winter; the Indigenous people showed them how to survive in the New World. They showed the settlers how to hunt for food and to use the furs for clothing that would protect them during the winter months.[57]

As the fur trade became the dominant economy in the New World, French voyageurs, trappers and hunters often married or formed relationships with Indigenous women. This allowed the French to develop relations with their wives' Indigenous nations, which in turn provided protection and access to their hunting and trapping grounds.

One specific Indigenous group borne of these relationships are the Métis people, who are descendants of marriages between French men and Indigenous women. Their name originates from an old French term for “person of mixed parentage.”[58] At the beginning of the fur trade, these relationships were encouraged by the French as a way to encourage the First Nations to adopt French culture and solidify alliances, but as the Métis began to emerge as an independent culture around the 1700s, it began to be discouraged by the French.[59] Many Métis families moved to western Canada in response to this, as well as for other reasons, such as fur trading opportunities. One major settlement at this time was in the Red River Valley, strategically placed in a significant area for the fur trade. This was the origin of the modern Métis nation, which was legally recognized by modern Canada as a protected Indigenous group in the Constitution Act, 1982. Its prior legal history has its roots in acts such as the Manitoba Act, 1870, which began to recognize the Métis nation as a separate group with various rights and protections, but was not supported by the vast majority of Métis as it removed many from land that was rightfully theirs.

The fur trade benefited Indigenous people as well. They traded furs for metal tools and other European-made items that made their lives easier. Tools such as knives, pots and kettles, nets, firearms and hatchets improved the general welfare of indigenous peoples. At the same time, while everyday life became easier, some traditional ways of doing things were abandoned or altered, and while Indigenous people embraced many of these implements and tools, they also were exposed to less vital trade goods, such as alcohol and sugar, sometimes with deleterious effects.[60] The Iroquois, like most tribes, began to rely on the importation of European goods, like firearms, which contributed significantly to a decrease in the beaver population of the Hudson Valley. This decline resulted in the fur trade moving further north, along the St. Lawrence River.[61]

Formal entry of England in New France area fur trade

 
1681 French map of the New World above the equator: New France and the Great Lakes in the north, with a dark line as the Mississippi River to the west in the Illinois Country and the mouth of the river (and future New Orleans) then terra incognita

Since Henry Hudson had claimed Hudson Bay, and the surrounding lands for England in 1611, English colonists had begun expanding their boundaries across what is now the Canadian north beyond the French-held territory of New France. In 1670, King Charles II of England issued a charter to Prince Rupert and "the Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson Bay" for an English monopoly in harvesting furs in Rupert's Land, a portion of the land draining into Hudson Bay. This is the start of the Hudson's Bay Company, ironically aided by French coureurs des bois, Pierre-Esprit Radisson and Médard des Groseilliers, frustrated with French license rules.[62][63][64] Now both France and England were formally in the Canadian fur trade.[65]

The economy of La Louisiane

 
Map of Canada (New France) in 1703, showing full length of Mississippi River

The major commercial importance of the Louisiana Purchase territory was the Mississippi River. New Orleans, the largest and most important city in the territory, was the most commercial city in the United States until the Civil War, with most jobs there being related to trade and shipping; there was little manufacturing. The first commercial shipment to come down the Mississippi River was of deer and bear hides in 1705.[66] The area, always loosely defined in those early times of European claims and settlements, extended as far east as the city that is now Mobile, Alabama, begun by French settlers in 1702.

The French (later Spanish) Louisiana Territory was owned by France for a number of years before the money-losing territory was transferred to French banker Antoine Crozat in 1713 for 15 years. After losing four times his investment, Crozat gave up his charter in 1717. Control of Louisiana and its 700 inhabitants was given to the Company of the Indies in 1719. The company conducted a major settlement program by recruiting European settlers to locate in the territory. Unemployed persons, convicts and prostitutes were also sent to the Louisiana Territory. After the bankruptcy of the company in 1720, control was returned to the king.[66][67]

Louis XV saw little value in Louisiana, and to compensate Spain for its losses in the Seven Years' War, he transferred Louisiana to his cousin Charles III in 1762. Louisiana remained under the control of Spain until it was demanded to be turned over to France by Napoleon. Although Louisiana was property of France by the Third Treaty of San Ildefonso in 1800, Louisiana continued to be administered by Spain until the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. Following the American acquisition of the territory, its population tripled between 1803 and Louisiana statehood in 1812.

Religion

Before the arrival of European colonists and explorers, First Nations followed a wide array of mostly animistic religions.[68] During the colonial period, the French settled along the shores of the Saint Lawrence River, specifically Latin Rite Roman Catholics, including a number of Jesuits dedicated to converting the indigenous population; an effort that eventually proved successful.[69]

The French Roman Catholic Church, which after Champlain's death was the dominant force in New France, wanted to establish a Christian community in the colony.[70] In 1642, they sponsored a group of settlers, led by Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve, who founded Ville-Marie, precursor to present-day Montreal, farther up the St. Lawrence.[71] Throughout the 1640s, Jesuit missionaries penetrated the Great Lakes region and converted many of the Huron. The missionaries came into conflict with the Iroquois, who frequently attacked Montreal.

 
Le Grand Voyage du Pays des Hurons, Gabriel Sagard, 1632

The presence of Jesuit missionaries in Huron society was nonnegotiable. The Huron relied on French goods to facilitate life and warfare. Because the French would refuse trade to all indigenous societies that denied relations with missionaries, the Huron had more of a propensity towards Christian conversion.[72] The Huron heavily relied on European goods to perform burial ceremonies known as The Huron Feast of the Dead. Trading with the French allowed for larger amounts of decorative goods to be buried during ceremonies as opposed to only a bare minimum.[72] With the growing epidemics and high number of deaths, the Huron could not afford to lose relations with the French, fearing to anger their ancestors.[72]

Jesuit missionaries explored the Mississippi River, in the territory of the Illinois. Father Jacques Marquette and explorer Louis Jolliet traveled in a small party, starting from Green Bay down the Wisconsin River to the Mississippi River, communicating with the tribes they met en route. Although Spanish trade goods had reached most of the indigenous peoples, these were the first Frenchmen to connect in the area named for the Illinois, including the Kaskaskia. They kept detailed records of what they saw and the people they met, sketching what they could, and mapped the Mississippi River in 1673.[73] Their travels were described as first contacts with the indigenous peoples, though evidence of contact with Spanish from the south was clear.[73]

Subsequent to the arrival of French children in Quebec in 1634, measles was also brought along with them, which quickly spread among the indigenous peoples. Jesuit priest Jean de Brébeuf described the symptoms as being severe. Brebeuf stated that the fearlessness of the indigenous peoples towards death upon this disease made them perfect candidates for conversion to Christianity.[74] The indigenous peoples believed that if they did not convert to Christianity, they would be exposed to the evil magic of the priests that caused the illness.[72]

Jesuit missionaries were troubled by the absence of patriarchy in indigenous communities. Indigenous women were highly regarded within their societies and participated in political and military decisions.[75] Jesuits attempted to eliminate the matriarchy and shift the powers of men and women to accommodate those of European societies. "In France, women are to be obedient to their masters, their husbands."[76] Jesuits would attempt to justify this to the indigenous women in hopes to enlighten them on proper European behavior. In response, Indigenous women grew worrisome of the presence of these missionaries fearing they would lose power and freedom within their communities.[76] By 1649, both the Jesuit mission and the Huron society were almost destroyed by Iroquois invasions (see Canadian Martyrs). In 1653, a peace invitation was extended by the Onondaga Nation, one of the five nations of the Iroquois Confederacy. to New France and an expedition of Jesuits, led by Simon Le Moyne, established Sainte Marie de Ganentaa in 1656. The Jesuits were forced to abandon the mission by 1658, as hostilities with the Iroquois resumed.[77]

The second article of the charter of the Compagnie des Cent-Associés stated that New France could only be Roman Catholic.[78] This resulted in Huguenots facing legal restrictions to enter the colony when Cardinal Richelieu transferred the control of the colony to Compagnie des Cent-Associés in 1627. Protestantism was then outlawed in France and all its overseas possessions by the Edict of Fontainebleau in 1685.[78] In spite of that, approximately 15,000 Protestants settled in New France by using socioeconomic pretexts while at the same time concealing their religious background.[79]

The Huguenots (a name used to designate French-Speaking Protestants) were a mercantile group, originating from the coastal cities of North-Western France, and had a significant impact on the early development of New France, especially in the regions of Quebec and Acadia,[80] where many people still hold Huguenot surnames to this day.[81] Huguenots were famous for their large and interconnected trading and communication network that spanned throughout France, and most of her colonies.[82] This network was also known for trading with the Dutch Republic, and the Kingdom of England; two of France’s most important rivals, that also happened to be protestant nations.

Initially, King Henri IV recognised Protestants as a significant minority within France, and allowed them a certain degree of freedom within their religion. After several years of various skirmishes within Metropolitan France, the Huguenots were deemed to not be "faithful servants of the king", and their mercantile powers stripped, their trading network disbanded, and widespread governmental persuctory policies were enacted both within mainland France and Nouvelle France. In 1661, Louis XVI was able to enact self-rule as his regency ended, and he instituted a variety of anti-protestant conventions throughout the greater French Empire. Under these new rules, Protestant children were forcibly converted to Catholicism, implemented direct governmental jurisdiction over what were formerly Huguenot-controlled trade routes, and labelled the Protestant communities throughout Nouvelle France (specifically Quebec and Acadia) as significant threats to the colonies, as they might sympathise with English Protestants competing in the same areas and trades. Eventually, Protestants were banned from settling in Nouvelle France, and the existing ones were only allowed to "summer" in the colonies, not "winter" there.[82]

Judiciary of New France

Early history in New France (pre-1663)

 
Governor Frontenac performing a tribal dance with indigenous allies

In the early stage of French settlement, legal matters fell within the Governor of New France's purview.[83] Under this arrangement, legal disputes were settled in an incoherent fashion due to the Governor's arbitrariness in issuing verdicts.

Since 1640, a Seneschal (sénéchal), a Judge (juge d'épée, which literally means 'sword-bearing judge'), and a jurisdiction in Trois-Rivières were created.[83] However, the Seneschal was under the oversight by the Governor, hence the Governor still had rather extensive control over legal matters in New France.[83] In 1651, the Company of New France made the Great Seneschal (Grand Sénéchal) the chief justice.[83] However, the Island of Montreal had its special Governor at that time, who also administered justice on the Island, and had not handed over justice to the Grand Seneschal until 1652.[84]

In practice, though, the Great Seneschal was awarded as an honorary title to the son of Jean de Lauson, then Governor of New France; judicial functions were in fact carried out by the Seneschal's deputies.[85] These deputies included such officials as the civil and criminal lieutenant general (lieutenant général civil et criminel), the special lieutenant (lieutenant particulier, acting as assistant royal judge), and the lieutenant fiscal (lieutenant fiscal, acting as tax magistrate).[85]

The Civil and Criminal Lieutenant General sat as judge in trials at first instance, whereas appeals would be adjudicated by the Governor, who held the sovereign right to settle final appeals on behalf of the French king. The Great Seneschal also had a magistrate in Trois-Rivières, as well as a bailiff formed by the Society of Priests of Saint Sulpice on the Island of Montreal.[86]

Apart from judicial responsibilities, the Great Seneschal was also in charge of convening local nobility in New France, as well as issuing declarations of war if necessary.[84] However, such alternative role of the Great Seneschal was much weakened soon after by having the rights to declare war and to administer finances stripped off from the office because the French crown feared that colonial officers held too much authority.[84]

Legal reforms (1663)

Royal judges and the Sovereign Council

On 13 October 1663, the royal court replaced the Seneschal Office (sénéchaussée). Canada was divided into three districts: the district of Quebec City, the district of Trois-Rivières, and the district of Montreal.[87] Each district had its own separate jurisdiction with a judge appointed by the Crown, known as the civil and criminal lieutenants general.[87] They were responsible for all legal matters, civil and criminal, in each of the districts.[87]

In addition to the royal judges, there were other judicial officers in each district. The clerk of court (registrar) was responsible for transcribing all court proceedings as well as other documents relevant to each of the cases.[86] The king's attorney (procureur du roi) was responsible for inquiring into the facts and preparing the case against the accused.[88] In the districts of Quebec City and Montreal, the royal judges had special lieutenants to substitute them whenever they were absent or sick.[88] Feudal courts heard minor cases.[89][90]

The reform also brought the Sovereign Council of New France (Conseil souverain) into existence, which was later renamed the Superior Council (Conseil supérieur). The Sovereign Council effectively acted as the functional equivalent of a Council of State (Conseil d'État) for New France, having the authority to hand down verdicts on final appeal.[91] Initially, the Council convened once every week, and the quorum of the Sovereign Council was seven for criminal matters, or five for civil cases.[91] The council's practices evolved over time. At the Sovereign Council there was a king's attorney-general (procureur général du roi) in charge of the similar tasks as the district king's attorneys.[92] He was also responsible for supervising the king's attorneys' daily operations as well as execution of royal edicts and regulations passed by the council in their respective districts.[93]

The Custom of Paris

In 1664, the Custom of Paris (coutume de Paris) was formally set as the main source of law for civil law in France's overseas empire. All royal judges and king's attorneys in New France had to be thoroughly familiar with this compilation of rules.[91] The Custom governed various civil aspects of the daily life in New France, including property, marriage, inheritance, and so on.

Montreal Island: transition from feudal justice to royal justice

The Island of Montreal was a special case because its judiciary had been previously held by the Society of St-Sulpice. In 1663, Governor-General of New France Augustin de Saffray de Mésy originally considered appointing Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve the Governor of the Island of Montreal and consolidating a royal jurisdiction on the island, but the plan garnered the St-Sulpicians' disapproval, who held the Island as its own fiefdom and effectively acted as the island's governor.[94] In other words, the Sovereign Council had not been able to seize effective control over the legal matters of the Island; instead, the St-Sulpicians administered justice on the island.

It was not until 16 September 1666, that the St-Sulpicians finally handed over the justice of the Island of Montreal to the Intendant of New France.[95] In 1693, the French king commanded the replacement of the ecclesiastical courts in Montreal with a royal court composed of one royal judge, with appeals going to the Sovereign Council. The introduction of a royal court on the Montreal Island also resulted in the abolition of the feudal court in the fief of Trois-Rivières (then held by the Jesuits).[96]

Quebec: founding of the Provostry of Quebec

In the Quebec City district, the lower court (tribunal antérieur) was established in 1664 and had jurisdiction to try cases at first instance, but then it was abolished in 1674.[97] The Sovereign Council appointed trial judges (juges inférieurs) to adjudicate cases at first instance until the Provostry of Quebec (prévôté de Québec) was created in May 1677.

The Provostry of Quebec was located in the Hall of Justice (palais de justice) in Quebec City and had only one royal judge, also known as the civil and criminal lieutenant general of Quebec City, who heard both civil and criminal cases, as well as district police.[97] Additionally, a court clerk and a king's attorney were appointed to the court; if either of these two officers could not attend the trials due to illness or other untenable circumstances, the Intendant would appoint a temporary substitute.[97]

Criminal justice

In the early stages of French colonization, the execution of criminal justice in New France was rather arbitrary. The Governor of New France served as the judge to the colonists as well as soldiers. He would announce his verdict at the presence of the chiefs of the Company of One Hundred Associates and that would be final.[98]

After the Sovereign Council was established in Quebec in 1663, the Council carried out criminal justice according to the general ordinances of France.[98] In 1670, the Criminal Ordinance was enacted in New France by order of the French king as a codification of the previous criminal laws passed by the Sovereign Council.[99]

Special courts

Ecclesiastical court

The ecclesiastical court (tribunal ecclésiastique, or Officialité) was a special court for hearing first instance trials on both religious and secular affairs involving members of the Church.[100] It first appeared in around 1660 but was not officially recognized by state authorities for it was not administered by a bishop, until 1684.[100] Appeals from this court lay with the Sovereign Council.[100]

Admiralty court

The court of admiralty was created on 12 January 1717 and was the last judicial body set up in Canada during the French colonial period.[101] The court had a judge (also known as the lieutenant-general of the court) appointed by the French admiralty, a king's attorney, a clerk of court, and one or two bailiffs (huissiers).[102] The admiralty court was located in Quebec City and had jurisdiction over all of New France except Louisiana and Louisbourg.[100] The court heard first instance trials on maritime affairs, including commerce and seamen's conduct.[100] During wartime, it also commanded maritime police.[100] Before 1717, the Quebec Provostry performed the duties of the admiralty court.[100]

Acadia

Unlike Canada, Acadia's judicial system was somewhat under-developed during the New France period. Prior to 1670, Acadia was in a state of being torn between various European colonists. None of the countries—France, England, the Netherlands—were able to put in place a stable jurisdiction there.

In 1670, France regained control of Acadia and appointed Mathieu de Goutin as the Civil and Criminal Lieutenant (lieutenant civil et criminel) of Acadia.[103] Simultaneously, the Governor of Acadia was set up and his job was primarily the defense of Acadia from English invasion.[104] The Civil and Criminal Lieutenant was essentially supervised by the Governor, who held superior judicial authority over the Lieutenant, but for most of the time would let the Lieutenant mediate and decide legal affairs.[105]

Due to the situation in Acadia as a small settlement of around 399 settlers in 1670–71, vulnerable to foreign invasion, courts were minimal, consisting of only a Civil and Criminal Lieutenant and a king's attorney.[104] There was not an official court in Acadia, although the king's attorney of Acadia performed very similar duties as his counterpart in New France.[106] Yet since Acadia never actually had a court, there was no clerk of court; instead, trials were recorded by a local notary.[106] It is difficult to trace the judicial history of French Acadia as the relevant archives were destroyed in a fire in 1708.[106]

Military conflicts

The presence of settlers, of businesses from several European countries harvesting furs, along with the interests of the indigenous people in this new competition for North American resources set the scene for significant military conflicts among all parties in New France beginning in 1642, and ending with the Seven Years' War, 1756–1763.

Iroquois attacks against Montreal

 
Engraving depicting Adam Dollard with a keg of gunpowder above his head, during the Battle of Long Sault

Ville-Marie was a noteworthy site for it was the center of defence against the Iroquois, the point of departure for all western and northern journeys, and the meeting point to which the trading Indians brought their annual furs. This placed Ville-Marie, later known as Montreal, at the forefront against the Iroquois, which resulted in its trade being easily and frequently interrupted. The Iroquois were in alliance with the Dutch and English,[107] which allowed them to interrupt the French fur trade and send the furs down the Hudson River to the Dutch and English traders.[53]

This also put the Iroquois at warfare against the Hurons, the Algonquians, and any other tribes that were in alliance with the French. If the Iroquois could destroy New France and its Indian allies, they would be able to trade freely and profitably with the Dutch and English on the Hudson River.[108] The Iroquois formally attacked the settlement at today's Quebec City in its foundation year of 1642, and in almost every subsequent year thereafter.[109] A militant theocracy maintained Montreal. In 1653 and 1654, reinforcements arrived at Montreal, which allowed the Iroquois to be halted.[110][self-published source] In that year the Iroquois made peace with the French.[53]

Adam Dollard des Ormeaux, a colonist and soldier of New France, was a notable figure regarding the Iroquois attacks against Montreal. The Iroquois soon resumed their assaults against Montreal, and the few settlers of Montreal fell almost completely to hostile Iroquois forces. The Iroquois did not use typical raiding tactics of moving swiftly and silently. Instead, they captured individuals and brought them back to their own territory. Women and children were made a part of the village, and men encountered slow torturous deaths. In the ’60s, warfare changed, and France began to counterattack. Professional French soldiers had arrived in the New World for the first time, and Alexandre de Prouville led them to invade Iroquois territory.[111] In the spring of 1660, Adam Dollard des Ormeaux led a small militia consisting of 16 men from Montreal against a much larger Iroquois force at the Battle of Long Sault on the Ottawa River.[112] They succeeded in turning back the Iroquois invasion and are responsible for saving Montreal from destruction.[113] They were able to take Chief Canaqueese as a prisoner, and in September 1660, the French returned and burned Iroquois homes and crops. Later that Winter, many Iroquois died due to starvation, and the Iroquois finally agreed to peace which lasted roughly twenty years.[111] The encounter between Ormeaux and the Iroquois is of significance because it dissuaded the Iroquois from further attacks against Montreal.[114]

King William's War

 
Map of North America in 1702 showing forts, towns and (in solid colors) areas occupied by European settlements

In 1688, King William's War began and the English and Iroquois launched a major assault on New France, after many years of small skirmishes throughout the English and French territories. New France and the Wabanaki Confederacy were able to thwart New England expansion into Acadia, whose border New France defined as the Kennebec River in southern Maine.[115][116][117] King William's War ended in 1697, but a second war (Queen Anne's War) broke out in 1702. Quebec survived the English invasions of both these wars, and during the wars France seized many of the English Hudson's Bay Company fur trading centres on Hudson Bay including York Factory, which the French renamed Fort Bourbon.

Queen Anne's War

While Acadia defeated an English invasion attempt during King William's War, the colony was occupied by the British during Queen Anne's War. The final Conquest of Acadia happened in 1710. In 1713, peace came to New France with the Treaty of Utrecht.[118] Although the treaty turned Hudson Bay, Newfoundland and part of Acadia (peninsular Nova Scotia) over to Great Britain, France remained in control of Île Royale (Cape Breton Island) (which also administered Île Saint-Jean (Prince Edward Island)). The northern part of Acadia, what is today New Brunswick and Maine, remained contested territory. Construction of Fortress Louisbourg on Île Royale, a French military stronghold intended to protect the approaches to the St. Lawrence River settlements, began in 1719.[119]

Father Rale's War

 
An 1850s depiction of the death of the French Jesuit priest Sébastien Rale during Father Rale's War

In Acadia, however, war continued. Father Rale's War (1722–1725) was a series of battles between New England and the Wabanaki Confederacy, who were allied with New France. New France and the Wabanaki Confederacy defended against the expansion of New England settlements into Acadia, whose border New France defined as the Kennebec River in southern Maine.[115][116][117] After the New England Conquest of Acadia in 1710, mainland Nova Scotia was under the control of New England, but both present-day New Brunswick and virtually all of present-day Maine remained contested territory between New England and New France. To secure New France's claim to the region, it established Catholic missions among the three largest indigenous villages in the region: one on the Kennebec River (Norridgewock); one further north on the Penobscot River (Penobscot) and one on the Saint John River (Medoctec).[120][121]

The war began on two fronts: when New England pushed its way through Maine and when New England established itself at Canso, Nova Scotia. As a result of the war, Maine fell to the New Englanders with the defeat of Father Sébastien Rale at Norridgewock and the subsequent retreat of the indigenous peoples from the Kennebec and Penobscot rivers to St. Francis and Becancour, Quebec.[c]

King George's War

Peace lasted in Canada until 1744, when news of the outbreak of the War of the Austrian Succession (King George's War in North America) reached Fort Louisbourg. The French forces went on the attack first in a failed attempt to capture Annapolis Royal, the capital of British Nova Scotia. In 1745, William Shirley, governor of Massachusetts, led a counterattack on Louisbourg. Both France and New France were unable to relieve the siege, and Louisbourg fell to the British. With the famed Duc d'Anville Expedition, France attempted to retake Acadia and the fortress in 1746 but failed. The fortress was returned to France under the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, but the peace treaty, which restored all colonial borders to their pre-war status, did little to end the lingering enmity between France, Britain, and their respective colonies, nor did it resolve any territorial disputes.[citation needed]

Father Le Loutre's War

Within Acadia and Nova Scotia, Father Le Loutre's War (1749–1755) began with the British founding of Halifax. During Father Le Loutre's War, New France established three forts along the border of present-day New Brunswick to protect it from a New England attack from Nova Scotia. The war continued until British victory at Fort Beausejour, which dislodged Father Le Loutre from the region, thereby ending his alliance with the Maliseet, Acadians and Mi'kmaq.[121]

French and Indian War

 
Map of territorial claims in North America by 1750, before the French and Indian War, which was part of the greater worldwide conflict known as the Seven Years' War (1756 to 1763). Possessions of Britain (pink), France (blue), and Spain (orange, California, Pacific Northwest, and Great Basin not indicated)

Fort Duquesne, located at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers at the site of present-day Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, guarded the most important strategic location in the west at the time of the Seven Years' War. It was built to ensure that the Ohio River valley remained under French control. A small colonial force from Virginia began a fort here, but a French force under Claude-Pierre Pécaudy de Contrecœur drove them off in April 1754. New France claimed this as part of their colony, and the French were anxious to keep the British from encroaching on it. The French built Fort Duquesne here to serve as a military stronghold and as a base for developing trade and strengthening military alliances with the indigenous peoples of the area.

In 1755, General Edward Braddock led an expedition against Fort Duquesne, and although they were numerically superior to the French militia and their Indian allies, Braddock's army was routed and Braddock was killed.[122] Later that same year at the Battle of Lake George, the British General William Johnson with a force of 1700 American and Iroquois troops defeated a French force of 2800 French and Canadians and 700 Native Americans led by Baron Dieskau (Military commander of New France).

The fight for control over Ohio Country led to the French and Indian War, which began as the North American phase of the Seven Years' War (which did not technically begin in Europe until 1756). The war began with the defeat of a Virginia militia contingent led by Colonel George Washington by the French troupes de la marine in the Ohio valley. As a result of that defeat, the British decided to prepare the conquest of Quebec City, the capital of New France. The British defeated France in Acadia in the Battle of Fort Beausejour (1755) and then Île Royale (Cape Breton Island) (which also administered Île Saint-Jean (Prince Edward Island) with the Siege of Louisbourg (1758).

Throughout the war, the British deported the Acadians to the Thirteen Colonies and Europe, which the Acadian militias resisted with assistance from Mi'kmaq and Malisteet forces. The Great Upheaval continued from 1755 to 1764. In 1756, a large force of French, Canadians, and their Native American allies led by the Marquis de Montcalm launched an attack against the key British post at Fort Oswego on Lake Ontario from Fort Frontenac and forced the garrison to surrender. The following year Montcalm with a huge force of 7,200 French and Canadian troops and 2,400 Native Americans laid siege to Fort William Henry on the southern shores of Lake George, and after three weeks of fighting the British commander Monroe surrendered. Montcalm gave him honorable terms to return to England and not to fight for 18 months. And yet, when the British force with civilians was three miles from the fort, the Native American allies massacred about 1,100 of the 1,500 strong force.

The following year the French had one victory and one defeat. The defeat was at the French fortress city of Louisbourg. The victory was at the strip of land between Lake Champlain and Lake George at the French fortress of Fort Carillon. The British force sent to capture Fort Carillon (held by just 3400 French regulars and marines with almost no militia or indigenous support) was the largest ever seen in America at that time: 16,200 British, American, and Iroquois troops under the command of General James Abercrombie. This battle led the British to suffer 2,200 casualties, several artillery pieces against French losses of around 200 killed or wounded.

While the British Conquest of Acadia happened in 1710, the French continued to remain a significant force in the region with Fort Beausejour and Fortress Louisbourg. The dominant population in the region remained Acadian, that is to say, not British. In 1755, the British were successful in the Battle of Beausejour and immediately after began the expulsion of the Acadians.

In the meantime the French continued to explore westwards and expand their trade alliances with indigenous peoples. Fort de la Corne was built in 1753, by Louis de la Corne, Chevalier de la Corne just east of the Saskatchewan River Forks in what is today the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. This was the furthest westward outpost of the French Empire in North America to be established before its fall.

Treaties of cession

In 1758, British forces again captured Louisbourg, allowing them to blockade the entrance to the St. Lawrence River. This proved decisive in the war. In 1759, the British besieged Quebec by sea, and an army under General James Wolfe defeated the French under General Louis-Joseph de Montcalm at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham in September. The garrison in Quebec surrendered on 18 September, and by the next year New France had been conquered by the British after the attack on Montreal, which had refused to acknowledge the fall of Canada. The last French governor-general of New France, Pierre François de Rigaud, Marquis de Vaudreuil-Cavagnal, surrendered to British Major General Jeffery Amherst on 8 September 1760. France formally ceded Canada to the British in the Treaty of Paris, signed 10 February 1763.[123]

Aftermath

 
Map showing British territorial gains following the Treaty of Paris in pink, and Spanish territorial gains after the Treaty of Fontainebleau in yellow

The expelled Acadians were initially dispersed across much of eastern North America (including the Thirteen Colonies) and some were sent to France. Many eventually settled in Quebec or Louisiana, while others returned to the regions of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Chéticamp, Nova Scotia and the Magdalen Islands have significant communities. In Louisiana their descendants became known as the Cajuns, a corruption of the French Acadiens.

By the mid-1700s the French settlers were well established with a population around 70,000, mainly due to natural increase.[124][125] The European population had grown slowly under French rule.[36][126][127] The British Thirteen Colonies to the south along the Atlantic coast grew in population from natural increase and more new settlers from Europe. By 1760, almost 1.6 million people lived in the British colonies, a ratio of approximately twenty-three to one compared to New France.[128] The population of the New England colonies alone in 1760 was nearly 450,000.

French culture and religion remained dominant in most of the former territory of New France until the arrival of British settlers led to the later creation of Upper Canada (today Ontario) and New Brunswick. The Louisiana Territory, under Spanish control since the end of the Seven Years' War, remained off-limits to settlement from the thirteen American colonies.

Twelve years after the British defeated the French, the American Revolutionary War broke out in the Thirteen Colonies. Many French Canadians would take part in the war, including Major Clément Gosselin and Admiral Louis-Philippe de Vaudreuil. After the British surrender at Yorktown in 1781, the Treaty of Versailles gave all former British claims in New France below the Great Lakes into the possession of the nascent United States. A Franco-Spanish alliance treaty returned Louisiana to France in 1801, but French leader Napoleon Bonaparte sold it to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, ending French colonial efforts in North America.

The portions of the former New France that remained under British rule were administered as Upper Canada and Lower Canada, 1791–1841, and then those regions were merged as the Province of Canada during 1841–1867, when the passage of the British North America Act of 1867 instituted home rule for most of British North America and established French-speaking Quebec (the former Lower Canada) as one of the original provinces of the Dominion of Canada. The former French colony of Acadia was first designated the Colony of Nova Scotia but shortly thereafter the Colony of New Brunswick, which then included Prince Edward Island, was split off from it.

In Canada, the legacy of New France can be seen in the enduring Francophone identity of its descendants, which has led to institutional bilingualism in Canada as a whole.

The only remnant of the former colonial territory of New France that remains under French control to this day is the French overseas collectivity of Saint Pierre and Miquelon (French: Collectivité territoriale de Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon), consisting of a group of small islands 25 kilometres (16 mi; 13 nmi) off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada.

Political divisions of New France

 
A chart showing the political organization of New France, c. 1759

Before the Treaty of Utrecht of 1713, the territory of New France was divided into four colonies:

The Treaty of Utrecht resulted in the relinquishing of French claims to mainland Acadia, the Hudson Bay and Newfoundland, and the establishment of the colony of Île Royale, now called Cape Breton Island, where the French built the Fortress of Louisbourg.[9][129]

Acadia had a difficult history, with the Great Upheaval, remembered on July 28 each year since 2003. The descendants are dispersed in the Maritime Provinces of Canada, in Maine and Louisiana in the United States, with small populations in Chéticamp, Nova Scotia and the Magdalen Islands.[citation needed]

Historiography

The Conquest (referring to the fall of New France to the British, and specifically the events of 1759–60) has always been a central and contested theme of Canadian memory. Some Anglophone historians portray the Conquest as a victory for "British military, political and economic superiority" and argue that it ultimately brought benefits to the French settlers.[130] However, Cornelius Jaenen notes that French-Canadian historians remain strongly divided on the subject. One group sees it as a highly negative economic, political and ideological disaster that threatened a way of life with materialism and Protestantism. At the other pole are those historians who see the positive benefit of enabling the preservation of language, and religion and traditional customs under British rule.[130] French-Canadian debates have escalated since the 1960s, as the conquest is seen as a pivotal moment in the history of Québec's nationalism. Francophone historian Jocelyn Létourneau suggested in 2009, that today, "1759 does not belong primarily to a past that we might wish to study and understand, but, rather, to a present and a future that we might wish to shape and control."[131]

The enduring contestation of the legacy of the Conquest can be exemplified by an episode in 2009, when an attempt to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the battle of the Plains of Abraham was cancelled. The explanation for the cancellation was that it was over security concerns, but activist Sylvain Rocheleau stated, "[I think] they had to cancel the event because it was insulting a majority of Francophones. They had to cancel it because it was a bad idea.".[132]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Lesser version of the coat of arms as used by the French Government.
  2. ^ The Royal Banner of early modern France or "Bourbon Flag" was the most commonly used flag in New France[1][2][3][4][5]
  3. ^ While New Englanders safely settled the land, not until the treaty of 1752 did Massachusetts officially lay claim to the entire Penobscot watershed, and in 1759, the Pownall Expedition, led by Governor Thomas Pownall, established Fort Pownall on Cape Jellison in what is now Stockton Springs.

References

  1. ^ The Governor General of Canada (12 November 2020). "Royal Banner of France - Heritage Emblem". Confirmation of the blazon of a Flag. February 15, 2008 Vol. V, p. 202. The Office of the Secretary to the Governor General.
  2. ^ New York State Historical Association (1915). Proceedings of the New York State Historical Association with the Quarterly Journal: 2nd-21st Annual Meeting with a List of New Members. The Association. It is most probable that the Bourbon Flag was used during the greater part of the occupancy of the French in the region extending southwest from the St. Lawrence to the Mississippi, known as New France... The French flag was probably blue at that time with three golden fleur - de - lis ....
  3. ^ "Background: The First National Flags". The Canadian Encyclopedia. 28 November 2019. Retrieved 1 March 2021. At the time of New France (1534 to the 1760s), two flags could be viewed as having national status. The first was the banner of France — a blue square flag bearing three gold fleurs-de-lys. It was flown above fortifications in the early years of the colony. For instance, it was flown above the lodgings of Pierre Du Gua de Monts at Île Sainte-Croix in 1604. There is some evidence that the banner also flew above Samuel de Champlain's habitation in 1608. ... the completely white flag of the French Royal Navy was flown from ships, forts and sometimes at land-claiming ceremonies.
  4. ^ "INQUINTE.CA | CANADA 150 Years of History ~ The story behind the flag". inquinte.ca. When Canada was settled as part of France and dubbed "New France," two flags gained national status. One was the Royal Banner of France. This featured a blue background with three gold fleurs-de-lis. A white flag of the French Royal Navy was also flown from ships and forts and sometimes flown at land-claiming ceremonies.
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Further reading

  • "New France". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016. scholarly biographies of all major figures in New France
  • Chartrand, René (2008). The Forts of New France in Northeast America 1600–1763. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781472803184.
  • Chartrand, René (2008). The forts of New France : the Great Lakes, the Plains and the Gulf Coast, 1600–1763. Bloomsbury USA. ISBN 9781846035043.
  • Charbonneau, H.; et al. (1993). The First French Canadians: Pioneers in the St. Lawrence Valley. University of Delaware Press. ISBN 9780874134544.
  • Choquette, Leslie (1997). Frenchmen into peasants : modernity and tradition in the peopling of French Canada. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-32315-5.
  • Dale, Ronald J. (2004). The Fall of New France: How the French Lost a North American Empire, 1754–1763. Toronto: James Lorimer and Company, Ltd. ISBN 9781550288407.
  • Dechêne, Louise (1992). Habitants and merchants in seventeenth-century Montreal. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 9780773509511.
  • Eccles, W. J. (1968). Canadian Society during the French Regime. Canadian Historical Association.
  • Eccles, W. J. (1969). The Canadian Frontier, 1534–1760. Toronto: Holt Rinehart Winston.
  • Greer, Allan (1997). The people of New France. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-7816-2.
  • Harris, Richard Colebrook (1966). The Seigneurial System in Early Canada. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 9780773504349.
  • Maura, Juan Francisco (4 June 2020). "La invención de la carta de Giovanni da Verrazano y de la 'Nouvelle France' (Canadá)" [The invention of the map by Giovanni da Verrazano of New France (Canada)]. Cuadernos Hispanoamericanos (in Spanish).
  • Munro, William Bennett (1906). "The Office of Intendant in New France". American Historical Review. Oxford University Press. 12 (1): 15–38. doi:10.2307/1832882. JSTOR 1832882.
  • Moogk, Peter N. (2000). La Nouvelle-France: the making of French Canada : a cultural history. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87013-528-6.
  • Stiles, T. J., ed. (1998). "Chapter 21: The Fall of New France". The Colonizers. In their own words (1st ed.). New York: Perigee Books. pp. 394–418. ISBN 978-0-399-52390-8. LCCN 97041889.
  • Trigger, Bruce (1976). The Children of Aataentsic. A history of the Huron People to 1660. Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press. ISBN 9780773506275.

Older classics

  • Kingsford, William (1890). The History of Canada: Canada under French rule. Vol. 4. Roswell & Hutchinson.
  • Parkman, Francis (1983). Francis Parkman : France and England in North America, Pioneers of France in the New World, The Jesuits in North America in the Seventeenth Century, La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, The Old Regime in Canada. Count Frontenac and New France under Louis XIV, A Half-Century of Conflict, Montcalm and Wolfe. Vol. 2. Library of America.
  • Wrong, George M.; Langton, H.H., eds. (1914). The Chronicles of Canada: Volume II – The Rise of New France (2009 reissue ed.). Fireship Press. ISBN 978-1-934757-45-1.
  • Wrong, George M. (1918). The Conquest of New France: A Chronicle of the Colonial Wars. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-1-58057-276-7. Retrieved 4 March 2011.

Primary sources

  • Lawn, Katherine; Salvucci, Claudio, eds. (2005). Women in New France: Extracts from the Jesuit Relations. Bristol, Penn.: Evolution Publishing.

Historiography

  • Desbarats, Catherine; Greer, Allan (2015). "North America From the Top Down: Visions from New France". Journal of Early American History. 5 (2): 109–136. doi:10.1163/18770703-00502008.
  • Gagnon, Serge (1978). "The Historiography of New France, 1960–1974: Jean Hamelin to Louise Dechêne". Journal of Canadian Studies. University of Toronto Press. 13 (1): 80+. doi:10.3138/jcs.13.1.80. ISBN 9780887720260. S2CID 152109936.
  • Greer, Allan (2010). "National, Transnational, and hypernational historiographies: New France meets early American history". Canadian Historical Review. 91 (4): 695–724. doi:10.3138/chr.91.4.695.
  • Peterson, Mark (October 2002). "How (and Why) to Read Francis Parkman". Common-Place: The Journal of Early American Life. 3 (1).

In French

  • Havard, Gilles; Vidal, Cécile (2003). Histoire de l'Amérique française. Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 978-2-08-210045-8.
  • Lahaise, Robert; Vallerand, Noël (1999). La Nouvelle-France 1524–1760. Outremont, Québec: Lanctôt. ISBN 978-2-89485-060-2.

External links

  • Electronic New France 12 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Internet gateway to everything New France (archives, heritage sites, etc.)
  • The Virtual Museum of New France, Canadian Museum of Civilization
  • Bibliothèque nationale de France / Library of Congress site (click on Themes) – text and maps
  • Chronologie de l'histoire du Québec (French)(List of Governors, Intendants, and Bishops) 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine

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Nouvelle France redirects here For other uses see Nouvelle France disambiguation and New France disambiguation New France French Nouvelle France was the area colonized by France in North America beginning with the exploration of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence by Jacques Cartier in 1534 and ending with the cession of New France to Great Britain and Spain in 1763 under the Treaty of Paris New FranceNouvelle France French 1534 1763Flag b Coat of arms a Motto Montjoie Saint Denis French Mountjoy Saint Denis Anthem Marche Henri IV March of Henry IV Location of New France green maximal expansion in 1712 before Treaty of Utrecht StatusViceroyalty of the Kingdom of FranceCapitalQuebecCommon languagesFrenchReligionCatholicismGovernmentMonarchyKing of France 1534 1547Francis I first 1715 1763Louis XV last Viceroy of New France 1534 1541Jacques Cartier first as Governor of New France 1755 1760Pierre de Rigaud de Vaudreuil last LegislatureSuperior CouncilHistorical eraColonial French and Indian War Exploration of Canada begins with Jacques Cartier24 July 1534 Foundation of Quebec by Samuel de Champlain3 July 1608 Cardinal Richelieu creates the Compagnie de la Nouvelle France responsible for colonizing the country 29 April 1627 Louis XIV integrated New France into the royal domain endowed it with a new administration and founded the French West India Company 18 September 1663 By the Treaty of Utrecht France ceded most of Acadia to the Kingdom of Great Britain as well as its claims on Newfoundland and Hudson s Bay 11 April 1713 Beginning of the Seven Years War in America28 May 1754 Defeat of the French led by Louis Joseph de Montcalm at the Plains of Abraham near Quebec13 September 1759 By the Treaty of Paris Louis XV cedes New France to Great Britain10 February 1763Area 6 8 000 000 km2 3 100 000 sq mi CurrencyLivre tournoisPreceded by Succeeded byAdaiAlgonquiansAtakapasBeothuksCaddoanChitimachasInuitIroquoisMuscogeeNatchezSiouxTunicaYuchisMiꞌkmaꞌki Province of QuebecPrince Edward IslandNova ScotiaIndian TerritoryLouisianaSaint Pierre and MiquelonToday part ofCanadaUnited StatesSaint Pierre and MiquelonThe vast territory of New France consisted of five colonies at its peak in 1712 each with its own administration Canada the most developed colony was divided into the districts of Quebec Trois Rivieres and Montreal Hudson Bay Acadie in the northeast Terre Neuve Plaisance on the island of Newfoundland and Louisiane 7 8 It extended from Newfoundland to the Canadian Prairies and from Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico including all the Great Lakes of North America In the 16th century the lands were used primarily to draw from the wealth of natural resources such as furs through trade with the various indigenous peoples In the seventeenth century successful settlements began in Acadia and in Quebec In the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht France ceded to Great Britain its claims over mainland Acadia Hudson Bay and Newfoundland France established the colony of Ile Royale on Cape Breton Island where they built the Fortress of Louisbourg 9 10 The population rose slowly but steadily In 1754 New France s population consisted of 10 000 Acadians 55 000 Canadiens and about 4 000 settlers in upper and lower Louisiana 69 000 in total 11 The British expelled the Acadians in the Great Upheaval from 1755 to 1764 which has been remembered on July 28 each year since 2003 Their descendants are dispersed in the Maritime provinces of Canada and in Maine and Louisiana with small populations in Cheticamp Nova Scotia and the Magdalen Islands Some also went to France After the Seven Years War which included the French and Indian War in America France ceded the rest of New France to Great Britain and Spain in the Treaty of Paris of 1763 except the islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon Britain acquired Canada Acadia and French Louisiana east of the Mississippi River except for the Ile d Orleans which was granted to Spain with the territory to the west In 1800 Spain returned its portion of Louisiana to France under the secret Treaty of San Ildefonso and Napoleon Bonaparte sold it to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 permanently ending French colonial efforts on the American mainland New France eventually became absorbed within the United States and Canada with the only vestige of French rule being the tiny islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon In the United States the legacy of New France includes numerous place names as well as small pockets of French speaking communities Contents 1 Early exploration 1523 1650s 1 1 Foundation of Quebec City 1608 2 Royal takeover and attempts to settle 2 1 Settlers and their families 2 2 Settlements in Louisiana 3 Growth of the settlements 4 Fur trade and economy 4 1 Coureurs des bois and voyageurs 4 2 Indigenous peoples 4 3 Formal entry of England in New France area fur trade 4 4 The economy of La Louisiane 5 Religion 6 Judiciary of New France 6 1 Early history in New France pre 1663 6 2 Legal reforms 1663 6 2 1 Royal judges and the Sovereign Council 6 2 2 The Custom of Paris 6 2 2 1 Montreal Island transition from feudal justice to royal justice 6 2 2 2 Quebec founding of the Provostry of Quebec 6 3 Criminal justice 6 4 Special courts 6 4 1 Ecclesiastical court 6 4 2 Admiralty court 6 5 Acadia 7 Military conflicts 7 1 Iroquois attacks against Montreal 7 2 King William s War 7 3 Queen Anne s War 7 4 Father Rale s War 7 5 King George s War 7 6 Father Le Loutre s War 7 7 French and Indian War 8 Treaties of cession 9 Aftermath 10 Political divisions of New France 11 Historiography 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 15 1 Older classics 15 2 Primary sources 15 3 Historiography 15 4 In French 16 External linksEarly exploration 1523 1650s EditAround 1523 the Florentine navigator Giovanni da Verrazzano convinced King Francis I to commission an expedition to find a western route to Cathay China 12 Late that year Verrazzano set sail in Dieppe crossing the Atlantic on a small caravel with 50 men 13 After exploring the coast of the present day Carolinas early the following year he headed north along the coast eventually anchoring in the Narrows of New York Bay 13 The first European to visit the site of present day New York Verrazzano named it Nouvelle Angouleme in honour of the king the former count of Angouleme 14 Verrazzano s voyage convinced the king to seek to establish a colony in the newly discovered land Verrazzano gave the names Francesca and Nova Gallia to that land between New Spain Mexico and English Newfoundland 15 A map of New France made by Samuel de Champlain in 1612 In 1534 Jacques Cartier planted a cross in the Gaspe Peninsula and claimed the land in the name of King Francis I 16 It was the first province of New France The first settlement of 400 people Fort Charlesbourg Royal present day Quebec City was attempted in 1541 but lasted only two years 17 French fishing fleets continued to sail to the Atlantic coast and into the St Lawrence River making alliances with Canadian First Nations that became important once France began to occupy the land French merchants soon realized the St Lawrence region was full of valuable fur bearing animals especially the beaver which were becoming rare in Europe Eventually the French crown decided to colonize the territory to secure and expand its influence in America citation needed Another early French attempt at settlement in North America took place in 1564 at Fort Caroline now Jacksonville Florida Intended as a haven for Huguenots Caroline was founded under the leadership of Rene Goulaine de Laudonniere and Jean Ribault It was sacked by the Spanish led by Pedro Menendez de Aviles who slaughtered every Protestant there and then established the settlement of St Augustine on 20 September 1565 18 Acadia and Canada New France were inhabited by indigenous nomadic Algonquian peoples and sedentary Iroquoian peoples These lands were full of unexploited and valuable natural resources which attracted all of Europe By the 1580s French trading companies had been set up and ships were contracted to bring back furs Much of what transpired between the indigenous population and their European visitors around that time is not known for lack of historical records 16 Other attempts at establishing permanent settlements were also failures In 1598 a French trading post was established on Sable Island off the coast of Acadia but was unsuccessful In 1600 a trading post was established at Tadoussac but only five settlers survived the winter 16 In 1604 a settlement was founded at Ile Saint Croix on Baie Francois Bay of Fundy which was moved to Port Royal in 1605 16 It was abandoned in 1607 re established in 1610 and destroyed in 1613 after which settlers moved to other nearby locations creating settlements that were collectively known as Acadia and the settlers as Acadians 16 Foundation of Quebec City 1608 Edit Champlain s Habitation c 1608 In 1608 King Henry IV sponsored Pierre Dugua Sieur de Mons and Samuel de Champlain as founders of the city of Quebec with 28 men This was the second permanent French settlement in the colony of Canada 19 20 21 Colonization was slow and difficult Many settlers died early because of harsh weather and diseases In 1630 there were only 103 colonists living in the settlement but by 1640 the population had reached 355 22 Champlain allied himself with the Algonquin and Montagnais peoples in the area who were at war with the Iroquois as soon as possible In 1609 Champlain and two French companions accompanied his Algonquin Montagnais and Huron allies south from the St Lawrence Valley to Lake Champlain He participated decisively in a battle against the Iroquois there killing two Iroquois chiefs with the first shot of his arquebus This military engagement against the Iroquois solidified Champlain s status with New France s Huron and Algonquin allies enabling him to maintain bonds essential to New France s interests in the fur trade 23 A map of western New France including the Illinois Country by Vincenzo Coronelli 1688 Champlain also arranged to have young French men live with local indigenous people to learn their language and customs and help the French adapt to life in North America These coureurs des bois runners of the woods including Etienne Brule extended French influence south and west to the Great Lakes and among the Huron tribes who lived there Ultimately for the better part of a century the Iroquois and French clashed in a series of attacks and reprisals 23 During the first decades of the colony s existence only a few hundred French people lived there while the English colonies to the south were much more populous and wealthier Cardinal Richelieu adviser to Louis XIII wished to make New France as significant as the English colonies In 1627 Richelieu founded the Company of One Hundred Associates to invest in New France promising land parcels to hundreds of new settlers and to turn Canada into an important mercantile and farming colony 24 He named Champlain as the Governor of New France and forbade non Roman Catholics to live there Consequently any Protestant emigrants to New France were forced to convert to Catholicism prompting many of them to relocate to the English colonies instead 24 The Roman Catholic Church and missionaries such as the Recollets and the Jesuits became firmly established in the territory Richelieu also introduced the seigneurial system a semi feudal system of farming based on ribbon farms that remained a characteristic feature of the St Lawrence valley until the 19th century While Richelieu s efforts did little to increase the French presence in New France they did pave the way for the success of later efforts 24 Simultaneously the English colonies to the south began raiding the St Lawrence Valley also capturing and holding Quebec until 1632 25 Champlain returned to Canada that year and requested that Sieur de Laviolette found another trading post at Trois Rivieres which Laviolette did in 1634 Champlain died in 1635 On 23 September 1646 under the command of Pierre LeGardeur Le Cardinal arrived to Quebec with Jules Gilles Trottier II and his family Le Cardinal commissioned by the Communaute des Habitants had arrived from La Rochelle France Communaute des Habitants at the time of Trottier traded fur primarily On 4 July 1646 by Pierre Teuleron sieur de Repentigny granted Trottier land in La Rochelle to build and develop New France under the authorization Jacques Le Neuf de la Poterie Royal takeover and attempts to settle Edit The Merchant Flag of France 1689 design inspiration for the flag of Quebec In 1650 New France had seven hundred colonists and Montreal had only a few dozen settlers Because the First Nations people did most of the work of beaver hunting the company needed few French employees The sparsely populated New France almost fell to hostile Iroquois forces completely as well In 1660 settler Adam Dollard des Ormeaux led a Canadian and Huron militia against a much larger Iroquois force none of the Canadians survived although they did turn back the Iroquois invasion In 1627 Quebec had only eighty five French colonists and was easily overwhelmed two years later when three English privateers plundered the settlement In 1663 New France finally became more secure when Louis XIV made it a royal province taking control away from the Company of One Hundred Associates In the same year the Societe Notre Dame de Montreal ceded its possessions to the Seminaire de Saint Sulpice 26 The Crown paid for transatlantic passages and offered other incentives to those willing to move to New France as well after which the population of New France grew to three thousand 27 In 1665 Louis XIV sent a French garrison the Carignan Salieres Regiment to Quebec The colonial government was reformed along the lines of the government of France with the Governor General and Intendant subordinate to the French Minister of the Marine In 1665 Jean Talon Minister of the Marine accepted an appointment from Jean Baptiste Colbert as the first Intendant of New France These reforms limited the power of the Bishop of Quebec who had held the greatest amount of power after the death of Champlain Talon tried reforming the seigneurial system by forcing the seigneurs to reside on their land and limiting the size of the seigneuries intending to make more land available to new settlers Talon s attempts failed since very few settlers arrived and the various industries he established failed to surpass the importance of the fur trade Settlers and their families Edit One group of King s Daughters arrives at Quebec 1667 The first settler was brought to Quebec by Champlain the apothecary Louis Hebert and his family of Paris They came expressly to settle stay in one place to make the New France settlement function Waves of recruits came in response to the requests for men with specific skills like farming apothecaries blacksmiths As couples married cash incentives to have large families were put in place and were effective To strengthen and make the colony the centre of France s colonial empire Louis XIV decided to send single women between 15 and 30 years old and known as the King s Daughters or in French les filles du roi to New France He also paid for their passages and granted goods or money as their dowries if or when they married Approximately 800 girls and women went there during 1663 1673 The King s Daughters found husbands among the male settlers new lives for themselves within two years of their respective immigrations They came on their own choice many because they could not contract favorable marriages in the French social hierarchy Primarily they came from Parisian Norman and west central commoner families By 1672 the population of New France had risen to 6 700 people a marked increase from the population of 3 200 people in 1663 28 Political map of the northeastern part of North America in 1664 At the same time the government encouraged marriages with the indigenous peoples and welcomed indentured servants or engages sent to New France The women there contributed to establishing family life civil society and rapid demographic growth significantly 29 There was a high demand for children since they contributed to farmers prosperity from an early age and they could receive abundant food supplies Women there also bore about 30 more children than comparable women who remained in France Landry says Canadians had an exceptional diet for their time This was due to the natural abundance of meat fish and pure water the good food conservation conditions during the winter and an adequate wheat supply in most years 29 Besides household duties some women participated in the fur trade the major source of money in New France They worked at home alongside their husbands or fathers as merchants clerks and provisioners Some were widows who took over their husbands roles Some even became independent and active entrepreneurs 30 Settlements in Louisiana Edit Main article Louisiana New France Respectable young women known as the King s Daughters were transported at government expense to Louisiana as brides for the colonists The French extended their territorial claim to the south and to the west of the American colonies late in the 17th century naming it for King Louis XIV as La Louisiane In 1682 Rene Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle explored the Ohio River Valley and the Mississippi River Valley and he claimed the entire territory for France as far south as the Gulf of Mexico 31 La Salle attempted to establish the first southern colony in the new territory in 1685 but inaccurate maps and navigational issues led him to instead establish his Fort Saint Louis in what is now Texas The colony was devastated by disease and the surviving settlers were killed in 1688 in an attack by the area s indigenous population 32 Other parts of Louisiana were settled and developed with success such as New Orleans and southern Illinois leaving a strong French influence in these areas long after the Louisiana Purchase Many strategic forts were built there under the orders of Governor Louis de Buade de Frontenac Forts were also built in the older portions of New France that had not yet been settled 33 Many of these forts were garrisoned by the Troupes de la Marine the only regular soldiers in New France between 1683 and 1755 34 Growth of the settlements Edit Jean Talon count of Orsainville first intendant of New France The European population grew slowly under French rule 35 thus remained relatively low as growth was largely achieved through natural births rather than by immigration 36 Most of the French were farmers and the rate of natural increase among the settlers themselves was very high 37 The women had about 30 per cent more children than comparable women who remained in France 29 Yves Landry says Canadians had an exceptional diet for their time 38 The 1666 census of New France was the first census conducted in North America 39 It was organized by Jean Talon the first Intendant of New France between 1665 and 1666 39 According to Talon s census there were 3 215 people in New France comprising 538 separate families 40 The census showed a great difference in the number of men at 2 034 versus 1 181 women 40 By the early 1700s the New France settlers were well established along the Saint Lawrence River and Acadian Peninsula with a population around 15 000 to 16 000 41 The first population figures for Acadia are from 1671 which enumerated only 450 people 42 After the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 New France began to prosper Industries such as fishing and farming which had failed under Talon began to flourish A King s Highway Chemin du Roy was built between Montreal and Quebec to encourage faster trade The shipping industry also flourished as new ports were built and old ones were upgraded The number of colonists greatly increased By 1720 Canada had become a self sufficient colony with a population of 24 594 43 Mainly due to natural increase and modest immigration from Northwest France Brittany Normandy Ile de France Poitou Charentes and Pays de la Loire the population of Canada increased to 55 000 according to the last French census of 1754 44 This was an increase from 42 701 in 1730 45 By 1765 the population approached 70 000 43 By 1714 the Acadian population had expanded to over 2 500 and to about 13 000 people by the end of the 1750s 42 This was mostly from natural increase rather than immigration that affected other French settlements 42 European population of Louisiana is estimated at around 5 000 by the 1720s 46 This would dramatically change in the mid 1730s with the loss of 2 000 French settlers and the introduction of African slaves 47 Enslaved men women and children represented approximately 65 percent of the 6 000 non indigenous population of Louisiana by the end of French rule 47 Fur trade and economy EditMain article Beaver Wars See also List of French forts in North America Card money in New France had the same currency value in the colony as minted currency c 1714 According to the staples thesis the economic development of New France was marked by the emergence of successive economies based on staple commodities each of which dictated the political and cultural settings of the time During the 16th and early 17th centuries New France s economy was heavily centered on its Atlantic fisheries This would change in the later half of the 17th and 18th centuries as French settlement penetrated further into the continental interior 48 Here French economic interests would shift and concentrate itself on the development of the North American fur trade It would soon become the new staple good that would strengthen and drive New France s economy in particular that of Montreal for the next century The trading post of Ville Marie established on the current island of Montreal quickly became the economic hub for the French fur trade It achieved this in great part due to its particular location along the St Lawrence River From here a new economy emerged one of size and density that provided increased economic opportunities for the inhabitants of New France In December 1627 the Company of New France was recognized and given commercial rights to the gathering and export of furs from French territories 49 By trading with various indigenous populations and securing the main markets its power grew steadily for the next decade As a result it was able to set specific price points for furs and other valuable goods often doing so to protect its economic hegemony over other trading partners and other areas of the economy The fur trade itself was based on a commodity of small bulk but high value Because of this it managed to attract increased attention and or input capital that would otherwise be intended for other areas of the economy The Montreal area witnessed a stagnant agricultural sector it remained for the most part subsistence orientated with little or no trade purposes outside of the French colony This was a prime example of the handicapping effect the fur trade had on its neighbouring areas of the economy 50 Company of New France building in present day Quebec City Nonetheless by the beginning of the 1700s the economic prosperity the fur trade stimulated slowly transformed Montreal Economically it was no longer a town of small traders or of fur fairs but rather a city of merchants and of bright lights The primary sector of the fur trade the act of acquiring and the selling of the furs quickly promoted the growth of complementary second and tertiary sectors of the economy For instance a small number of tanneries was established in Montreal as well as a larger number of inns taverns and markets that would support the growing number of inhabitants whose livelihood depended on the fur trade Already by 1683 there were well over 140 families and there may have been as many as 900 people living in Montreal The founding of the Compagnie des Indes in 1718 once again highlighted the economic importance of the fur trade 51 This merchant association like its predecessor the Compagnie des Cent Associes regulated the fur trade to the best of its abilities imposing price points supporting government sale taxes and combating black market practices However by the middle half of the 18th century the fur trade was in a slow decline 52 The natural abundance of furs had passed and it could no longer meet market demand This eventually resulted in the repeal of the 25 percent sales tax that had previously aimed at curbing the administrative costs New France had accumulated In addition dwindling supply increased black market trading A greater number of indigenous groups and fur traders began circumventing Montreal and New France altogether many began trading with either British or Dutch merchants to the south 52 By the end of French rule in New France in 1763 the fur trade had significantly lost its importance as the key staple good that supported much of New France s economy for more than the last century Even so it did serve as the fundamental force behind the establishment and vast growth of Montreal and the French colony Coureurs des bois and voyageurs Edit The arrival of Radisson in an Amerindian camp in 1660 The coureurs des bois were responsible for starting the flow of trade from Montreal carrying French goods into upper territories while indigenous people were bringing down their furs The coureurs traveled with intermediate trading tribes and found that they were anxious to prevent French access to the more distant fur hunting tribes Still the coureurs kept thrusting outwards using the Ottawa River as their initial step upon the journey and keeping Montreal as their starting point 53 The Ottawa River was significant because it offered a route that was practical for Europeans by taking the traders northward out of the territory dominated by the Iroquois It was for this reason that Montreal and the Ottawa River was a central location of indigenous warfare and rivalry Montreal faced difficulties by having too many coureurs out in the woods The furs coming down were causing an oversupply on the markets of Europe This challenged the coureurs trade because they so easily evaded controls monopolies and taxation and additionally because the coureurs trade was held to debauch both French and various indigenous groups The coureur debauched Frenchmen by accustoming them to fully live with indigenous and indigenous by trading on their desire for alcohol 53 The issues caused a great rift in the colony and in 1678 it was confirmed by a General Assembly that the trade was to be made in public so as to better assure the safety of the indigenous population It was also forbidden to take spirits inland to trade with indigenous groups However these restrictions on the coureurs for a variety of reasons never worked The fur trade remained dependent on spirits and increasingly in the hands of the coureurs who journeyed north in search of furs 53 As time passed the Coureurs des bois were partially replaced by licensed fur trading endeavors and the main canoe travel workers of those endeavors were called voyageurs Indigenous peoples Edit The two factions Iroquois and French were constantly at war with one another until the Great Peace of Montreal in 1701 The relationship between the Iroquois and the French first began in 1609 The relationship between the French and Iroquois began violently As Samuel De Champlain travelled from the St Lawrence Valley accompanied by his Algonquin Montagnais and Huron allies the killing of three Iroquoian chiefs on Lake Champlain was Champlain s way of fortifying his stance with these other tribal allies These alliances were in the interest of the fur trade 54 The French and Algonquins first encountered one another in 1603 after Samuel de Champlain established France s first permanent North American settlement along the St Lawrence River In 1610 the Algonquins continued to solidify their relations with the French by guiding Etienne Brule into the interiors of Canada The relationship between the Iroquois and the French first began in 1609 where Samuel De Champlain engaged in battle against the Iroquois Champlain travelled from the St Lawrence Valley accompanied by his Algonquin Montagnais and Huron allies to kill three Iroquoian chiefs on Lake Champlain with the first shots of his arquebus The two factions Iroquois and French were constantly at war with one another until the Great Peace of Montreal in 1701 55 Map showing the approximate location of major tribes and settlements 56 The French were interested in exploiting the land through the fur trade as well as the timber trade later on Despite having tools and guns the French settlers were dependent on Indigenous people to survive in the difficult climate in this part of North America Many settlers did not know how to survive through the winter the Indigenous people showed them how to survive in the New World They showed the settlers how to hunt for food and to use the furs for clothing that would protect them during the winter months 57 As the fur trade became the dominant economy in the New World French voyageurs trappers and hunters often married or formed relationships with Indigenous women This allowed the French to develop relations with their wives Indigenous nations which in turn provided protection and access to their hunting and trapping grounds One specific Indigenous group borne of these relationships are the Metis people who are descendants of marriages between French men and Indigenous women Their name originates from an old French term for person of mixed parentage 58 At the beginning of the fur trade these relationships were encouraged by the French as a way to encourage the First Nations to adopt French culture and solidify alliances but as the Metis began to emerge as an independent culture around the 1700s it began to be discouraged by the French 59 Many Metis families moved to western Canada in response to this as well as for other reasons such as fur trading opportunities One major settlement at this time was in the Red River Valley strategically placed in a significant area for the fur trade This was the origin of the modern Metis nation which was legally recognized by modern Canada as a protected Indigenous group in the Constitution Act 1982 Its prior legal history has its roots in acts such as the Manitoba Act 1870 which began to recognize the Metis nation as a separate group with various rights and protections but was not supported by the vast majority of Metis as it removed many from land that was rightfully theirs The fur trade benefited Indigenous people as well They traded furs for metal tools and other European made items that made their lives easier Tools such as knives pots and kettles nets firearms and hatchets improved the general welfare of indigenous peoples At the same time while everyday life became easier some traditional ways of doing things were abandoned or altered and while Indigenous people embraced many of these implements and tools they also were exposed to less vital trade goods such as alcohol and sugar sometimes with deleterious effects 60 The Iroquois like most tribes began to rely on the importation of European goods like firearms which contributed significantly to a decrease in the beaver population of the Hudson Valley This decline resulted in the fur trade moving further north along the St Lawrence River 61 Formal entry of England in New France area fur trade Edit 1681 French map of the New World above the equator New France and the Great Lakes in the north with a dark line as the Mississippi River to the west in the Illinois Country and the mouth of the river and future New Orleans then terra incognita Since Henry Hudson had claimed Hudson Bay and the surrounding lands for England in 1611 English colonists had begun expanding their boundaries across what is now the Canadian north beyond the French held territory of New France In 1670 King Charles II of England issued a charter to Prince Rupert and the Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson Bay for an English monopoly in harvesting furs in Rupert s Land a portion of the land draining into Hudson Bay This is the start of the Hudson s Bay Company ironically aided by French coureurs des bois Pierre Esprit Radisson and Medard des Groseilliers frustrated with French license rules 62 63 64 Now both France and England were formally in the Canadian fur trade 65 The economy of La Louisiane Edit Map of Canada New France in 1703 showing full length of Mississippi River The major commercial importance of the Louisiana Purchase territory was the Mississippi River New Orleans the largest and most important city in the territory was the most commercial city in the United States until the Civil War with most jobs there being related to trade and shipping there was little manufacturing The first commercial shipment to come down the Mississippi River was of deer and bear hides in 1705 66 The area always loosely defined in those early times of European claims and settlements extended as far east as the city that is now Mobile Alabama begun by French settlers in 1702 The French later Spanish Louisiana Territory was owned by France for a number of years before the money losing territory was transferred to French banker Antoine Crozat in 1713 for 15 years After losing four times his investment Crozat gave up his charter in 1717 Control of Louisiana and its 700 inhabitants was given to the Company of the Indies in 1719 The company conducted a major settlement program by recruiting European settlers to locate in the territory Unemployed persons convicts and prostitutes were also sent to the Louisiana Territory After the bankruptcy of the company in 1720 control was returned to the king 66 67 Louis XV saw little value in Louisiana and to compensate Spain for its losses in the Seven Years War he transferred Louisiana to his cousin Charles III in 1762 Louisiana remained under the control of Spain until it was demanded to be turned over to France by Napoleon Although Louisiana was property of France by the Third Treaty of San Ildefonso in 1800 Louisiana continued to be administered by Spain until the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 Following the American acquisition of the territory its population tripled between 1803 and Louisiana statehood in 1812 Religion EditMain article Jesuit missions in North America Before the arrival of European colonists and explorers First Nations followed a wide array of mostly animistic religions 68 During the colonial period the French settled along the shores of the Saint Lawrence River specifically Latin Rite Roman Catholics including a number of Jesuits dedicated to converting the indigenous population an effort that eventually proved successful 69 The French Roman Catholic Church which after Champlain s death was the dominant force in New France wanted to establish a Christian community in the colony 70 In 1642 they sponsored a group of settlers led by Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve who founded Ville Marie precursor to present day Montreal farther up the St Lawrence 71 Throughout the 1640s Jesuit missionaries penetrated the Great Lakes region and converted many of the Huron The missionaries came into conflict with the Iroquois who frequently attacked Montreal Le Grand Voyage du Pays des Hurons Gabriel Sagard 1632 The presence of Jesuit missionaries in Huron society was nonnegotiable The Huron relied on French goods to facilitate life and warfare Because the French would refuse trade to all indigenous societies that denied relations with missionaries the Huron had more of a propensity towards Christian conversion 72 The Huron heavily relied on European goods to perform burial ceremonies known as The Huron Feast of the Dead Trading with the French allowed for larger amounts of decorative goods to be buried during ceremonies as opposed to only a bare minimum 72 With the growing epidemics and high number of deaths the Huron could not afford to lose relations with the French fearing to anger their ancestors 72 Jesuit missionaries explored the Mississippi River in the territory of the Illinois Father Jacques Marquette and explorer Louis Jolliet traveled in a small party starting from Green Bay down the Wisconsin River to the Mississippi River communicating with the tribes they met en route Although Spanish trade goods had reached most of the indigenous peoples these were the first Frenchmen to connect in the area named for the Illinois including the Kaskaskia They kept detailed records of what they saw and the people they met sketching what they could and mapped the Mississippi River in 1673 73 Their travels were described as first contacts with the indigenous peoples though evidence of contact with Spanish from the south was clear 73 Subsequent to the arrival of French children in Quebec in 1634 measles was also brought along with them which quickly spread among the indigenous peoples Jesuit priest Jean de Brebeuf described the symptoms as being severe Brebeuf stated that the fearlessness of the indigenous peoples towards death upon this disease made them perfect candidates for conversion to Christianity 74 The indigenous peoples believed that if they did not convert to Christianity they would be exposed to the evil magic of the priests that caused the illness 72 Jesuit missionaries were troubled by the absence of patriarchy in indigenous communities Indigenous women were highly regarded within their societies and participated in political and military decisions 75 Jesuits attempted to eliminate the matriarchy and shift the powers of men and women to accommodate those of European societies In France women are to be obedient to their masters their husbands 76 Jesuits would attempt to justify this to the indigenous women in hopes to enlighten them on proper European behavior In response Indigenous women grew worrisome of the presence of these missionaries fearing they would lose power and freedom within their communities 76 By 1649 both the Jesuit mission and the Huron society were almost destroyed by Iroquois invasions see Canadian Martyrs In 1653 a peace invitation was extended by the Onondaga Nation one of the five nations of the Iroquois Confederacy to New France and an expedition of Jesuits led by Simon Le Moyne established Sainte Marie de Ganentaa in 1656 The Jesuits were forced to abandon the mission by 1658 as hostilities with the Iroquois resumed 77 The second article of the charter of the Compagnie des Cent Associes stated that New France could only be Roman Catholic 78 This resulted in Huguenots facing legal restrictions to enter the colony when Cardinal Richelieu transferred the control of the colony to Compagnie des Cent Associes in 1627 Protestantism was then outlawed in France and all its overseas possessions by the Edict of Fontainebleau in 1685 78 In spite of that approximately 15 000 Protestants settled in New France by using socioeconomic pretexts while at the same time concealing their religious background 79 The Huguenots a name used to designate French Speaking Protestants were a mercantile group originating from the coastal cities of North Western France and had a significant impact on the early development of New France especially in the regions of Quebec and Acadia 80 where many people still hold Huguenot surnames to this day 81 Huguenots were famous for their large and interconnected trading and communication network that spanned throughout France and most of her colonies 82 This network was also known for trading with the Dutch Republic and the Kingdom of England two of France s most important rivals that also happened to be protestant nations Initially King Henri IV recognised Protestants as a significant minority within France and allowed them a certain degree of freedom within their religion After several years of various skirmishes within Metropolitan France the Huguenots were deemed to not be faithful servants of the king and their mercantile powers stripped their trading network disbanded and widespread governmental persuctory policies were enacted both within mainland France and Nouvelle France In 1661 Louis XVI was able to enact self rule as his regency ended and he instituted a variety of anti protestant conventions throughout the greater French Empire Under these new rules Protestant children were forcibly converted to Catholicism implemented direct governmental jurisdiction over what were formerly Huguenot controlled trade routes and labelled the Protestant communities throughout Nouvelle France specifically Quebec and Acadia as significant threats to the colonies as they might sympathise with English Protestants competing in the same areas and trades Eventually Protestants were banned from settling in Nouvelle France and the existing ones were only allowed to summer in the colonies not winter there 82 Judiciary of New France EditEarly history in New France pre 1663 Edit Governor Frontenac performing a tribal dance with indigenous allies In the early stage of French settlement legal matters fell within the Governor of New France s purview 83 Under this arrangement legal disputes were settled in an incoherent fashion due to the Governor s arbitrariness in issuing verdicts Since 1640 a Seneschal senechal a Judge juge d epee which literally means sword bearing judge and a jurisdiction in Trois Rivieres were created 83 However the Seneschal was under the oversight by the Governor hence the Governor still had rather extensive control over legal matters in New France 83 In 1651 the Company of New France made the Great Seneschal Grand Senechal the chief justice 83 However the Island of Montreal had its special Governor at that time who also administered justice on the Island and had not handed over justice to the Grand Seneschal until 1652 84 In practice though the Great Seneschal was awarded as an honorary title to the son of Jean de Lauson then Governor of New France judicial functions were in fact carried out by the Seneschal s deputies 85 These deputies included such officials as the civil and criminal lieutenant general lieutenant general civil et criminel the special lieutenant lieutenant particulier acting as assistant royal judge and the lieutenant fiscal lieutenant fiscal acting as tax magistrate 85 The Civil and Criminal Lieutenant General sat as judge in trials at first instance whereas appeals would be adjudicated by the Governor who held the sovereign right to settle final appeals on behalf of the French king The Great Seneschal also had a magistrate in Trois Rivieres as well as a bailiff formed by the Society of Priests of Saint Sulpice on the Island of Montreal 86 Apart from judicial responsibilities the Great Seneschal was also in charge of convening local nobility in New France as well as issuing declarations of war if necessary 84 However such alternative role of the Great Seneschal was much weakened soon after by having the rights to declare war and to administer finances stripped off from the office because the French crown feared that colonial officers held too much authority 84 Legal reforms 1663 Edit Royal judges and the Sovereign Council Edit On 13 October 1663 the royal court replaced the Seneschal Office senechaussee Canada was divided into three districts the district of Quebec City the district of Trois Rivieres and the district of Montreal 87 Each district had its own separate jurisdiction with a judge appointed by the Crown known as the civil and criminal lieutenants general 87 They were responsible for all legal matters civil and criminal in each of the districts 87 In addition to the royal judges there were other judicial officers in each district The clerk of court registrar was responsible for transcribing all court proceedings as well as other documents relevant to each of the cases 86 The king s attorney procureur du roi was responsible for inquiring into the facts and preparing the case against the accused 88 In the districts of Quebec City and Montreal the royal judges had special lieutenants to substitute them whenever they were absent or sick 88 Feudal courts heard minor cases 89 90 The reform also brought the Sovereign Council of New France Conseil souverain into existence which was later renamed the Superior Council Conseil superieur The Sovereign Council effectively acted as the functional equivalent of a Council of State Conseil d Etat for New France having the authority to hand down verdicts on final appeal 91 Initially the Council convened once every week and the quorum of the Sovereign Council was seven for criminal matters or five for civil cases 91 The council s practices evolved over time At the Sovereign Council there was a king s attorney general procureur general du roi in charge of the similar tasks as the district king s attorneys 92 He was also responsible for supervising the king s attorneys daily operations as well as execution of royal edicts and regulations passed by the council in their respective districts 93 The Custom of Paris Edit Main article Custom of Paris in New France In 1664 the Custom of Paris coutume de Paris was formally set as the main source of law for civil law in France s overseas empire All royal judges and king s attorneys in New France had to be thoroughly familiar with this compilation of rules 91 The Custom governed various civil aspects of the daily life in New France including property marriage inheritance and so on Montreal Island transition from feudal justice to royal justice Edit The Island of Montreal was a special case because its judiciary had been previously held by the Society of St Sulpice In 1663 Governor General of New France Augustin de Saffray de Mesy originally considered appointing Paul de Chomedey Sieur de Maisonneuve the Governor of the Island of Montreal and consolidating a royal jurisdiction on the island but the plan garnered the St Sulpicians disapproval who held the Island as its own fiefdom and effectively acted as the island s governor 94 In other words the Sovereign Council had not been able to seize effective control over the legal matters of the Island instead the St Sulpicians administered justice on the island It was not until 16 September 1666 that the St Sulpicians finally handed over the justice of the Island of Montreal to the Intendant of New France 95 In 1693 the French king commanded the replacement of the ecclesiastical courts in Montreal with a royal court composed of one royal judge with appeals going to the Sovereign Council The introduction of a royal court on the Montreal Island also resulted in the abolition of the feudal court in the fief of Trois Rivieres then held by the Jesuits 96 Quebec founding of the Provostry of Quebec Edit In the Quebec City district the lower court tribunal anterieur was established in 1664 and had jurisdiction to try cases at first instance but then it was abolished in 1674 97 The Sovereign Council appointed trial judges juges inferieurs to adjudicate cases at first instance until the Provostry of Quebec prevote de Quebec was created in May 1677 The Provostry of Quebec was located in the Hall of Justice palais de justice in Quebec City and had only one royal judge also known as the civil and criminal lieutenant general of Quebec City who heard both civil and criminal cases as well as district police 97 Additionally a court clerk and a king s attorney were appointed to the court if either of these two officers could not attend the trials due to illness or other untenable circumstances the Intendant would appoint a temporary substitute 97 Criminal justice Edit Main article Criminal justice in New France In the early stages of French colonization the execution of criminal justice in New France was rather arbitrary The Governor of New France served as the judge to the colonists as well as soldiers He would announce his verdict at the presence of the chiefs of the Company of One Hundred Associates and that would be final 98 After the Sovereign Council was established in Quebec in 1663 the Council carried out criminal justice according to the general ordinances of France 98 In 1670 the Criminal Ordinance was enacted in New France by order of the French king as a codification of the previous criminal laws passed by the Sovereign Council 99 Special courts Edit Ecclesiastical court Edit Officialite New France redirects here For the ecclesiastical court see Ecclesiastical court The ecclesiastical court tribunal ecclesiastique or Officialite was a special court for hearing first instance trials on both religious and secular affairs involving members of the Church 100 It first appeared in around 1660 but was not officially recognized by state authorities for it was not administered by a bishop until 1684 100 Appeals from this court lay with the Sovereign Council 100 Admiralty court Edit The court of admiralty was created on 12 January 1717 and was the last judicial body set up in Canada during the French colonial period 101 The court had a judge also known as the lieutenant general of the court appointed by the French admiralty a king s attorney a clerk of court and one or two bailiffs huissiers 102 The admiralty court was located in Quebec City and had jurisdiction over all of New France except Louisiana and Louisbourg 100 The court heard first instance trials on maritime affairs including commerce and seamen s conduct 100 During wartime it also commanded maritime police 100 Before 1717 the Quebec Provostry performed the duties of the admiralty court 100 Acadia Edit Unlike Canada Acadia s judicial system was somewhat under developed during the New France period Prior to 1670 Acadia was in a state of being torn between various European colonists None of the countries France England the Netherlands were able to put in place a stable jurisdiction there In 1670 France regained control of Acadia and appointed Mathieu de Goutin as the Civil and Criminal Lieutenant lieutenant civil et criminel of Acadia 103 Simultaneously the Governor of Acadia was set up and his job was primarily the defense of Acadia from English invasion 104 The Civil and Criminal Lieutenant was essentially supervised by the Governor who held superior judicial authority over the Lieutenant but for most of the time would let the Lieutenant mediate and decide legal affairs 105 Due to the situation in Acadia as a small settlement of around 399 settlers in 1670 71 vulnerable to foreign invasion courts were minimal consisting of only a Civil and Criminal Lieutenant and a king s attorney 104 There was not an official court in Acadia although the king s attorney of Acadia performed very similar duties as his counterpart in New France 106 Yet since Acadia never actually had a court there was no clerk of court instead trials were recorded by a local notary 106 It is difficult to trace the judicial history of French Acadia as the relevant archives were destroyed in a fire in 1708 106 Military conflicts EditMain articles French and Indian Wars Father Rale s War and Father Le Loutre s War Further information Military of New France The presence of settlers of businesses from several European countries harvesting furs along with the interests of the indigenous people in this new competition for North American resources set the scene for significant military conflicts among all parties in New France beginning in 1642 and ending with the Seven Years War 1756 1763 Iroquois attacks against Montreal Edit Engraving depicting Adam Dollard with a keg of gunpowder above his head during the Battle of Long Sault Ville Marie was a noteworthy site for it was the center of defence against the Iroquois the point of departure for all western and northern journeys and the meeting point to which the trading Indians brought their annual furs This placed Ville Marie later known as Montreal at the forefront against the Iroquois which resulted in its trade being easily and frequently interrupted The Iroquois were in alliance with the Dutch and English 107 which allowed them to interrupt the French fur trade and send the furs down the Hudson River to the Dutch and English traders 53 This also put the Iroquois at warfare against the Hurons the Algonquians and any other tribes that were in alliance with the French If the Iroquois could destroy New France and its Indian allies they would be able to trade freely and profitably with the Dutch and English on the Hudson River 108 The Iroquois formally attacked the settlement at today s Quebec City in its foundation year of 1642 and in almost every subsequent year thereafter 109 A militant theocracy maintained Montreal In 1653 and 1654 reinforcements arrived at Montreal which allowed the Iroquois to be halted 110 self published source In that year the Iroquois made peace with the French 53 Adam Dollard des Ormeaux a colonist and soldier of New France was a notable figure regarding the Iroquois attacks against Montreal The Iroquois soon resumed their assaults against Montreal and the few settlers of Montreal fell almost completely to hostile Iroquois forces The Iroquois did not use typical raiding tactics of moving swiftly and silently Instead they captured individuals and brought them back to their own territory Women and children were made a part of the village and men encountered slow torturous deaths In the 60s warfare changed and France began to counterattack Professional French soldiers had arrived in the New World for the first time and Alexandre de Prouville led them to invade Iroquois territory 111 In the spring of 1660 Adam Dollard des Ormeaux led a small militia consisting of 16 men from Montreal against a much larger Iroquois force at the Battle of Long Sault on the Ottawa River 112 They succeeded in turning back the Iroquois invasion and are responsible for saving Montreal from destruction 113 They were able to take Chief Canaqueese as a prisoner and in September 1660 the French returned and burned Iroquois homes and crops Later that Winter many Iroquois died due to starvation and the Iroquois finally agreed to peace which lasted roughly twenty years 111 The encounter between Ormeaux and the Iroquois is of significance because it dissuaded the Iroquois from further attacks against Montreal 114 King William s War Edit Main article King William s War Map of North America in 1702 showing forts towns and in solid colors areas occupied by European settlements In 1688 King William s War began and the English and Iroquois launched a major assault on New France after many years of small skirmishes throughout the English and French territories New France and the Wabanaki Confederacy were able to thwart New England expansion into Acadia whose border New France defined as the Kennebec River in southern Maine 115 116 117 King William s War ended in 1697 but a second war Queen Anne s War broke out in 1702 Quebec survived the English invasions of both these wars and during the wars France seized many of the English Hudson s Bay Company fur trading centres on Hudson Bay including York Factory which the French renamed Fort Bourbon Queen Anne s War Edit Main article Queen Anne s War While Acadia defeated an English invasion attempt during King William s War the colony was occupied by the British during Queen Anne s War The final Conquest of Acadia happened in 1710 In 1713 peace came to New France with the Treaty of Utrecht 118 Although the treaty turned Hudson Bay Newfoundland and part of Acadia peninsular Nova Scotia over to Great Britain France remained in control of Ile Royale Cape Breton Island which also administered Ile Saint Jean Prince Edward Island The northern part of Acadia what is today New Brunswick and Maine remained contested territory Construction of Fortress Louisbourg on Ile Royale a French military stronghold intended to protect the approaches to the St Lawrence River settlements began in 1719 119 Father Rale s War Edit Main article Father Rale s War An 1850s depiction of the death of the French Jesuit priest Sebastien Rale during Father Rale s War In Acadia however war continued Father Rale s War 1722 1725 was a series of battles between New England and the Wabanaki Confederacy who were allied with New France New France and the Wabanaki Confederacy defended against the expansion of New England settlements into Acadia whose border New France defined as the Kennebec River in southern Maine 115 116 117 After the New England Conquest of Acadia in 1710 mainland Nova Scotia was under the control of New England but both present day New Brunswick and virtually all of present day Maine remained contested territory between New England and New France To secure New France s claim to the region it established Catholic missions among the three largest indigenous villages in the region one on the Kennebec River Norridgewock one further north on the Penobscot River Penobscot and one on the Saint John River Medoctec 120 121 The war began on two fronts when New England pushed its way through Maine and when New England established itself at Canso Nova Scotia As a result of the war Maine fell to the New Englanders with the defeat of Father Sebastien Rale at Norridgewock and the subsequent retreat of the indigenous peoples from the Kennebec and Penobscot rivers to St Francis and Becancour Quebec c King George s War Edit Main article King George s War Peace lasted in Canada until 1744 when news of the outbreak of the War of the Austrian Succession King George s War in North America reached Fort Louisbourg The French forces went on the attack first in a failed attempt to capture Annapolis Royal the capital of British Nova Scotia In 1745 William Shirley governor of Massachusetts led a counterattack on Louisbourg Both France and New France were unable to relieve the siege and Louisbourg fell to the British With the famed Duc d Anville Expedition France attempted to retake Acadia and the fortress in 1746 but failed The fortress was returned to France under the Treaty of Aix la Chapelle but the peace treaty which restored all colonial borders to their pre war status did little to end the lingering enmity between France Britain and their respective colonies nor did it resolve any territorial disputes citation needed Father Le Loutre s War Edit Main article Father Le Loutre s War Within Acadia and Nova Scotia Father Le Loutre s War 1749 1755 began with the British founding of Halifax During Father Le Loutre s War New France established three forts along the border of present day New Brunswick to protect it from a New England attack from Nova Scotia The war continued until British victory at Fort Beausejour which dislodged Father Le Loutre from the region thereby ending his alliance with the Maliseet Acadians and Mi kmaq 121 French and Indian War Edit Main articles French and Indian War and Expulsion of the Acadians Map of territorial claims in North America by 1750 before the French and Indian War which was part of the greater worldwide conflict known as the Seven Years War 1756 to 1763 Possessions of Britain pink France blue and Spain orange California Pacific Northwest and Great Basin not indicated Fort Duquesne located at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers at the site of present day Pittsburgh Pennsylvania guarded the most important strategic location in the west at the time of the Seven Years War It was built to ensure that the Ohio River valley remained under French control A small colonial force from Virginia began a fort here but a French force under Claude Pierre Pecaudy de Contrecœur drove them off in April 1754 New France claimed this as part of their colony and the French were anxious to keep the British from encroaching on it The French built Fort Duquesne here to serve as a military stronghold and as a base for developing trade and strengthening military alliances with the indigenous peoples of the area In 1755 General Edward Braddock led an expedition against Fort Duquesne and although they were numerically superior to the French militia and their Indian allies Braddock s army was routed and Braddock was killed 122 Later that same year at the Battle of Lake George the British General William Johnson with a force of 1700 American and Iroquois troops defeated a French force of 2800 French and Canadians and 700 Native Americans led by Baron Dieskau Military commander of New France The fight for control over Ohio Country led to the French and Indian War which began as the North American phase of the Seven Years War which did not technically begin in Europe until 1756 The war began with the defeat of a Virginia militia contingent led by Colonel George Washington by the French troupes de la marine in the Ohio valley As a result of that defeat the British decided to prepare the conquest of Quebec City the capital of New France The British defeated France in Acadia in the Battle of Fort Beausejour 1755 and then Ile Royale Cape Breton Island which also administered Ile Saint Jean Prince Edward Island with the Siege of Louisbourg 1758 Throughout the war the British deported the Acadians to the Thirteen Colonies and Europe which the Acadian militias resisted with assistance from Mi kmaq and Malisteet forces The Great Upheaval continued from 1755 to 1764 In 1756 a large force of French Canadians and their Native American allies led by the Marquis de Montcalm launched an attack against the key British post at Fort Oswego on Lake Ontario from Fort Frontenac and forced the garrison to surrender The following year Montcalm with a huge force of 7 200 French and Canadian troops and 2 400 Native Americans laid siege to Fort William Henry on the southern shores of Lake George and after three weeks of fighting the British commander Monroe surrendered Montcalm gave him honorable terms to return to England and not to fight for 18 months And yet when the British force with civilians was three miles from the fort the Native American allies massacred about 1 100 of the 1 500 strong force The following year the French had one victory and one defeat The defeat was at the French fortress city of Louisbourg The victory was at the strip of land between Lake Champlain and Lake George at the French fortress of Fort Carillon The British force sent to capture Fort Carillon held by just 3400 French regulars and marines with almost no militia or indigenous support was the largest ever seen in America at that time 16 200 British American and Iroquois troops under the command of General James Abercrombie This battle led the British to suffer 2 200 casualties several artillery pieces against French losses of around 200 killed or wounded While the British Conquest of Acadia happened in 1710 the French continued to remain a significant force in the region with Fort Beausejour and Fortress Louisbourg The dominant population in the region remained Acadian that is to say not British In 1755 the British were successful in the Battle of Beausejour and immediately after began the expulsion of the Acadians In the meantime the French continued to explore westwards and expand their trade alliances with indigenous peoples Fort de la Corne was built in 1753 by Louis de la Corne Chevalier de la Corne just east of the Saskatchewan River Forks in what is today the Canadian province of Saskatchewan This was the furthest westward outpost of the French Empire in North America to be established before its fall Treaties of cession EditFurther information Conquest of New France 1758 1760 In 1758 British forces again captured Louisbourg allowing them to blockade the entrance to the St Lawrence River This proved decisive in the war In 1759 the British besieged Quebec by sea and an army under General James Wolfe defeated the French under General Louis Joseph de Montcalm at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham in September The garrison in Quebec surrendered on 18 September and by the next year New France had been conquered by the British after the attack on Montreal which had refused to acknowledge the fall of Canada The last French governor general of New France Pierre Francois de Rigaud Marquis de Vaudreuil Cavagnal surrendered to British Major General Jeffery Amherst on 8 September 1760 France formally ceded Canada to the British in the Treaty of Paris signed 10 February 1763 123 Aftermath EditMain articles Canada under British Imperial control Louisiana New Spain and Colonial history of the United States Map showing British territorial gains following the Treaty of Paris in pink and Spanish territorial gains after the Treaty of Fontainebleau in yellow The expelled Acadians were initially dispersed across much of eastern North America including the Thirteen Colonies and some were sent to France Many eventually settled in Quebec or Louisiana while others returned to the regions of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Cheticamp Nova Scotia and the Magdalen Islands have significant communities In Louisiana their descendants became known as the Cajuns a corruption of the French Acadiens By the mid 1700s the French settlers were well established with a population around 70 000 mainly due to natural increase 124 125 The European population had grown slowly under French rule 36 126 127 The British Thirteen Colonies to the south along the Atlantic coast grew in population from natural increase and more new settlers from Europe By 1760 almost 1 6 million people lived in the British colonies a ratio of approximately twenty three to one compared to New France 128 The population of the New England colonies alone in 1760 was nearly 450 000 French culture and religion remained dominant in most of the former territory of New France until the arrival of British settlers led to the later creation of Upper Canada today Ontario and New Brunswick The Louisiana Territory under Spanish control since the end of the Seven Years War remained off limits to settlement from the thirteen American colonies Twelve years after the British defeated the French the American Revolutionary War broke out in the Thirteen Colonies Many French Canadians would take part in the war including Major Clement Gosselin and Admiral Louis Philippe de Vaudreuil After the British surrender at Yorktown in 1781 the Treaty of Versailles gave all former British claims in New France below the Great Lakes into the possession of the nascent United States A Franco Spanish alliance treaty returned Louisiana to France in 1801 but French leader Napoleon Bonaparte sold it to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 ending French colonial efforts in North America The portions of the former New France that remained under British rule were administered as Upper Canada and Lower Canada 1791 1841 and then those regions were merged as the Province of Canada during 1841 1867 when the passage of the British North America Act of 1867 instituted home rule for most of British North America and established French speaking Quebec the former Lower Canada as one of the original provinces of the Dominion of Canada The former French colony of Acadia was first designated the Colony of Nova Scotia but shortly thereafter the Colony of New Brunswick which then included Prince Edward Island was split off from it In Canada the legacy of New France can be seen in the enduring Francophone identity of its descendants which has led to institutional bilingualism in Canada as a whole The only remnant of the former colonial territory of New France that remains under French control to this day is the French overseas collectivity of Saint Pierre and Miquelon French Collectivite territoriale de Saint Pierre et Miquelon consisting of a group of small islands 25 kilometres 16 mi 13 nmi off the coast of Newfoundland Canada Political divisions of New France EditFurther information List of towns and villages in New France A chart showing the political organization of New France c 1759 Before the Treaty of Utrecht of 1713 the territory of New France was divided into four colonies Acadie Canada Illinois Country before 1717 Louisiane Louisiana New France Illinois Country after 1717 Terre NeuveThe Treaty of Utrecht resulted in the relinquishing of French claims to mainland Acadia the Hudson Bay and Newfoundland and the establishment of the colony of Ile Royale now called Cape Breton Island where the French built the Fortress of Louisbourg 9 129 Acadia had a difficult history with the Great Upheaval remembered on July 28 each year since 2003 The descendants are dispersed in the Maritime Provinces of Canada in Maine and Louisiana in the United States with small populations in Cheticamp Nova Scotia and the Magdalen Islands citation needed Historiography EditThe Conquest referring to the fall of New France to the British and specifically the events of 1759 60 has always been a central and contested theme of Canadian memory Some Anglophone historians portray the Conquest as a victory for British military political and economic superiority and argue that it ultimately brought benefits to the French settlers 130 However Cornelius Jaenen notes that French Canadian historians remain strongly divided on the subject One group sees it as a highly negative economic political and ideological disaster that threatened a way of life with materialism and Protestantism At the other pole are those historians who see the positive benefit of enabling the preservation of language and religion and traditional customs under British rule 130 French Canadian debates have escalated since the 1960s as the conquest is seen as a pivotal moment in the history of Quebec s nationalism Francophone historian Jocelyn Letourneau suggested in 2009 that today 1759 does not belong primarily to a past that we might wish to study and understand but rather to a present and a future that we might wish to shape and control 131 The enduring contestation of the legacy of the Conquest can be exemplified by an episode in 2009 when an attempt to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the battle of the Plains of Abraham was cancelled The explanation for the cancellation was that it was over security concerns but activist Sylvain Rocheleau stated I think they had to cancel the event because it was insulting a majority of Francophones They had to cancel it because it was a bad idea 132 See also Edit Canada portal France portal Indigenous peoples of the Americas portal United States portalAlcohol in New France French Colonial Historic District List of French possessions and colonies List of North American cities founded in chronological order New France Intellectual Life Slavery in New France New France Sovereign Council Seigneurial system of New France Timeline of New France historyNotes Edit Lesser version of the coat of arms as used by the French Government The Royal Banner of early modern France or Bourbon Flag was the most commonly used flag in New France 1 2 3 4 5 While New Englanders safely settled the land not until the treaty of 1752 did Massachusetts officially lay claim to the entire Penobscot watershed and in 1759 the Pownall Expedition led by Governor Thomas Pownall established Fort Pownall on Cape Jellison in what is now Stockton Springs References Edit The Governor General of Canada 12 November 2020 Royal Banner of France Heritage Emblem Confirmation of the blazon of a Flag February 15 2008 Vol V p 202 The Office of the Secretary to the Governor General New York State Historical Association 1915 Proceedings of the New York State Historical Association with the Quarterly Journal 2nd 21st Annual Meeting with a List of New Members The Association It is most probable that the Bourbon Flag was used during the greater part of the occupancy of the French in the region extending southwest from the St Lawrence to the Mississippi known as New France The French flag was probably blue at that time with three golden fleur de lis Background The First National Flags The Canadian Encyclopedia 28 November 2019 Retrieved 1 March 2021 At the time of New France 1534 to the 1760s two flags could be viewed as having national status The first was the banner of France a blue square flag bearing three gold fleurs de lys It was flown above fortifications in the early years of the colony For instance it was flown above the lodgings of Pierre Du Gua de Monts at Ile Sainte Croix in 1604 There is some evidence that the banner also flew above Samuel de Champlain s habitation in 1608 the completely white flag of the French Royal Navy was flown from ships forts and sometimes at land claiming ceremonies INQUINTE CA CANADA 150 Years of History The story behind the flag inquinte ca When Canada was settled as part of France and dubbed New France two flags gained national status One was the Royal Banner of France This featured a blue background with three gold fleurs de lis A white flag of the French Royal Navy was also flown from ships and forts and sometimes flown at land claiming ceremonies Wallace W Stewart 1948 Flag of New France The Encyclopedia of Canada Vol II Toronto University Associates of Canada pp 350 351 During the French regime in Canada there does not appear to have been any French national flag in the modern sense of the term The Banner of France which was composed of fleur de lys on a blue field came nearest to being a national flag since it was carried before the king when he marched to battle and thus in some sense symbolized the kingdom of France During the later period of French rule it would seem that the emblem was a flag showing the fleur de lys on a white ground as seen in Florida There were however 68 flags authorized for various services by Louis XIV in 1661 and a number of these were doubtless used in New France Havard Vidal Histoire de l Amerique francaise Flammarion 2003 p 67 Francis R Douglas Jones Richard Smith Donald B 2009 Journeys A History of Canada Cengage Learning p 51 ISBN 978 0 17 644244 6 La Nouvelle France Le Territoire New France The Territory in French Government of France Archived from the original on 20 September 2008 Retrieved 16 January 2017 a b Johnston Andrew John Bayly 2001 Control and Order in French Colonial Louisbourg 1713 1758 MSU Press pp 8 9 ISBN 978 0 8701 3570 5 JSTOR 10 14321 j ctt7zt68f History Fortress of Louisbourg Association Archived from the original on 23 July 2010 Retrieved 23 April 2015 Leclerc Jacques in French 2018 Arrival of the Europeans Canada at the Time of New France Linguistic History of Canada University of Ottawa online Litalien Raymonde 2004 Champlain The Birth of French America McGill Queen s Press p 115 ISBN 978 0 7735 7256 0 a b Cox Caroline Albala Ken 2009 Opening Up North America 1497 1800 Infobase Publishing p 27 ISBN 978 1 60413 196 3 Pritchard Evan T 2002 Native New Yorkers The Legacy of the Algonquin People of New York Council Oak Books p 21 ISBN 978 1 57178 107 9 Axelrod Alan 2011 A Savage Empire Trappers Traders Tribes and the Wars That Made America St Martin s Press p 50 ISBN 978 1 4299 9070 7 a b c d e Riendeau Roger E 2007 A Brief History of Canada Infobase Publishing p 36 ISBN 978 1 4381 0822 3 Fort Charlesbourg Royal National Historic Site of Canada Canada s Historic Places Parks Canada Retrieved 31 July 2018 Bryant Calvin 27 August 2020 Massacre of the Huguenots by the Spanish in Florida Jean Ribault Heritage Society Retrieved 28 July 2022 Grenon Jean Yves 2000 Pierre Dugua De Mons Founder of Acadie 1604 05 Co Founder of Quebec 1608 Translated by Roberts Phil Annapolis Royal Nova Scotia Peninsular Press ISBN 978 0 9682 0162 6 Liebel Jean 1999 Pierre Dugua sieur de Mons fondateur de Quebec Paris Le Croit vif ISBN 978 2 9079 6748 8 Binot Guy 2004 Pierre Dugua de Mons gentilhomme royannais premier colonisateur du Canada lieutenant general de la Nouvelle France de 1603 a 1612 Vaux sur Mer Bonne anse ISBN 978 2 9144 6313 3 Estimated population of Canada 1605 to present Statistics Canada 2009 Retrieved 26 August 2010 a b Hunter Douglas 2007 God s Mercies Rivalry Betrayal and the Dream of Discovery Random House of Canada pp 240 242 ISBN 978 0 3856 6058 7 a b c Knecht R J 1991 Richelieu Essex England Pearson Education Limited p 165 ISBN 978 0 582 43757 9 Fry Michael 2001 The Scottish Empire Tuckwell Press p 21 ISBN 978 1 84158 259 7 Young Brian 1986 Chapter 1 Holy Housekeeping The Company and Business Management In Its Corporate Capacity the Seminary of Montreal as a Business Institution 1816 76 Montreal McGill Queen s University Press pp 3 37 ISBN 978 0 7735 0554 4 Taylor Alan 2001 American Colonies The Settling of North America New York Penguin Books pp 365 366 ISBN 978 0 14 200210 0 Le peuplement d un pays Musee de la civilisation 1998 Archived from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 3 October 2013 a b c Landry Yves Winter 1993 Fertility in France and New France The Distinguishing Characteristics of Canadian Behavior in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Social Science History 17 4 586 doi 10 2307 1171305 JSTOR 1171305 Noel Jan 2009 N etre plus la deleguee de personne une reevaluation du role des femmes dans le commerce en Nouvelle France PDF Revue d histoire de l Amerique francaise 63 2 209 241 doi 10 7202 044453ar Magocsi Paul R 1999 Encyclopedia of Canada s Peoples University of Toronto Press pp 539 540 ISBN 978 0 8020 2938 6 Chartrand Rene 2010 The Forts of New France The Great Lakes the Plains and the Gulf Coast 1600 1763 Bloomsbury USA p 51 ISBN 9781846035043 Chartrand Rene 2013 The Forts of New France in Northeast America 1600 1763 Bloomsbury Publishing pp 6 8 ISBN 9781472803184 Haefeli Evan Sweeney Kevin 2006 Captive Histories English French and Native Narratives of the 1704 Deerfield Raid University of Massachusetts Press p 207 ISBN 978 1 55849 543 2 Preston David L 2009 The Texture of Contact European and Indian Settler Communities on the Frontiers of Iroquoia 1667 1783 University of Nebraska Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 8032 2549 7 a b Powell John 2009 New France Encyclopedia of North American Immigration Infobase Publishing p 203 ISBN 978 1 4381 1012 7 Retrieved 8 March 2021 McIlwraith Thomas F Muller Edward K 2001 North America The Historical Geography of a Changing Continent Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 72 ISBN 978 1 4616 3960 2 Landry Yves 1993 Fertility in France and New France The Distinguishing Characteristics of Canadian Behavior in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Social Science History Universite de Montreal 17 4 577 592 quote p 586 doi 10 1017 S0145553200016928 JSTOR 1171305 S2CID 147651557 a b North America s First Census Statistics Canada 2009 Archived from the original on 16 June 2012 Retrieved 23 June 2010 a b Tables of census data collected in 1665 and 1666 by Jean Talon Statistics Canada 2009 Archived from the original on 2 December 2010 Retrieved 23 June 2010 Estimated population of Canada 1605 to present Statistics Canada 2009 Retrieved 26 August 2010 a b c Hornsby Stephen J ed 2005 Explanatory maps of Saint Croix amp Acadia Acadian Deportation Migration and Resettlement Canadian American Center University of Maine Retrieved 8 March 2021 a b Belanger Claude 23 August 2000 Population of Quebec 1605 1844 Quebec History Statistical Material and Charts Montreal Marianopolis College Retrieved 25 July 2016 Year 1765 Population 69 810 Leslie Peter M 1988 Ethnonationalism in a Federal State The Case of Canada Queen s University p 6 note 5 ISBN 978 0 88911 456 2 Hartz Louis 1969 The Founding of New Societies Studies in the History of the United States Latin America South Africa Canada and Australia Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 231 ISBN 0 547 97109 5 Annual Report of Department of Public Works Canada 1891 pp 3 4 a b Lescarbot Marc Percival Biggar Henry Grant William Lawson Ganong William Francis 1907 Histoire de la Nouvelle France History of New France in French Champlain Society p 21 Watkins Melville H May 1963 A Staple Theory of Economic Growth The Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science 29 2 141 158 doi 10 2307 139461 JSTOR 139461 Adair E R 1942 The Evolution of Montreal under the French Regime PDF Report of the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association 21 1 20 41 doi 10 7202 300228ar Innis H A 1937 Significant Factors in Canadian Economic Development Canadian Historical Review 18 4 374 384 doi 10 3138 CHR 018 04 02 S2CID 162329527 Wien Thomas 1990 Selling Beaver Skins in North America and Europe 1720 1760 The Uses of Fur Trade Imperialism PDF Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 1 1 293 317 doi 10 7202 031021ar a b Lunn Jean 1939 The Illegal Fur Trade out of New France 1713 60 PDF Report of the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association 18 1 61 76 doi 10 7202 300187ar ISSN 0317 0594 Retrieved 20 February 2012 a b c d e Rich E E 1966 Montreal And The Fur Trade Montreal McGill University Press Iroquois Wars The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved 10 November 2022 La Rochelle 1641 Virtual Museum of New France Retrieved 9 November 2022 Jennings Francis 1984 The Ambiguous Iroquois Empire W W Norton pp 15 26 ISBN 978 0 393 01719 9 Friders James S 1993 Native Peoples in Canada Contemporary Conflicts Scarborough Ontario Prentice Hall Canada ISBN 978 0 1301 2204 9 metis Etymology origin and meaning of metis by etymonline www etymonline com Retrieved 9 November 2022 Government of Alberta Walking Together First Nations Metis and Inuit Perspectives in Curriculum FNMI Worldviews The Metis People Accessed November 9 2022 https www learnalberta ca content aswt worldviews documents metis people pdf Carlos Ann M Lewis Frank D 2010 Commerce by Frozen Sea Native Americans and the European Fur Trade Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0812204827 Iroquois Confederacy The Iroquois Confederacy s role in the French British rivalry Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 10 November 2022 Hudson s Bay Company is born May 2 1670 HBC Heritage Hudson s Bay Company Retrieved 14 November 2013 Explorers Radisson and des Groseilliers HBC Heritage Hudson s Bay Company Retrieved 14 November 2013 Fuchs Denise March 2002 Embattled Notions Constructions of Rupert s Land s Native Sons 1760 To 1861 Manitoba History Manitoba Historical Society 44 10 17 ISSN 0226 5044 Our History People Samuel Hearne HBC Heritage Hudson s Bay Company Retrieved 14 November 2007 a b Garvey Joan Widmer Mary Lou 2012 Beautiful Crescent A History of New Orleans reprint ed Gretna Louisiana Pelican Publishing ISBN 978 1455617425 Conrad Glenn R 1995 The French Experience in Louisiana Center for Louisiana Studies University of Southwestern Louisiana ISBN 978 0 9409 8497 4 Elizabeth Tooker 1979 Native North American spirituality of the eastern woodlands sacred myths dreams visions speeches healing formulas rituals and ceremonials Paulist Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 8091 2256 1 John E Findling Frank W Thackeray 2010 What Happened An Encyclopedia of Events That Changed America Forever ABC CLIO p 52 ISBN 978 1 59884 622 5 Shenwen Li 2001 Strategies missionnaires des Jesuites Francais en Nouvelle France et en Chine au XVIIieme siecle Les Presses de l Universite Laval L Harmattan p 44 ISBN 978 2 7475 1123 0 Miquelon Dale 16 December 2013 7 February 2006 Ville Marie Colony The Canadian Encyclopedia online ed Historica Canada Archived from the original on 27 February 2014 Retrieved 14 June 2016 a b c d Seeman Erik R 2011 The Huron Wendat Feast of the Dead Indian European Encounters in Early North America Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press p 95 ISBN 978 0 8018 9854 9 a b Stelle Lenville J et al 2005 Inoca Ethnohistory Project Eye Witness Descriptions of the Contact Generation 1673 1700 Champaign Illinois Center For Social Research Parkland College Retrieved 14 April 2010 Seeman 2011 p 50 Smith Andrea 2008 Native Americans and the Christian right the gendered politics of unlikely alliances New York Duke University Press p 116 ISBN 978 0 8223 4163 5 a b Randall Catherine 2011 Black Robes and Buckskin A Selection from the Jesuit Relations Toronto Fordham University Press p 98 ISBN 978 0 8232 3262 8 Historical Atlas of Canada University of Toronto Press 1987 pp 84 ISBN 978 0 8020 2495 4 a b Larin Robert 23 September 2011 The French Monarchy and Protestant Immigration to Canada Before 1760 The Social Political and Religious Contexts In Zuidema Jason ed French Speaking Protestants in Canada Histrorical Essays BRILL p 17 ISBN 978 90 04 21176 6 John Powell 2009 Encyclopedia of North American Immigration Infobase Publishing pp 101 ISBN 978 1 4381 1012 7 The first Canadian colony Acadia Musee virtuel du protestantisme Musee virtuel du protestantisme Retrieved 9 November 2022 Jaenen Cornelius J Huguenots The Canadian Encyclopedia The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 9 November 2022 a b Fish Malcolm Huguenots and Nouvelle France Tracing the Impact of the French Protestant Minority on Colonial Development in Canada PHP Dialogues Thompson Rivers University Retrieved 9 November 2022 a b c d Lareau Edmond 1881 Histoire du droit Canadien depuis les origines de la colonie jusqu a nos jours Vol I Domination Francaise Montreal Quebec A Periard p 244 a b c Lareau 1881 p 246 a b Lareau 1881 p 245 a b Lareau 1881 a b c Lareau 1881 p 247 a b Lareau 1881 p 249 Eccles W J 1998 The French in North America 1500 1783 East Lansing Michigan Michigan State University Press p 80 ISBN 978 1 5504 1076 1 Exhibitions Administration The Administration of Justice Champlain2004 org Retrieved 30 June 2010 dead link a b c Lareau 1881 p 248 Lareau 1881 p 251 Lareau 1881 p 252 Lareau 1881 p 253 Lareau 1881 p 254 Lareau 1881 p 261 a b c Lareau 1881 p 264 a b Lareau 1881 p 286 Lareau 1881 p 282 a b c d e f g Les structure judiciaire dans la justice sous le Regime francais Justice Quebec Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Lareau 1881 p 268 Lareau 1881 p 269 Vanderlinden Jacques 2004 Lieutenant Civil et Criminel Mathieu de Goutin en Acadie Francaise 1688 1710 Moncton New Brunswick Chaire d etudes acadiennes Universite de Moncton p 28 ISBN 978 0 9192 4116 9 a b Vanderlinden 2004 p 55 Vanderlinden 2004 p 201 a b c Vanderlinden 2004 p 69 Native Peoples of the Americas Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2010 p 99 ISBN 978 1 61535 365 1 Ayers Edward L Gould Lewis L Oshinsky David M Soderlund Jean R American Passages Cengage Learning p 78 ISBN 978 1 111 80846 4 Otterbein Keith F 2004 How War Began Texas A amp M University Press p 211 ISBN 978 1 60344 637 2 Adams Charles E 2013 Assault on a Culture Xlibris Corporation p 52 ISBN 978 1 4836 1293 5 self published source a b Our Proud History Algonquins of Ontario www tanakiwin com Retrieved 9 November 2022 Gough Barry M 2010 Historical Dictionary of Canada Scarecrow Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 8108 7504 3 Delage Denys 1995 Bitter Feast Amerindians and Europeans in Northeastern North America 1600 64 translated by Jane Brierley UBC Press p 277 ISBN 978 0 7748 4282 2 Wilson Keith 1980 Fur Trade In Canada Focus On Canadian History Series Toronto Grolier Limited a b Williamson William Durkee 1832 The history of the state of Maine Vol II Glazier Masters amp Co p 27 a b Griffiths N E S 2005 From Migrant to Acadian McGill Queen s University Press p 61 ISBN 978 0 7735 2699 0 a b Campbell William Edward 2005 The Road to Canada The Grand Communications Route from Saint John to Quebec Goose Lane Editions and The New Brunswick Heritage Military Project p 21 ISBN 978 0 8649 2426 1 Axelrod Alan 2007 Blooding at Great Meadows young George Washington and the battle that Shaped the Man Running Press p 62 ISBN 9780762432271 History of Louisbourg The Fortress Louisbourg Association 2008 Archived from the original on 23 July 2010 Retrieved 9 June 2010 Meductic Indian Village Fort Meductic National Historic Site of Canada Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved 20 December 2011 a b Grenier John 2008 The Far Reaches of Empire War in Nova Scotia 1710 1760 University of Oklahoma Press pp 51 54 ISBN 978 0 8061 3876 3 The Battle of the Monongahela World Digital Library 1755 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Rodriguez Junius P 2002 The Louisiana Purchase A Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 272 ISBN 978 1 5760 7188 5 Estimated population of Canada 1605 to present Statistics Canada 2009 Retrieved 26 August 2010 David L Preston 2009 The Texture of Contact European and Indian Settler Communities on the Frontiers of Iroquoia 1667 1783 U of Nebraska Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 8032 2549 7 Ronald J Dale 2004 The Fall of New France How the French Lost a North American Empire 1754 1763 James Lorimer amp Company p 2 ISBN 978 1 55028 840 7 John E Findling Frank W Thackeray 2011 What Happened An Encyclopedia of Events that Changed America Forever ABC CLIO p 38 ISBN 978 1 59884 621 8 Bogue Donald J Anderton Douglas L Barrett Richard E 2010 The Population of the United States 3rd Edition Simon and Schuster p 6 ISBN 978 1 4516 0312 5 University of Ottawa 2004 Canada at the Time of New France Archived from the original on 25 March 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2017 a b Jaenen Cornelius J 1982 Muise D A ed Canada during the French regime A Reader s Guide to Canadian History Volume 1 Beginnings to Confederation p 40 ISBN 978 0 8020 6442 4 Letourneau Jocelyn 2012 Buckner Phillip Reid John G eds What is to be done with 1759 Remembering 1759 The Conquest of Canada in Historical Memory University of Toronto Press p 279 ISBN 978 1 4426 9924 3 Organizers cancel mock Battle of the Plains of Abraham CBC 17 February 2009 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Further reading Edit New France Dictionary of Canadian Biography online ed University of Toronto Press 1979 2016 scholarly biographies of all major figures in New France Chartrand Rene 2008 The Forts of New France in Northeast America 1600 1763 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781472803184 Chartrand Rene 2008 The forts of New France the Great Lakes the Plains and the Gulf Coast 1600 1763 Bloomsbury USA ISBN 9781846035043 Charbonneau H et al 1993 The First French Canadians Pioneers in the St Lawrence Valley University of Delaware Press ISBN 9780874134544 Choquette Leslie 1997 Frenchmen into peasants modernity and tradition in the peopling of French Canada Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 32315 5 Dale Ronald J 2004 The Fall of New France How the French Lost a North American Empire 1754 1763 Toronto James Lorimer and Company Ltd ISBN 9781550288407 Dechene Louise 1992 Habitants and merchants in seventeenth century Montreal Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773509511 Eccles W J 1968 Canadian Society during the French Regime Canadian Historical Association Eccles W J 1969 The Canadian Frontier 1534 1760 Toronto Holt Rinehart Winston Greer Allan 1997 The people of New France Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 7816 2 Harris Richard Colebrook 1966 The Seigneurial System in Early Canada Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773504349 Maura Juan Francisco 4 June 2020 La invencion de la carta de Giovanni da Verrazano y de la Nouvelle France Canada The invention of the map by Giovanni da Verrazano of New France Canada Cuadernos Hispanoamericanos in Spanish Munro William Bennett 1906 The Office of Intendant in New France American Historical Review Oxford University Press 12 1 15 38 doi 10 2307 1832882 JSTOR 1832882 Moogk Peter N 2000 La Nouvelle France the making of French Canada a cultural history East Lansing Michigan State University Press ISBN 978 0 87013 528 6 Stiles T J ed 1998 Chapter 21 The Fall of New France The Colonizers In their own words 1st ed New York Perigee Books pp 394 418 ISBN 978 0 399 52390 8 LCCN 97041889 Trigger Bruce 1976 The Children of Aataentsic A history of the Huron People to 1660 Montreal McGill Queens University Press ISBN 9780773506275 Older classics Edit Kingsford William 1890 The History of Canada Canada under French rule Vol 4 Roswell amp Hutchinson Parkman Francis 1983 Francis Parkman France and England in North America Pioneers of France in the New World The Jesuits in North America in the Seventeenth Century La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West The Old Regime in Canada Count Frontenac and New France under Louis XIV A Half Century of Conflict Montcalm and Wolfe Vol 2 Library of America Wrong George M Langton H H eds 1914 The Chronicles of Canada Volume II The Rise of New France 2009 reissue ed Fireship Press ISBN 978 1 934757 45 1 Wrong George M 1918 The Conquest of New France A Chronicle of the Colonial Wars Yale University Press ISBN 978 1 58057 276 7 Retrieved 4 March 2011 Primary sources Edit Lawn Katherine Salvucci Claudio eds 2005 Women in New France Extracts from the Jesuit Relations Bristol Penn Evolution Publishing Historiography Edit Desbarats Catherine Greer Allan 2015 North America From the Top Down Visions from New France Journal of Early American History 5 2 109 136 doi 10 1163 18770703 00502008 Gagnon Serge 1978 The Historiography of New France 1960 1974 Jean Hamelin to Louise Dechene Journal of Canadian Studies University of Toronto Press 13 1 80 doi 10 3138 jcs 13 1 80 ISBN 9780887720260 S2CID 152109936 Greer Allan 2010 National Transnational and hypernational historiographies New France meets early American history Canadian Historical Review 91 4 695 724 doi 10 3138 chr 91 4 695 Peterson Mark October 2002 How and Why to Read Francis Parkman Common Place The Journal of Early American Life 3 1 In French Edit Havard Gilles Vidal Cecile 2003 Histoire de l Amerique francaise Paris Flammarion ISBN 978 2 08 210045 8 Lahaise Robert Vallerand Noel 1999 La Nouvelle France 1524 1760 Outremont Quebec Lanctot ISBN 978 2 89485 060 2 External links EditNew France at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Electronic New France Archived 12 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Internet gateway to everything New France archives heritage sites etc The Virtual Museum of New France Canadian Museum of Civilization France In America Bibliotheque nationale de France Library of Congress site click on Themes text and maps Chronologie de l histoire du Quebec French List of Governors Intendants and Bishops Archived 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New France amp oldid 1133863368, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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