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Samuel de Champlain

Samuel de Champlain (French: [samɥɛl də ʃɑ̃plɛ̃]; c. 13 August 1567[2][Note 1][Note 2] – 25 December 1635) was a French colonist, navigator, cartographer, draftsman, soldier, explorer, geographer, ethnologist, diplomat, and chronicler. He made between 21 and 29 trips across the Atlantic Ocean,[3] and founded Quebec, and New France, on 3 July 1608. An important figure in Canadian history, Champlain created the first accurate coastal map during his explorations, and founded various colonial settlements.

Samuel de Champlain
Inauthentic depiction of Champlain, by Théophile Hamel (1870), after the one by Ducornet, based on a portrait of Michel Particelli d'Emery by Balthasar Moncornet. No authentic portrait of Champlain is known to exist.[1]
Born
Samuel Champlain

(1567-08-13)13 August 1567[2]
Brouage or La Rochelle, France
Died25 December 1635(1635-12-25) (aged 68)
Other names"The Father of New France"
Occupation(s)Navigator, cartographer, soldier, explorer, administrator and chronicler of New France
Spouse
Hélène Boullé
(m. 1610)
Signature

Born into a family of sailors, Champlain began exploring North America in 1603, under the guidance of his uncle, François Gravé Du Pont.[4][5] After 1603, Champlain's life and career consolidated into the path he would follow for the rest of his life.[6]

From 1604 to 1607, he participated in the exploration and creation of the first permanent European settlement north of Florida, Port Royal, Acadia (1605).

In 1608, he established the French settlement that is now Quebec City.[Note 3]

Champlain was the first European to describe the Great Lakes, and published maps of his journeys and accounts of what he learned from the natives and the French living among the Natives.

He formed long time relationships with local Montagnais and Innu, and, later, with others farther west—tribes of the Ottawa River, Lake Nipissing, and Georgian Bay, and with Algonquin and Wendat. He agreed to provide assistance in the Beaver Wars against the Iroquois. He learned and mastered their languages.

Late in the year of 1615, Champlain returned to the Wendat and stayed with them over the winter, which permitted him to make the first ethnographic observations of this important nation, the events of which form the bulk of his book Voyages et Decouvertes faites en la Nouvelle France, depuis l’année 1615 published in 1619.[6]

In 1620, Louis XIII of France ordered Champlain to cease exploration, return to Quebec, and devote himself to the administration of the country.[Note 4]

In every way but formal title, Samuel de Champlain served as Governor of New France, a title that may have been formally unavailable to him owing to his non-noble status.[Note 5] Champlain established trading companies that sent goods, primarily fur, to France, and oversaw the growth of New France in the St. Lawrence River valley until his death, in 1635.

Many places, streets, and structures in northeastern North America today bear his name, most notably Lake Champlain.

Early life

 
Detail from "Défaite des Iroquois au Lac de Champlain," Champlain Voyages (1613). This self-portrait is the only surviving contemporary likeness of the explorer.[7]

Champlain was born to Antoine Champlain (also written "Anthoine Chappelain" in some records) and Marguerite Le Roy, in either Hiers-Brouage, or the port city of La Rochelle, in the French province of Aunis.

He was born on or before 13 August 1574, according to a recent baptism record found by Jean-Marie Germe, French genealogist.[2][Note 1][8]

Although in 1870, the Canadian Catholic priest Laverdière, in the first chapter of his Œuvres de Champlain, accepted Pierre-Damien Rainguet's[9] estimate of Champlain's birth in 1567 and tried to justify it, his calculations were based on assumptions now believed or proven, to be incorrect.

Although Léopold Delayant (member, secretary, then president of l'Académie des belles-lettres, sciences et arts de La Rochelle) wrote as early as 1867 that Rainguet's estimate was wrong, the books of Rainguet and Laverdière have had a significant influence. The 1567 date was carved on numerous monuments dedicated to Champlain and is widely regarded as accurate.

In the first half of the 20th century, some authors disagreed, choosing 1570 or 1575 instead of 1567. In 1978 Jean Liebel published groundbreaking research about these estimates of Champlain's birth year and concluded, "Samuel Champlain was born about 1580 in Brouage, France."[10]

Liebel asserts that some authors, including the Catholic priests Rainguet and Laverdière, preferred years when Brouage was under Catholic control (which include 1567, 1570, and 1575).[11] Champlain claimed to be from Brouage in the title of his 1603 book and to be Saintongeois in the title of his second book (1613).

He belonged to a Roman Catholic family in Brouage which was most of the time a Catholic city, Brouage was a royal fortress and its governor, from 1627 until his death in 1642, was Cardinal Richelieu.</ref> The exact location of his birth is thus also not known with certainty, but at the time of his birth his parents were living in Brouage.[Note 6]

 
Sir Sandford Fleming Park, Halifax, Nova Scotia – Stone from Samuel de Champlain's birthplace in Brouage, France (1574)

Born into a family of mariners (both his father and uncle-in-law were sailors, or navigators), Samuel Champlain learned to navigate, draw, make nautical charts, and write practical reports. His education did not include Ancient Greek or Latin, so he did not read or learn from any ancient literature.

As each French fleet had to assure its own defense at sea, Champlain sought to learn to fight with the firearms of his time: he acquired this practical knowledge when serving with the army of King Henry IV during the later stages of France's religious wars in Brittany from 1594 or 1595 to 1598, beginning as a quartermaster responsible for the feeding and care of horses.

During this time he claimed to go on a "certain secret voyage" for the king,[12] and saw combat (including maybe the Siege of Fort Crozon, at the end of 1594).[13] By 1597 he was a "capitaine d'une compagnie" serving in a garrison near Quimper.[13]

Early travels

 
Champlain and guide[14] in Isle La Motte, Vermont, at the site Champlain is said to have first set foot in Vermont (and encamped) in 1609. Lake Champlain is in the background. (Sculptor E.L.Weber, 1967; Photo by Matt Wills, 2009)

In year 3, his uncle-in-law, a navigator whose ship Saint-Julien was to transport Spanish troops to Cádiz pursuant to the Treaty of Vervins, gave Champlain the opportunity to accompany him.

After a difficult passage, he spent some time in Cádiz before his uncle, whose ship was then chartered to accompany a large Spanish fleet to the West Indies, again offered him a place on the ship. His uncle, who gave command of the ship to Jeronimo de Valaebrera, instructed the young Champlain to watch over the ship.[15]

This journey lasted two years and gave Champlain the opportunity to see or hear about Spanish holdings from the Caribbean to Mexico City. Along the way, he took detailed notes, wrote an illustrated report on what he learned on this trip, and gave this secret report to King Henry,[Note 7] who rewarded Champlain with an annual pension.

This report was published for the first time in 1870, by Laverdière, as Brief Discours des Choses plus remarquables que Samuel Champlain de Brouage a reconneues aux Indes Occidentalles au voiage qu'il en a faict en icettes en l'année 1599 et en l'année 1601, comme ensuite (and in English as Narrative of a Voyage to the West Indies and Mexico 1599–1602).

The authenticity of this account as a work written by Champlain has frequently been questioned, due to inaccuracies and discrepancies with other sources on a number of points; however, recent scholarship indicates that the work probably was authored by Champlain.[Note 8]

On Champlain's return to Cádiz in August 1600, his uncle Guillermo Elena (Guillaume Allene),[16] who had fallen ill, asked him to look after his business affairs. This Champlain did, and when his uncle died in June 1601, Champlain inherited his substantial estate. It included an estate near La Rochelle, commercial properties in Spain, and a 150-ton merchant ship.[17]

This inheritance, combined with the king's annual pension, gave the young explorer a great deal of independence, as he did not need to rely on the financial backing of merchants and other investors.[18]

From 1601 to 1603 Champlain served as a geographer in the court of King Henry IV. As part of his duties, he traveled to French ports and learned much about North America from the fishermen that seasonally traveled to coastal areas from Nantucket to Newfoundland to capitalize on the rich fishing grounds there.

He also made a study of previous French failures at colonization in the area, including that of Pierre de Chauvin at Tadoussac.[19] When Chauvin forfeited his monopoly on the fur trade in North America in 1602, responsibility for renewing the trade was given to Aymar de Chaste. Champlain approached de Chaste about a position on the first voyage, which he received with the king's assent.[20]

Champlain's first trip to North America was as an observer on a fur-trading expedition led by François Gravé Du Pont. Du Pont was a navigator and merchant who had been a ship's captain on Chauvin's expedition, and with whom Champlain established a firm lifelong friendship.

He educated Champlain about navigation in North America, including the Saint Lawrence River, and in dealing with the natives there (and in Acadia after).[4] The Bonne-Renommée (the Good Fame) arrived at Tadoussac on March 15, 1603. Champlain was anxious to see for himself all of the places that Jacques Cartier had seen and described sixty years earlier, and wanted to go even further than Cartier, if possible.

Champlain created a map of the Saint Lawrence on this trip and, after his return to France on 20 September, published an account as Des Sauvages: ou voyage de Samuel Champlain, de Brouages, faite en la France nouvelle l'an 1603 ("Concerning the Savages: or travels of Samuel Champlain of Brouages, made in New France in the year 1603").[Note 9]

Included in his account were meetings with Begourat, chief of the Montagnais at Tadoussac, in which positive relationships were established between the French and the many Montagnais gathered there, with some Algonquin friends.

Promising to King Henry to report on further discoveries, Champlain joined a second expedition to New France in the spring of 1604. This trip, once again an exploratory journey without women and children, lasted several years, and focused on areas south of the St. Lawrence River, in what later became known as Acadia. It was led by Pierre Dugua de Mons, a noble and Protestant merchant who had been given a fur trading monopoly in New France by the king. Dugua asked Champlain to find a site for winter settlement.

After exploring possible sites in the Bay of Fundy, Champlain selected Saint Croix Island in the St. Croix River as the site of the expedition's first winter settlement. After enduring a harsh winter on the island the settlement was relocated across the bay where they established Port Royal. Until 1607, Champlain used that site as his base, while he explored the Atlantic coast. Dugua was forced to leave the settlement for France in September 1605, because he learned that his monopoly was at risk. His monopoly was rescinded by the king in July 1607 under pressure from other merchants and proponents of free trade, leading to the abandonment of the settlement.

In 1605 and 1606, Champlain explored the North American coast as far south as Cape Cod, searching for sites for a permanent settlement. Minor skirmishes with the resident Nausets dissuaded him from the idea of establishing one near present-day Chatham, Massachusetts. He named the area Mallebar ("bad bar").[21][22]

Founding of Quebec

 
Plaque in Honfleur commemorating Champlain's departures
 
Painting by George Agnew Reid, done for the third centennial (1908), showing the arrival of Samuel de Champlain on the site of Quebec City.[Note 10]

In the spring of 1608, Dugua wanted Champlain to start a new French colony and fur trading centre on the shores of the St. Lawrence. Dugua equipped, at his own expense, a fleet of three ships with workers, that left the French port of Honfleur. The main ship, called Don-de-Dieu (French for Gift of God), was commanded by Champlain. Another ship, Lévrier (Hunt Dog), was commanded by his friend Du Pont. The small group of male settlers arrived at Tadoussac on the lower St. Lawrence in June. Because of the dangerous strength of the Saguenay River ending there, they left the ships and continued up the "Big River" in small boats bringing the men and the materials.[Note 10]

Upon arriving in Quebec, Champlain later wrote: "I arrived there on the third of July, when I searched for a place suitable for our settlement; but I could find none more convenient or better suited than the point of Quebec, so called by the savages, which was covered with nut-trees." Champlain ordered his men to gather lumber by cutting down the nut-trees for use in building habitations.[23]

Some days after Champlain's arrival in Quebec, Jean du Val, a member of Champlain's party, plotted to kill Champlain to the end of securing the settlement for the Basques or Spaniards and making a fortune for himself. Du Val's plot was ultimately foiled when an associate of Du Val confessed his involvement in the plot to Champlain's pilot, who informed Champlain. Champlain had a young man deliver Du Val, along with 3 co-conspirators, two bottles of wine and invite the four worthies to an event on board a boat. Soon after the four conspirators arrived on the boat, Champlain had them arrested. Du Val was strangled and hung in Quebec and his head was displayed in the "most conspicuous place" of Champlain's fort. The other three were sent back to France to be tried.[23]

Relations and war with Native Americans

 
Engraving based on a drawing by Champlain of his 1609 voyage. It depicts a battle between Iroquois and Algonquian tribes near Lake Champlain

During the summer of 1609, Champlain attempted to form better relations with the local First Nations tribes. He made alliances with the Wendat (called Huron by the French) and with the Algonquin, the Montagnais and the Etchemin, who lived in the area of the St. Lawrence River. These tribes sought Champlain's help in their war against the Iroquois, who lived farther south. Champlain set off with nine French soldiers and 300 natives to explore the Rivière des Iroquois (now known as the Richelieu River), and became the first European to map Lake Champlain. Having had no encounters with the Haudenosaunee at this point many of the men headed back, leaving Champlain with only 2 Frenchmen and 60 natives.

On 29 July, somewhere in the area near Ticonderoga and Crown Point, New York (historians are not sure which of these two places, but Fort Ticonderoga historians claim that it occurred near its site), Champlain and his party encountered a group of Haudenosaunee. In a battle that began the next day, two hundred and fifty Haudenosaunee advanced on Champlain's position, and one of his guides pointed out the three chiefs. In his account of the battle, Champlain recounts firing his arquebus and killing two of them with a single shot, after which one of his men killed the third. The Haudenosaunee turned and fled. While this cowed the Iroquois for some years, they would later return to successfully fight the French and Algonquin for the rest of the century.[Note 11]

The Battle of Sorel occurred on 19 June 1610, with Samuel de Champlain supported by the Kingdom of France and his allies, the Wendat people, Algonquin people and Innu people against the Mohawk people in New France at present-day Sorel-Tracy, Quebec. Champlain's forces armed with the arquebus engaged and slaughtered or captured nearly all of the Mohawks. The battle ended major hostilities with the Mohawks for twenty years.[24]

Marriage

One route Champlain may have chosen to improve his access to the court of the regent was his decision to enter into marriage with the twelve-year-old Hélène Boullé. She was the daughter of Nicolas Boullé, a man charged with carrying out royal decisions at court. The marriage contract was signed on 27 December 1610 in presence of Dugua, who had dealt with the father, and the couple was married three days later. The terms of the contract called for the marriage to be consummated two years later.[25]

Champlain's marriage was initially quite troubled, as Hélène rallied against joining him in August 1613. Their relationship, while it apparently lacked any physical connection, recovered and was apparently good for many years.[26] Hélène lived in Quebec for several years,[27] but returned to Paris and eventually decided to enter a convent. The couple had no children, and Champlain adopted three Montagnais girls named Faith, Hope, and Charity in the winter of 1627–28.

Exploration of New France

 
Chaleur Bay and Gulf of Saint Lawrence — extract of Champlain 1612 map
 
Marine astrolabe attributed to Champlain, made in France in 1603, found in Ontario in 1867.

On 29 March 1613, arriving back in New France, he first ensured that his new royal commission be proclaimed. Champlain set out on May 27 to continue his exploration of the Huron country and in hopes of finding the "northern sea" he had heard about (probably Hudson Bay). He travelled the Ottawa River, later giving the first description of this area.[Note 12] Along the way, he apparently dropped or left behind a cache of silver cups, copper kettles, and a brass astrolabe dated 1603 (Champlain's Astrolabe), which was later found by a farm boy named Edward Lee near Cobden, Ontario.[28] It was in June that he met with Tessouat, the Algonquin chief of Allumettes Island, and offered to build the tribe a fort if they were to move from the area they occupied, with its poor soil, to the locality of the Lachine Rapids.[22]

By 26 August, Champlain was back in Saint-Malo. There, he wrote an account of his life from 1604 to 1612 and his journey up the Ottawa river, his Voyages[29] and published another map of New France. In 1614, he formed the "Compagnie des Marchands de Rouen et de Saint-Malo" and "Compagnie de Champlain", which bound the Rouen and Saint-Malo merchants for eleven years. He returned to New France in the spring of 1615 with four Recollects in order to further religious life in the new colony. The Roman Catholic Church was eventually given en seigneurie large and valuable tracts of land, estimated at nearly 30% of all the lands granted by the French Crown in New France.[30]

In 1615, Champlain reunited with Étienne Brûlé, his capable interpreter, following separate four-year explorations. There, Brûlé reported North American explorations, including that he had been joined by another French interpreter named Grenolle with whom he had travelled along the north shore of la mer douce (the calm sea), now known as Lake Huron, to the great rapids of Sault Ste. Marie, where Lake Superior enters Lake Huron, some of which was recorded by Champlain.[31][32]

Champlain continued to work to improve relations with the natives, promising to help them in their struggles against the Iroquois. With his native guides, he explored further up the Ottawa River and reached Lake Nipissing. He then followed the French River until he reached Lake Huron.[33]

In 1615, Champlain was escorted through the area that is now Peterborough, Ontario by a group of Wendat. He used the ancient portage between Chemong Lake and Little Lake (now Chemong Road) and stayed for a short period of time near what is now Bridgenorth.[34]

Military expedition

 
Samuel de Champlain, Nepean Point, Ottawa by Hamilton MacCarthy

On 1 September 1615, at Cahiagué (a Wendat community on what is now called Lake Simcoe), he and the northern tribes started a military expedition against the Iroquois. The party passed Lake Ontario at its eastern tip where they hid their canoes and continued their journey by land. They followed the Oneida River until they arrived at the main Onondaga fort on October 10. The exact location of this place is still a matter of debate. Although the traditional location, Nichols Pond, is regularly disproved by professional and amateur archaeologists, many still claim that Nichols Pond is the location of the battle, 10 miles (16 km) south of Canastota, New York.[35] Champlain attacked the stockaded Oneida village. He was accompanied by 10 Frenchmen and 300 Wendat. Pressured by the Huron Wendat to attack prematurely, the assault failed. Champlain was wounded twice in the leg by arrows, one in his knee. The conflict ended on October 16 when the French Wendat were forced to flee.[citation needed]

Although he did not want to, the Wendat insisted that Champlain spend the winter with them. During his stay, he set off with them in their great deer hunt, during which he became lost and was forced to wander for three days living off game and sleeping under trees until he met up with a band of First Nations people by chance. He spent the rest of the winter learning "their country, their manners, customs, modes of life". On 22 May 1616, he left the Wendat country and returned to Quebec before heading back to France on 2 July.[citation needed]

Improving administration in New France

 
Map of New France (Champlain, 1612). A more precise map was drawn by Champlain in 1632.
 
19th century artist's conception of Champlain by E. Ronjat.[36]

Champlain returned to New France in 1620 and was to spend the rest of his life focusing on administration of the territory rather than exploration. Champlain spent the winter building Fort Saint-Louis on top of Cape Diamond. By mid-May, he learned that the fur trading monopoly had been handed over to another company led by the Caen brothers. After some tense negotiations, it was decided to merge the two companies under the direction of the Caens. Champlain continued to work on relations with the natives and managed to impose on them a chief of his choice. He also negotiated a peace treaty with the Iroquois.

Champlain continued to work on the fortifications of what became Quebec City, laying the first stone on 6 May 1624. On 15 August he once again returned to France where he was encouraged to continue his work as well as to continue looking for a passage to China, something widely believed to exist at the time. By July 5 he was back at Quebec and continued expanding the city.

In 1627 the Caen brothers' company lost its monopoly on the fur trade, and Cardinal Richelieu (who had joined the Royal Council in 1624 and rose rapidly to a position of dominance in French politics that he would hold until his death in 1642) formed the Compagnie des Cent-Associés (the Hundred Associates) to manage the fur trade. Champlain was one of the 100 investors, and its first fleet, loaded with colonists and supplies, set sail in April 1628.[37]

Champlain had overwintered in Quebec. Supplies were low, and English merchants sacked Cap Tourmente in early July 1628.[38] A war had broken out between France and England, and Charles I of England had issued letters of marque that authorized the capture of French shipping and its colonies in North America.[39] Champlain received a summons to surrender on July 10 from the Kirke brothers, two Scottish brothers who were working for the English government. Champlain refused to deal with them, misleading them to believe that Quebec's defenses were better than they actually were (Champlain had only 50 pounds of gunpowder to defend the community). Successfully bluffed, they withdrew, but encountered and captured the French supply fleet, cutting off that year's supplies to the colony.[40] By the spring of 1629 supplies were dangerously low and Champlain was forced to send people to Gaspé and into Indian communities to conserve rations.[41] On July 19, the Kirke brothers arrived before Quebec after intercepting Champlain's plea for help, and Champlain was forced to surrender the colony.[42] Many colonists were transported first to England and then to France by the Kirkes, but Champlain remained in London to begin the process of regaining the colony. A peace treaty had been signed in April 1629, three months before the surrender, and, under the terms of that treaty, Quebec and other prizes that were taken by the Kirkes after the treaty were to be returned.[43] It was not until the 1632 Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, however, that Quebec was formally given back to France. (David Kirke was rewarded when Charles I knighted him and gave him a charter for Newfoundland.) Champlain reclaimed his role as commander of New France on behalf of Richelieu on 1 March 1633, having served in the intervening years as commander in New France "in the absence of my Lord the Cardinal de Richelieu" from 1629 to 1635.[44] In 1632 Champlain published Voyages de la Nouvelle-France, which was dedicated to Cardinal Richelieu, and Traitté de la marine et du devoir d'un bon marinier, a treatise on leadership, seamanship, and navigation. (Champlain made more than twenty-five round-trip crossings of the Atlantic in his lifetime, without losing a single ship.)[45]

Last return, and last years working in Quebec

Champlain returned to Quebec on 22 May 1633, after an absence of four years. Richelieu gave him a commission as Lieutenant General of New France, along with other titles and responsibilities, but not that of governor. Despite this lack of formal status, many colonists, French merchants, and Indians treated him as if he had the title; writings survive in which he is referred to as "our governor".[46] On 18 August 1634, he sent a report to Richelieu stating that he had rebuilt on the ruins of Quebec, enlarged its fortifications, and established two more habitations. One was 15 leagues upstream, and the other was at Trois-Rivières. He also began an offensive against the Iroquois, reporting that he wanted them either wiped out or "brought to reason".[citation needed]

Death and burial

Champlain had a severe stroke in October 1635, and died on 25 December, leaving no immediate heirs. Jesuit records state he died in the care of his friend and confessor Charles Lallemant.[citation needed]

Although his will (drafted on 17 November 1635) gave much of his French property to his wife Hélène Boullé, he made significant bequests to the Catholic missions and to individuals in the colony of Quebec. However, Marie Camaret, a cousin on his mother's side, challenged the will in Paris and had it overturned. It is unclear exactly what happened to his estate.[47][48][49]

Samuel de Champlain was temporarily buried in the church while a standalone chapel was built to hold his remains in the upper part of the city. Unfortunately, this small building, along with many others, was destroyed by a large fire in 1640. Though immediately rebuilt, no traces of it exist anymore: his exact burial site is still unknown, despite much research since about 1850, including several archaeological digs in the city. There is general agreement that the previous Champlain chapel site, and the remains of Champlain, should be somewhere near the Notre-Dame de Québec Cathedral.[50][51]

The search for Champlain's remains supplies a key plot-line in the crime writer Louise Penny's 2010 novel, Bury Your Dead.[52]

Legacy

 
Statue of Samuel de Champlain at sunrise (looking to the north-west; with a similar expressive face as traditionally Jacques Cartier's), by Paul-Romain Marie Léonce Chevré [fr] (Paris, 1896–1898), as newly repaired for 2008, at Quebec City since 1898, near Château Frontenac grand hotel, on the Terrasse Dufferin.

Many sites and landmarks have been named to honour Champlain, who was a prominent figure in many parts of Acadia, Ontario, Quebec, New York, and Vermont. Memorialized as the "Father of New France" and "Father of Acadia", his historic significance endures in modern times. Lake Champlain, which straddles the border between northern New York and Vermont, extending slightly across the border into Canada, was named by him, in 1609, when he led an expedition along the Richelieu River, exploring a long, narrow lake situated between the Green Mountains of present-day Vermont and the Adirondack Mountains of present-day New York. The first European to map and describe it, Champlain claimed the lake as his namesake.

Memorials include:

Bibliography

These are works that were written by Champlain:

  • Brief Discours des Choses plus remarquables que Sammuel Champlain de Brouage a reconneues aux Indes Occidentalles au voiage qu'il en a faict en icettes en l'année 1599 et en l'année 1601, comme ensuite (first French publication 1870, first English publication 1859 as Narrative of a Voyage to the West Indies and Mexico 1599–1602)
  • Des Sauvages: ou voyage de Samuel Champlain, de Brouages, faite en la France nouvelle l'an 1603 (first French publication 1604, first English publication 1625)
  • Voyages de la Nouvelle-France (first French publication 1632)
  • Traitté de la marine et du devoir d'un bon marinier (first French publication 1632)

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ a b For a detailed analysis of his baptismal record, see Ritch
  2. ^ The baptism act does not contain information about the age of Samuel, neither his birth date nor his place of birth.
  3. ^ Thanks to Pierre Dugua de Mons, who fully financed—at a loss—the first years of both French settlements in North America (first Acadia, then Quebec).
  4. ^ According to Trudel (1979), Louis was 18 years old, an inexperienced minor (when age of majority was 25), and Champlain was lieutenant to the Prince de Condé, the viceroy of New France since 1612, who, as Trudel writes, "was liberated [from jail, where he been for 3 years] in October 1619, and yielded his rights as viceroy to Henri II de Montmorency, admiral of France. The latter confirmed Champlain in his office [...]. On 7 May 1620, Louis XIII wrote to Champlain to enjoin him to maintain the country 'in obedience to me, making the people who are there live as closely in conformity with the laws of my kingdom as you can.' From that moment Champlain was to devote himself exclusively to the administration of the country; he was to undertake no further great voyages of discovery; his career as an explorer had ended."
  5. ^ Some say that the King of France made him his "royal geographer", but it is unproven and may only come from Marc Lescarbot books: Champlain never used that title. The honorific "de" was only added to his name from 1610, when he was already well-known, right after his patron, King Henry IV, was murdered. This usage by a non-noble was tolerated so that he would continue to gain access to the court during the long regency of King Louis XIII (who was only eight years old at the death of his father). Champlain received the official title of "lieutenant" (adjunct representative) of whichever noble was designated as Viceroy of New France, the first being Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Mons. In 1629, Champlain was named "commandant" under the authority of the King Minister, Richelieu. It was Champlain's successor, Charles Jacques Huault de Montmagny, who was the first to be formally named as the governor of New France, when he moved to Quebec City in 1636 and became the first noble to live there in that century.
  6. ^ His family lived in Brouage at the time of his birth; the exact place and date of his birth are unknown.Britannica.com
  7. ^ Three different handwritten copies of this report still exist. One of them is at the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University.
  8. ^ For a detailed treatment of claims against Champlain's authorship, see the chapter by François-Marc Gagnon in Litalien (2004), pp. 84ff. Fischer (2008), pp. 586ff also addresses these claims and accepts Champlain's authorship.
  9. ^ Champlain did not begin using the honorific de in his name until at least 1610 when he married, the year King Henry was murdered. A reprint of this book in 1612 was credited to "Sieur de Champlain, civilization.ca
  10. ^ a b Only at his last arrival (in 1633), Champlain did not leave the ships at Tadoussac but sailed them directly to Quebec City.Trudel (1979)
  11. ^ In 1701, The Great Peace Treaty was signed in Montreal, involving the French and every Indigenous nation coming or living on the shores of the Saint Lawrence River except maybe in wintertime.
  12. ^ In 1953, a rock was found at a location now known as the Champlain lookout, which bore the inscription "Champlain juin 2, 1613". What about this finding?

Citations

  1. ^ Bishop (1948), pp 6–7
  2. ^ a b c Fichier Origine
  3. ^ "Samuel de Champlain". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2018-01-30.
  4. ^ a b d'Avignon (2008)
  5. ^ Vaugeois (2008)
  6. ^ a b Heidenreich, Conrad E.; Ritch, K. Janet, eds. (2010). Samuel de Champlain before 1604: Des Sauvages and Other Documents Related to the Period. The Publications of the Champlain Society. p. 16. doi:10.3138/9781442620339. ISBN 978-0-7735-3756-9.
  7. ^ Fischer (2008), p. 3
  8. ^ Germe, p. 2
  9. ^ Rainguet (1851)
  10. ^ Liebel (1978), p. 236
  11. ^ Liebel (1978), pp. 229–237.
  12. ^ Fischer (2008), p. 62
  13. ^ a b Fischer (2008), p. 65 Note: Fischer cites numerous other authorities in repeating this.
  14. ^ Weber (1967)
  15. ^ Litalien (2004), p. 87
  16. ^ Heidenreich, Conrad E.; Ritch, K. Janet, eds. (2010). Samuel de Champlain before 1604: Des Sauvages and Other Documents Related to the Period. The Publications of the Champlain Society. p. 14. doi:10.3138/9781442620339. ISBN 978-0-7735-3756-9.
  17. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 98–99
  18. ^ Fischer (2008), p. 100
  19. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 100–117
  20. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 121–123
  21. ^ NPS
  22. ^ a b Vermont Map
  23. ^ a b "Founding of Quebec | Early Americas Digital Archive (EADA)". eada.lib.umd.edu. Retrieved 2021-02-20.
  24. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 577–578
  25. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 287–288
  26. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 313–316
  27. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 374–5
  28. ^ Brebner, John Bartlett (1966). The Explorers of North America, 1492–1806. Cleveland, Ohio: The World Publishing Company. p. 135.
  29. ^ Champlain (1613)
  30. ^ Dalton (1968)
  31. ^ Butterfield, Consul Willshire (1898). History of Brulé's Discoveries and Explorations, 1610–1626. Cleveland, Ohio: Helman-Taylor. pp. 49–51.(online: archive.org, Library of Congress)
  32. ^ "The Explorers Étienne Brûlé 1615-1621". Virtual Museum of New France. Canadian Museum of History. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  33. ^ "Samuel de Champlain: timeline". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  34. ^ Williams, Doug (September 8, 2015). . Peterborough Examiner. Archived from the original on February 20, 2018. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  35. ^ Weiskotten (1998)
  36. ^ Guizot, p. 190
  37. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 404–410
  38. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 410–412
  39. ^ Fischer (2008), p. 409
  40. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 412–415
  41. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 418–420
  42. ^ Fischer (2008), p. 421
  43. ^ Fischer (2008), p. 428
  44. ^ Trudel (1979)
  45. ^ Fischer (2008), p. 447
  46. ^ Fischer (2008), pp. 445–446
  47. ^ Fischer (2008), p. 520
  48. ^ Heidenreich
  49. ^ Le Blant (1964), pp 425–437
  50. ^ Champlain: Travels in the Canadian Francophonie
  51. ^ La Chappelle
  52. ^ Penny (2010)
  53. ^ Acadia National Park
  54. ^ Saint John Additional Information September 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ Gicker (2006)
  56. ^ "Orillia's Champlain monument restoration on hold". 18 July 2018.

References

  • "Acadia National Park". Oh Ranger. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  • Bishop, Morris (1948). Samuel de Champlain: The Life of Fortitude. New York: Knopf.
  • Champlain, Samuel (1613). Les voyages du Sieur de Champlain, Saintongeois, capitaine ordinaire pour le Roy en la Marine (in French). J. Berjon.
  • Dalton, Roy C. (1968). The Jesuit Estates Question, 1760–88. University of Toronto Press. p. 60.
  • d'Avignon (Davignon), Mathieu (2008). Champlain et les fondateurs oubliés, les figures du père et le mythe de la fondation (in French). Quebec City: Les Presses de l'Université Laval (PUL). p. 558. ISBN 978-2-7637-8644-5. Note: Mathieu d'Avignon (Ph.D. in history, Laval University, 2006) is an affiliate researcher into the University of Quebec at Chicoutimi Research Group on History. He is preparing a special new full edition, in modern French, of Champlain's Voyages in New France.
  • Germe, Jean-Marie (April 15, 2012). "Journal le Soleil": 2. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)[dead link]
  • "Champlain (de), Samuel". Fichier Origine (in French). Retrieved 2015-07-21.
  • (in French). Archived from the original on September 4, 2015. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  • Fischer, David Hackett (2008). Champlain's Dream. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4165-9332-4.
  • Gicker, William J., ed. (2006). "Samuel de Champlain 39¢ (USA); Samuel de Champlain 51¢ (Canada)". USA Philatelic. 11 (3): 7. This souvenir sheet celebrates the 400th anniversary of the explorations of Samuel de Champlain in 1606.
  • Guizot, François Pierre Guillaume. "Chapter 53". A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times. Vol. 6. Black, Robert (trans). Boston: Dana Estes & Charles E. Lauriat (Imp.).
  • Heidenreich, Conrad E. (August 8, 2008). . Métis sur mer. Archived from the original on May 12, 2013. This lecture is based on parts of a book by Conrad E. Heidenreich and K. Janet Ritch soon to by published by The Champlain Society, provisionally entitled: The Works of Samuel de Champlain: Des Sauvages and other Documents Related to the Period before 1604.
  • Le Blant, Robert (1964). "Le triste veuvage d'Hélène Boullé" [The sad widow of Hélène Boullé] (PDF). Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française (in French). 18 (3): 425. doi:10.7202/302392ar. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  • Liebel, Jean (September 1978). "On a vieilli Champlain" [They made Champlain older]. La Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française (in French). 32 (2): 229–237. doi:10.7202/303691ar.
  • Litalien, Raymonde; Vaugeois, Denis, eds. (2004). Champlain: the Birth of French America. Roth, Käthe (trans). McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 0-7735-2850-4.
  • "Malle Barre (Modern Nauset Harbor, Eastham, MA)". Archeology Program. National Park Service. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  • Penny, Louise (2010). Bury Your Dead. New York: Minotaur. ISBN 978-0-3123-7704-5.
  • Rainguet, Pierre-Damien (1851). Biographie Saintongeaise ou Dictionnaire Historique de Tous les Personnages qui se sont Illustrés dans les Anciennes Provinces de Saintonge et d'Aunis jusqu'à Nos Jours (in French). Saintes, France: M. Niox. OCLC 466560584.
  • Ritch, Janet. . The Champlain Society. Archived from the original on 2013-12-05. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  • . Travel Vermont. Archived from the original on November 11, 2010. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  • . Champlain : Travels in the Canadian Francophonie. Archived from the original on 2015-07-22. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  • Trudel, Marcel (1979) [1966]. "Samuel de Champlain". In Brown, George Williams (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. I (1000–1700) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. Retrieved 2009-05-28.
  • Vaugeois, Denis (June 2, 2008). . 133e congrès du comtié des travaux historiques et scientifiques (CTHS) (in French). Québec City. Archived from the original on May 13, 2013.
  • Weber, E. L. (Sculptor). "Samuel de Champlain, (sculpture)". Art Inventories Catalog. Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 2015-07-21.
  • Weiskotten, Daniel H. (July 1, 1998). "The Real Battle of Nichols Pond". Roots Web, Ancestry.com. Retrieved 2013-07-12.

Further reading

  • Champlain, Samuel de (2005). Voyages of Samuel de Champlain, 1604–1918: with a map and two plans. Elibron Classics. ISBN 1-4021-2853-3.
  • Dix, Edwin Asa. (1903). Champlain, the Founder of New France, IndyPublish ISBN 1-4179-2270-2
  • Laverdière, Abbé Charles-Honoré Cauchon (1870). Œuvres de Champlain (in French). Quebec City: Desbarats. Œuvres de Champlain.
  • Morganelli, Adrianna (2006). Samuel de Champlain: from New France to Cape Cod. Crabtree Pub. ISBN 978-0-7787-2414-8. Samuel de Champlain.
  • Morison, Samuel Eliot, (1972). Samuel de Champlain: Father of New France Little Brown, ISBN 0-316-58399-5
  • Sherman, Josepha (2003). Samuel de Champlain, Explorer of the Great Lakes Region and Founder of Quebec. Group's Rosen Central. ISBN 0-8239-3629-5. Samuel de Champlain.

External links

  Media related to Samuel de Champlain at Wikimedia Commons

  • Works by Samuel de Champlain at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Samuel de Champlain at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about Samuel de Champlain at Internet Archive
  • From Marcel Trudel: Champlain, Samuel de 2017-09-21 at the Wayback Machine (at The Canadian Encyclopedia)
  • Biography at the Museum of Civilization
  • They Didn't Name That Lake for Nothing, Sunday Book Review, The New York Times, October 31, 2008
  • World Digital Library presentation of Descripsion des costs, pts., rades, illes de la Nouuele France faict selon son vray méridienor Description of the Coasts, Points, Harbours and Islands of New France. Library of Congress. Primary source portolan style chart on vellum with summary description, image with enhanced view and zoom features, text to speech capability. French. Links to related content. Content available as TIF. One of the major cartographic resources, this map offers the first thorough delineation of the New England and Canadian coasts from Cape Sable to Cape Cod.
  • from the World Digital Library
  • (in French)
  • (in French) From Samuel de Champlain: (at Rare Book Room)
  • (in French) Baptismal parish register, August 13, 1574, protestant temple Saint.Yon, La Rochelle
  • (in French) Digitized copy of Champlain's Des Sauvages from the John Carter Brown Library
Government offices
Preceded by Lieutenant General of New France
1632–1635
Succeeded by

samuel, champlain, other, uses, champlain, disambiguation, french, samɥɛl, ʃɑ, plɛ, august, 1567, note, note, december, 1635, french, colonist, navigator, cartographer, draftsman, soldier, explorer, geographer, ethnologist, diplomat, chronicler, made, between,. For other uses see Champlain disambiguation Samuel de Champlain French samɥɛl de ʃɑ plɛ c 13 August 1567 2 Note 1 Note 2 25 December 1635 was a French colonist navigator cartographer draftsman soldier explorer geographer ethnologist diplomat and chronicler He made between 21 and 29 trips across the Atlantic Ocean 3 and founded Quebec and New France on 3 July 1608 An important figure in Canadian history Champlain created the first accurate coastal map during his explorations and founded various colonial settlements Samuel de ChamplainInauthentic depiction of Champlain by Theophile Hamel 1870 after the one by Ducornet based on a portrait of Michel Particelli d Emery by Balthasar Moncornet No authentic portrait of Champlain is known to exist 1 BornSamuel Champlain 1567 08 13 13 August 1567 2 Brouage or La Rochelle FranceDied25 December 1635 1635 12 25 aged 68 Quebec City New France Now Quebec Canada Other names The Father of New France Occupation s Navigator cartographer soldier explorer administrator and chronicler of New FranceSpouseHelene Boulle m 1610 wbr SignatureBorn into a family of sailors Champlain began exploring North America in 1603 under the guidance of his uncle Francois Grave Du Pont 4 5 After 1603 Champlain s life and career consolidated into the path he would follow for the rest of his life 6 From 1604 to 1607 he participated in the exploration and creation of the first permanent European settlement north of Florida Port Royal Acadia 1605 In 1608 he established the French settlement that is now Quebec City Note 3 Champlain was the first European to describe the Great Lakes and published maps of his journeys and accounts of what he learned from the natives and the French living among the Natives He formed long time relationships with local Montagnais and Innu and later with others farther west tribes of the Ottawa River Lake Nipissing and Georgian Bay and with Algonquin and Wendat He agreed to provide assistance in the Beaver Wars against the Iroquois He learned and mastered their languages Late in the year of 1615 Champlain returned to the Wendat and stayed with them over the winter which permitted him to make the first ethnographic observations of this important nation the events of which form the bulk of his book Voyages et Decouvertes faites en la Nouvelle France depuis l annee 1615 published in 1619 6 In 1620 Louis XIII of France ordered Champlain to cease exploration return to Quebec and devote himself to the administration of the country Note 4 In every way but formal title Samuel de Champlain served as Governor of New France a title that may have been formally unavailable to him owing to his non noble status Note 5 Champlain established trading companies that sent goods primarily fur to France and oversaw the growth of New France in the St Lawrence River valley until his death in 1635 Many places streets and structures in northeastern North America today bear his name most notably Lake Champlain Contents 1 Early life 2 Early travels 3 Founding of Quebec 4 Relations and war with Native Americans 5 Marriage 6 Exploration of New France 7 Military expedition 8 Improving administration in New France 9 Last return and last years working in Quebec 10 Death and burial 11 Legacy 12 Bibliography 13 Notes and references 13 1 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life Edit Detail from Defaite des Iroquois au Lac de Champlain Champlain Voyages 1613 This self portrait is the only surviving contemporary likeness of the explorer 7 Champlain was born to Antoine Champlain also written Anthoine Chappelain in some records and Marguerite Le Roy in either Hiers Brouage or the port city of La Rochelle in the French province of Aunis He was born on or before 13 August 1574 according to a recent baptism record found by Jean Marie Germe French genealogist 2 Note 1 8 Although in 1870 the Canadian Catholic priest Laverdiere in the first chapter of his Œuvres de Champlain accepted Pierre Damien Rainguet s 9 estimate of Champlain s birth in 1567 and tried to justify it his calculations were based on assumptions now believed or proven to be incorrect Although Leopold Delayant member secretary then president of l Academie des belles lettres sciences et arts de La Rochelle wrote as early as 1867 that Rainguet s estimate was wrong the books of Rainguet and Laverdiere have had a significant influence The 1567 date was carved on numerous monuments dedicated to Champlain and is widely regarded as accurate In the first half of the 20th century some authors disagreed choosing 1570 or 1575 instead of 1567 In 1978 Jean Liebel published groundbreaking research about these estimates of Champlain s birth year and concluded Samuel Champlain was born about 1580 in Brouage France 10 Liebel asserts that some authors including the Catholic priests Rainguet and Laverdiere preferred years when Brouage was under Catholic control which include 1567 1570 and 1575 11 Champlain claimed to be from Brouage in the title of his 1603 book and to be Saintongeois in the title of his second book 1613 He belonged to a Roman Catholic family in Brouage which was most of the time a Catholic city Brouage was a royal fortress and its governor from 1627 until his death in 1642 was Cardinal Richelieu lt ref gt The exact location of his birth is thus also not known with certainty but at the time of his birth his parents were living in Brouage Note 6 Sir Sandford Fleming Park Halifax Nova Scotia Stone from Samuel de Champlain s birthplace in Brouage France 1574 Born into a family of mariners both his father and uncle in law were sailors or navigators Samuel Champlain learned to navigate draw make nautical charts and write practical reports His education did not include Ancient Greek or Latin so he did not read or learn from any ancient literature As each French fleet had to assure its own defense at sea Champlain sought to learn to fight with the firearms of his time he acquired this practical knowledge when serving with the army of King Henry IV during the later stages of France s religious wars in Brittany from 1594 or 1595 to 1598 beginning as a quartermaster responsible for the feeding and care of horses During this time he claimed to go on a certain secret voyage for the king 12 and saw combat including maybe the Siege of Fort Crozon at the end of 1594 13 By 1597 he was a capitaine d une compagnie serving in a garrison near Quimper 13 Early travels Edit Champlain and guide 14 in Isle La Motte Vermont at the site Champlain is said to have first set foot in Vermont and encamped in 1609 Lake Champlain is in the background Sculptor E L Weber 1967 Photo by Matt Wills 2009 In year 3 his uncle in law a navigator whose ship Saint Julien was to transport Spanish troops to Cadiz pursuant to the Treaty of Vervins gave Champlain the opportunity to accompany him After a difficult passage he spent some time in Cadiz before his uncle whose ship was then chartered to accompany a large Spanish fleet to the West Indies again offered him a place on the ship His uncle who gave command of the ship to Jeronimo de Valaebrera instructed the young Champlain to watch over the ship 15 This journey lasted two years and gave Champlain the opportunity to see or hear about Spanish holdings from the Caribbean to Mexico City Along the way he took detailed notes wrote an illustrated report on what he learned on this trip and gave this secret report to King Henry Note 7 who rewarded Champlain with an annual pension This report was published for the first time in 1870 by Laverdiere as Brief Discours des Choses plus remarquables que Samuel Champlain de Brouage a reconneues aux Indes Occidentalles au voiage qu il en a faict en icettes en l annee 1599 et en l annee 1601 comme ensuite and in English as Narrative of a Voyage to the West Indies and Mexico 1599 1602 The authenticity of this account as a work written by Champlain has frequently been questioned due to inaccuracies and discrepancies with other sources on a number of points however recent scholarship indicates that the work probably was authored by Champlain Note 8 On Champlain s return to Cadiz in August 1600 his uncle Guillermo Elena Guillaume Allene 16 who had fallen ill asked him to look after his business affairs This Champlain did and when his uncle died in June 1601 Champlain inherited his substantial estate It included an estate near La Rochelle commercial properties in Spain and a 150 ton merchant ship 17 This inheritance combined with the king s annual pension gave the young explorer a great deal of independence as he did not need to rely on the financial backing of merchants and other investors 18 From 1601 to 1603 Champlain served as a geographer in the court of King Henry IV As part of his duties he traveled to French ports and learned much about North America from the fishermen that seasonally traveled to coastal areas from Nantucket to Newfoundland to capitalize on the rich fishing grounds there He also made a study of previous French failures at colonization in the area including that of Pierre de Chauvin at Tadoussac 19 When Chauvin forfeited his monopoly on the fur trade in North America in 1602 responsibility for renewing the trade was given to Aymar de Chaste Champlain approached de Chaste about a position on the first voyage which he received with the king s assent 20 Champlain s first trip to North America was as an observer on a fur trading expedition led by Francois Grave Du Pont Du Pont was a navigator and merchant who had been a ship s captain on Chauvin s expedition and with whom Champlain established a firm lifelong friendship He educated Champlain about navigation in North America including the Saint Lawrence River and in dealing with the natives there and in Acadia after 4 The Bonne Renommee the Good Fame arrived at Tadoussac on March 15 1603 Champlain was anxious to see for himself all of the places that Jacques Cartier had seen and described sixty years earlier and wanted to go even further than Cartier if possible Champlain created a map of the Saint Lawrence on this trip and after his return to France on 20 September published an account as Des Sauvages ou voyage de Samuel Champlain de Brouages faite en la France nouvelle l an 1603 Concerning the Savages or travels of Samuel Champlain of Brouages made in New France in the year 1603 Note 9 Included in his account were meetings with Begourat chief of the Montagnais at Tadoussac in which positive relationships were established between the French and the many Montagnais gathered there with some Algonquin friends Promising to King Henry to report on further discoveries Champlain joined a second expedition to New France in the spring of 1604 This trip once again an exploratory journey without women and children lasted several years and focused on areas south of the St Lawrence River in what later became known as Acadia It was led by Pierre Dugua de Mons a noble and Protestant merchant who had been given a fur trading monopoly in New France by the king Dugua asked Champlain to find a site for winter settlement After exploring possible sites in the Bay of Fundy Champlain selected Saint Croix Island in the St Croix River as the site of the expedition s first winter settlement After enduring a harsh winter on the island the settlement was relocated across the bay where they established Port Royal Until 1607 Champlain used that site as his base while he explored the Atlantic coast Dugua was forced to leave the settlement for France in September 1605 because he learned that his monopoly was at risk His monopoly was rescinded by the king in July 1607 under pressure from other merchants and proponents of free trade leading to the abandonment of the settlement In 1605 and 1606 Champlain explored the North American coast as far south as Cape Cod searching for sites for a permanent settlement Minor skirmishes with the resident Nausets dissuaded him from the idea of establishing one near present day Chatham Massachusetts He named the area Mallebar bad bar 21 22 Founding of Quebec EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Samuel de Champlain news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Plaque in Honfleur commemorating Champlain s departures Painting by George Agnew Reid done for the third centennial 1908 showing the arrival of Samuel de Champlain on the site of Quebec City Note 10 In the spring of 1608 Dugua wanted Champlain to start a new French colony and fur trading centre on the shores of the St Lawrence Dugua equipped at his own expense a fleet of three ships with workers that left the French port of Honfleur The main ship called Don de Dieu French for Gift of God was commanded by Champlain Another ship Levrier Hunt Dog was commanded by his friend Du Pont The small group of male settlers arrived at Tadoussac on the lower St Lawrence in June Because of the dangerous strength of the Saguenay River ending there they left the ships and continued up the Big River in small boats bringing the men and the materials Note 10 Upon arriving in Quebec Champlain later wrote I arrived there on the third of July when I searched for a place suitable for our settlement but I could find none more convenient or better suited than the point of Quebec so called by the savages which was covered with nut trees Champlain ordered his men to gather lumber by cutting down the nut trees for use in building habitations 23 Some days after Champlain s arrival in Quebec Jean du Val a member of Champlain s party plotted to kill Champlain to the end of securing the settlement for the Basques or Spaniards and making a fortune for himself Du Val s plot was ultimately foiled when an associate of Du Val confessed his involvement in the plot to Champlain s pilot who informed Champlain Champlain had a young man deliver Du Val along with 3 co conspirators two bottles of wine and invite the four worthies to an event on board a boat Soon after the four conspirators arrived on the boat Champlain had them arrested Du Val was strangled and hung in Quebec and his head was displayed in the most conspicuous place of Champlain s fort The other three were sent back to France to be tried 23 Relations and war with Native Americans Edit Engraving based on a drawing by Champlain of his 1609 voyage It depicts a battle between Iroquois and Algonquian tribes near Lake Champlain During the summer of 1609 Champlain attempted to form better relations with the local First Nations tribes He made alliances with the Wendat called Huron by the French and with the Algonquin the Montagnais and the Etchemin who lived in the area of the St Lawrence River These tribes sought Champlain s help in their war against the Iroquois who lived farther south Champlain set off with nine French soldiers and 300 natives to explore the Riviere des Iroquois now known as the Richelieu River and became the first European to map Lake Champlain Having had no encounters with the Haudenosaunee at this point many of the men headed back leaving Champlain with only 2 Frenchmen and 60 natives On 29 July somewhere in the area near Ticonderoga and Crown Point New York historians are not sure which of these two places but Fort Ticonderoga historians claim that it occurred near its site Champlain and his party encountered a group of Haudenosaunee In a battle that began the next day two hundred and fifty Haudenosaunee advanced on Champlain s position and one of his guides pointed out the three chiefs In his account of the battle Champlain recounts firing his arquebus and killing two of them with a single shot after which one of his men killed the third The Haudenosaunee turned and fled While this cowed the Iroquois for some years they would later return to successfully fight the French and Algonquin for the rest of the century Note 11 The Battle of Sorel occurred on 19 June 1610 with Samuel de Champlain supported by the Kingdom of France and his allies the Wendat people Algonquin people and Innu people against the Mohawk people in New France at present day Sorel Tracy Quebec Champlain s forces armed with the arquebus engaged and slaughtered or captured nearly all of the Mohawks The battle ended major hostilities with the Mohawks for twenty years 24 Marriage EditOne route Champlain may have chosen to improve his access to the court of the regent was his decision to enter into marriage with the twelve year old Helene Boulle She was the daughter of Nicolas Boulle a man charged with carrying out royal decisions at court The marriage contract was signed on 27 December 1610 in presence of Dugua who had dealt with the father and the couple was married three days later The terms of the contract called for the marriage to be consummated two years later 25 Champlain s marriage was initially quite troubled as Helene rallied against joining him in August 1613 Their relationship while it apparently lacked any physical connection recovered and was apparently good for many years 26 Helene lived in Quebec for several years 27 but returned to Paris and eventually decided to enter a convent The couple had no children and Champlain adopted three Montagnais girls named Faith Hope and Charity in the winter of 1627 28 Exploration of New France Edit Chaleur Bay and Gulf of Saint Lawrence extract of Champlain 1612 map Marine astrolabe attributed to Champlain made in France in 1603 found in Ontario in 1867 On 29 March 1613 arriving back in New France he first ensured that his new royal commission be proclaimed Champlain set out on May 27 to continue his exploration of the Huron country and in hopes of finding the northern sea he had heard about probably Hudson Bay He travelled the Ottawa River later giving the first description of this area Note 12 Along the way he apparently dropped or left behind a cache of silver cups copper kettles and a brass astrolabe dated 1603 Champlain s Astrolabe which was later found by a farm boy named Edward Lee near Cobden Ontario 28 It was in June that he met with Tessouat the Algonquin chief of Allumettes Island and offered to build the tribe a fort if they were to move from the area they occupied with its poor soil to the locality of the Lachine Rapids 22 By 26 August Champlain was back in Saint Malo There he wrote an account of his life from 1604 to 1612 and his journey up the Ottawa river his Voyages 29 and published another map of New France In 1614 he formed the Compagnie des Marchands de Rouen et de Saint Malo and Compagnie de Champlain which bound the Rouen and Saint Malo merchants for eleven years He returned to New France in the spring of 1615 with four Recollects in order to further religious life in the new colony The Roman Catholic Church was eventually given en seigneurie large and valuable tracts of land estimated at nearly 30 of all the lands granted by the French Crown in New France 30 In 1615 Champlain reunited with Etienne Brule his capable interpreter following separate four year explorations There Brule reported North American explorations including that he had been joined by another French interpreter named Grenolle with whom he had travelled along the north shore of la mer douce the calm sea now known as Lake Huron to the great rapids of Sault Ste Marie where Lake Superior enters Lake Huron some of which was recorded by Champlain 31 32 Champlain continued to work to improve relations with the natives promising to help them in their struggles against the Iroquois With his native guides he explored further up the Ottawa River and reached Lake Nipissing He then followed the French River until he reached Lake Huron 33 In 1615 Champlain was escorted through the area that is now Peterborough Ontario by a group of Wendat He used the ancient portage between Chemong Lake and Little Lake now Chemong Road and stayed for a short period of time near what is now Bridgenorth 34 Military expedition Edit Samuel de Champlain Nepean Point Ottawa by Hamilton MacCarthy On 1 September 1615 at Cahiague a Wendat community on what is now called Lake Simcoe he and the northern tribes started a military expedition against the Iroquois The party passed Lake Ontario at its eastern tip where they hid their canoes and continued their journey by land They followed the Oneida River until they arrived at the main Onondaga fort on October 10 The exact location of this place is still a matter of debate Although the traditional location Nichols Pond is regularly disproved by professional and amateur archaeologists many still claim that Nichols Pond is the location of the battle 10 miles 16 km south of Canastota New York 35 Champlain attacked the stockaded Oneida village He was accompanied by 10 Frenchmen and 300 Wendat Pressured by the Huron Wendat to attack prematurely the assault failed Champlain was wounded twice in the leg by arrows one in his knee The conflict ended on October 16 when the French Wendat were forced to flee citation needed Although he did not want to the Wendat insisted that Champlain spend the winter with them During his stay he set off with them in their great deer hunt during which he became lost and was forced to wander for three days living off game and sleeping under trees until he met up with a band of First Nations people by chance He spent the rest of the winter learning their country their manners customs modes of life On 22 May 1616 he left the Wendat country and returned to Quebec before heading back to France on 2 July citation needed Improving administration in New France Edit Map of New France Champlain 1612 A more precise map was drawn by Champlain in 1632 19th century artist s conception of Champlain by E Ronjat 36 Champlain returned to New France in 1620 and was to spend the rest of his life focusing on administration of the territory rather than exploration Champlain spent the winter building Fort Saint Louis on top of Cape Diamond By mid May he learned that the fur trading monopoly had been handed over to another company led by the Caen brothers After some tense negotiations it was decided to merge the two companies under the direction of the Caens Champlain continued to work on relations with the natives and managed to impose on them a chief of his choice He also negotiated a peace treaty with the Iroquois Champlain continued to work on the fortifications of what became Quebec City laying the first stone on 6 May 1624 On 15 August he once again returned to France where he was encouraged to continue his work as well as to continue looking for a passage to China something widely believed to exist at the time By July 5 he was back at Quebec and continued expanding the city In 1627 the Caen brothers company lost its monopoly on the fur trade and Cardinal Richelieu who had joined the Royal Council in 1624 and rose rapidly to a position of dominance in French politics that he would hold until his death in 1642 formed the Compagnie des Cent Associes the Hundred Associates to manage the fur trade Champlain was one of the 100 investors and its first fleet loaded with colonists and supplies set sail in April 1628 37 Champlain had overwintered in Quebec Supplies were low and English merchants sacked Cap Tourmente in early July 1628 38 A war had broken out between France and England and Charles I of England had issued letters of marque that authorized the capture of French shipping and its colonies in North America 39 Champlain received a summons to surrender on July 10 from the Kirke brothers two Scottish brothers who were working for the English government Champlain refused to deal with them misleading them to believe that Quebec s defenses were better than they actually were Champlain had only 50 pounds of gunpowder to defend the community Successfully bluffed they withdrew but encountered and captured the French supply fleet cutting off that year s supplies to the colony 40 By the spring of 1629 supplies were dangerously low and Champlain was forced to send people to Gaspe and into Indian communities to conserve rations 41 On July 19 the Kirke brothers arrived before Quebec after intercepting Champlain s plea for help and Champlain was forced to surrender the colony 42 Many colonists were transported first to England and then to France by the Kirkes but Champlain remained in London to begin the process of regaining the colony A peace treaty had been signed in April 1629 three months before the surrender and under the terms of that treaty Quebec and other prizes that were taken by the Kirkes after the treaty were to be returned 43 It was not until the 1632 Treaty of Saint Germain en Laye however that Quebec was formally given back to France David Kirke was rewarded when Charles I knighted him and gave him a charter for Newfoundland Champlain reclaimed his role as commander of New France on behalf of Richelieu on 1 March 1633 having served in the intervening years as commander in New France in the absence of my Lord the Cardinal de Richelieu from 1629 to 1635 44 In 1632 Champlain published Voyages de la Nouvelle France which was dedicated to Cardinal Richelieu and Traitte de la marine et du devoir d un bon marinier a treatise on leadership seamanship and navigation Champlain made more than twenty five round trip crossings of the Atlantic in his lifetime without losing a single ship 45 Last return and last years working in Quebec EditChamplain returned to Quebec on 22 May 1633 after an absence of four years Richelieu gave him a commission as Lieutenant General of New France along with other titles and responsibilities but not that of governor Despite this lack of formal status many colonists French merchants and Indians treated him as if he had the title writings survive in which he is referred to as our governor 46 On 18 August 1634 he sent a report to Richelieu stating that he had rebuilt on the ruins of Quebec enlarged its fortifications and established two more habitations One was 15 leagues upstream and the other was at Trois Rivieres He also began an offensive against the Iroquois reporting that he wanted them either wiped out or brought to reason citation needed Death and burial EditChamplain had a severe stroke in October 1635 and died on 25 December leaving no immediate heirs Jesuit records state he died in the care of his friend and confessor Charles Lallemant citation needed Although his will drafted on 17 November 1635 gave much of his French property to his wife Helene Boulle he made significant bequests to the Catholic missions and to individuals in the colony of Quebec However Marie Camaret a cousin on his mother s side challenged the will in Paris and had it overturned It is unclear exactly what happened to his estate 47 48 49 Samuel de Champlain was temporarily buried in the church while a standalone chapel was built to hold his remains in the upper part of the city Unfortunately this small building along with many others was destroyed by a large fire in 1640 Though immediately rebuilt no traces of it exist anymore his exact burial site is still unknown despite much research since about 1850 including several archaeological digs in the city There is general agreement that the previous Champlain chapel site and the remains of Champlain should be somewhere near the Notre Dame de Quebec Cathedral 50 51 The search for Champlain s remains supplies a key plot line in the crime writer Louise Penny s 2010 novel Bury Your Dead 52 Legacy Edit Statue of Samuel de Champlain at sunrise looking to the north west with a similar expressive face as traditionally Jacques Cartier s by Paul Romain Marie Leonce Chevre fr Paris 1896 1898 as newly repaired for 2008 at Quebec City since 1898 near Chateau Frontenac grand hotel on the Terrasse Dufferin Many sites and landmarks have been named to honour Champlain who was a prominent figure in many parts of Acadia Ontario Quebec New York and Vermont Memorialized as the Father of New France and Father of Acadia his historic significance endures in modern times Lake Champlain which straddles the border between northern New York and Vermont extending slightly across the border into Canada was named by him in 1609 when he led an expedition along the Richelieu River exploring a long narrow lake situated between the Green Mountains of present day Vermont and the Adirondack Mountains of present day New York The first European to map and describe it Champlain claimed the lake as his namesake Memorials include Lake Champlain Champlain Valley the Champlain Trail Lakes Champlain Sea a past inlet of the Atlantic Ocean in North America over the St Lawrence the Saguenay and the Richelieu rivers to over Lake Champlain which inlet disappeared many thousands years before Champlain was born Champlain Mountain Acadia National Park which he first observed in 1604 53 A town and village in New York as well as a township in Ontario and a municipality in Quebec The provincial electoral district of Champlain Quebec and several defunct electoral districts elsewhere in Canada Samuel de Champlain Provincial Park a provincial park in northern Ontario near the town of Mattawa Champlain Bridge which connects the island of Montreal to Brossard Quebec across the St Lawrence Champlain Bridge which connects the cities of Ottawa Ontario and Gatineau Quebec Champlain College one of six colleges at Trent University in Peterborough Ontario is named in his honour Fort Champlain a dormitory at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston Ontario named in his honour in 1965 it houses the 10th cadet squadron A French school in Saint John New Brunswick Ecole Champlain an elementary school in Moncton New Brunswick and one in Brossard Champlain College in Burlington Vermont and Champlain Regional College a CEGEP with three campuses in Quebec Marriott Chateau Champlain hotel in Montreal Streets named Champlain in numerous cities including Quebec Shawinigan the city of Dieppe in the province of New Brunswick in Plattsburgh and no less than eleven communities in northwestern Vermont A garden called Jardin Samuel de Champlain in Paris France A memorial statue on Cumberland Avenue in Plattsburgh New York on the shores of Lake Champlain in a park named for Champlain A memorial statue in Saint John New Brunswick Canada in Queen Square that commemorates his discovery of the Saint John River 54 A memorial statue in Isle La Motte Vermont on the shore of Lake Champlain The lighthouse at Crown Point New York features a statue of Champlain by Carl Augustus Heber A commemorative stamp issue in May 2006 jointly by the United States Postal Service and Canada Post 55 A statue in Ticonderoga New York unveiled in 2009 to commemorate the 400th anniversary of Champlain s exploration of Lake Champlain A statue in Orillia Ontario at Couchiching Beach Park on Lake Couchiching This statue was removed by Parks Canada and is not likely to be returned as it incorporated offensive depictions of First Nations peoples 56 HMCS Champlain 1919 a S class destroyer that served in the Royal Canadian Navy from 1928 to 1936 HMCS Champlain a Canadian Forces Naval Reserve division based in Chicoutimi Quebec since activation in 1985 Champlain Place a shopping centre located in Dieppe New Brunswick Canada The Champlain Society a Canadian historical and text publication society chartered in 1927 A memorial statue in Ottawa at Nepean Point by Hamilton MacCarthy The statue depicts Champlain holding an astrolabe upside down as it happens It did previously include an Indian Scout kneeling at its base In the 1990s after lobbying by Indigenous people it was removed from the statue s base renamed and placed as Anishinaabe Scout in Major s Hill Park Bibliography EditThese are works that were written by Champlain Brief Discours des Choses plus remarquables que Sammuel Champlain de Brouage a reconneues aux Indes Occidentalles au voiage qu il en a faict en icettes en l annee 1599 et en l annee 1601 comme ensuite first French publication 1870 first English publication 1859 as Narrative of a Voyage to the West Indies and Mexico 1599 1602 Des Sauvages ou voyage de Samuel Champlain de Brouages faite en la France nouvelle l an 1603 first French publication 1604 first English publication 1625 Voyages de la Nouvelle France first French publication 1632 Traitte de la marine et du devoir d un bon marinier first French publication 1632 Notes and references EditNotes a b For a detailed analysis of his baptismal record see Ritch The baptism act does not contain information about the age of Samuel neither his birth date nor his place of birth Thanks to Pierre Dugua de Mons who fully financed at a loss the first years of both French settlements in North America first Acadia then Quebec According to Trudel 1979 Louis was 18 years old an inexperienced minor when age of majority was 25 and Champlain was lieutenant to the Prince de Conde the viceroy of New France since 1612 who as Trudel writes was liberated from jail where he been for 3 years in October 1619 and yielded his rights as viceroy to Henri II de Montmorency admiral of France The latter confirmed Champlain in his office On 7 May 1620 Louis XIII wrote to Champlain to enjoin him to maintain the country in obedience to me making the people who are there live as closely in conformity with the laws of my kingdom as you can From that moment Champlain was to devote himself exclusively to the administration of the country he was to undertake no further great voyages of discovery his career as an explorer had ended Some say that the King of France made him his royal geographer but it is unproven and may only come from Marc Lescarbot books Champlain never used that title The honorific de was only added to his name from 1610 when he was already well known right after his patron King Henry IV was murdered This usage by a non noble was tolerated so that he would continue to gain access to the court during the long regency of King Louis XIII who was only eight years old at the death of his father Champlain received the official title of lieutenant adjunct representative of whichever noble was designated as Viceroy of New France the first being Pierre Dugua Sieur de Mons In 1629 Champlain was named commandant under the authority of the King Minister Richelieu It was Champlain s successor Charles Jacques Huault de Montmagny who was the first to be formally named as the governor of New France when he moved to Quebec City in 1636 and became the first noble to live there in that century His family lived in Brouage at the time of his birth the exact place and date of his birth are unknown Britannica com Three different handwritten copies of this report still exist One of them is at the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University For a detailed treatment of claims against Champlain s authorship see the chapter by Francois Marc Gagnon in Litalien 2004 pp 84ff Fischer 2008 pp 586ff also addresses these claims and accepts Champlain s authorship Champlain did not begin using the honorific de in his name until at least 1610 when he married the year King Henry was murdered A reprint of this book in 1612 was credited to Sieur de Champlain civilization ca a b Only at his last arrival in 1633 Champlain did not leave the ships at Tadoussac but sailed them directly to Quebec City Trudel 1979 In 1701 The Great Peace Treaty was signed in Montreal involving the French and every Indigenous nation coming or living on the shores of the Saint Lawrence River except maybe in wintertime In 1953 a rock was found at a location now known as the Champlain lookout which bore the inscription Champlain juin 2 1613 What about this finding Citations Bishop 1948 pp 6 7 a b c Fichier Origine Samuel de Champlain Encyclopedia com Retrieved 2018 01 30 a b d Avignon 2008 Vaugeois 2008 a b Heidenreich Conrad E Ritch K Janet eds 2010 Samuel de Champlain before 1604 Des Sauvages and Other Documents Related to the Period The Publications of the Champlain Society p 16 doi 10 3138 9781442620339 ISBN 978 0 7735 3756 9 Fischer 2008 p 3 Germe p 2 Rainguet 1851 Liebel 1978 p 236 Liebel 1978 pp 229 237 Fischer 2008 p 62 a b Fischer 2008 p 65 Note Fischer cites numerous other authorities in repeating this Weber 1967 Litalien 2004 p 87 Heidenreich Conrad E Ritch K Janet eds 2010 Samuel de Champlain before 1604 Des Sauvages and Other Documents Related to the Period The Publications of the Champlain Society p 14 doi 10 3138 9781442620339 ISBN 978 0 7735 3756 9 Fischer 2008 pp 98 99 Fischer 2008 p 100 Fischer 2008 pp 100 117 Fischer 2008 pp 121 123 NPS a b Vermont Map a b Founding of Quebec Early Americas Digital Archive EADA eada lib umd edu Retrieved 2021 02 20 Fischer 2008 pp 577 578 Fischer 2008 pp 287 288 Fischer 2008 pp 313 316 Fischer 2008 pp 374 5 Brebner John Bartlett 1966 The Explorers of North America 1492 1806 Cleveland Ohio The World Publishing Company p 135 Champlain 1613 Dalton 1968 Butterfield Consul Willshire 1898 History of Brule s Discoveries and Explorations 1610 1626 Cleveland Ohio Helman Taylor pp 49 51 online archive org Library of Congress The Explorers Etienne Brule 1615 1621 Virtual Museum of New France Canadian Museum of History Retrieved 7 April 2019 Samuel de Champlain timeline The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved September 7 2019 Williams Doug September 8 2015 A small man with a big gun Peterborough Examiner Archived from the original on February 20 2018 Retrieved 2018 02 20 Weiskotten 1998 Guizot p 190 Fischer 2008 pp 404 410 Fischer 2008 pp 410 412 Fischer 2008 p 409 Fischer 2008 pp 412 415 Fischer 2008 pp 418 420 Fischer 2008 p 421 Fischer 2008 p 428 Trudel 1979 Fischer 2008 p 447 Fischer 2008 pp 445 446 Fischer 2008 p 520 Heidenreich Le Blant 1964 pp 425 437 Champlain Travels in the Canadian Francophonie La Chappelle Penny 2010 Acadia National Park Saint John Additional Information Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Gicker 2006 Orillia s Champlain monument restoration on hold 18 July 2018 References Edit Acadia National Park Oh Ranger Retrieved July 21 2015 Bishop Morris 1948 Samuel de Champlain The Life of Fortitude New York Knopf Champlain Samuel 1613 Les voyages du Sieur de Champlain Saintongeois capitaine ordinaire pour le Roy en la Marine in French J Berjon Dalton Roy C 1968 The Jesuit Estates Question 1760 88 University of Toronto Press p 60 d Avignon Davignon Mathieu 2008 Champlain et les fondateurs oublies les figures du pere et le mythe de la fondation in French Quebec City Les Presses de l Universite Laval PUL p 558 ISBN 978 2 7637 8644 5 Note Mathieu d Avignon Ph D in history Laval University 2006 is an affiliate researcher into the University of Quebec at Chicoutimi Research Group on History He is preparing a special new full edition in modern French of Champlain s Voyages in New France Germe Jean Marie April 15 2012 Journal le Soleil 2 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help dead link Champlain de Samuel Fichier Origine in French Retrieved 2015 07 21 La chapelle et le tombeau de Champlain etat de la question in French Archived from the original on September 4 2015 Retrieved July 21 2015 Fischer David Hackett 2008 Champlain s Dream Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 9332 4 Gicker William J ed 2006 Samuel de Champlain 39 USA Samuel de Champlain 51 Canada USA Philatelic 11 3 7 This souvenir sheet celebrates the 400th anniversary of the explorations of Samuel de Champlain in 1606 Guizot Francois Pierre Guillaume Chapter 53 A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times Vol 6 Black Robert trans Boston Dana Estes amp Charles E Lauriat Imp Heidenreich Conrad E August 8 2008 Who was Champlain His Family and Early Life Metis sur mer Archived from the original on May 12 2013 This lecture is based on parts of a book by Conrad E Heidenreich and K Janet Ritch soon to by published by The Champlain Society provisionally entitled The Works of Samuel de Champlain Des Sauvages and other Documents Related to the Period before 1604 Le Blant Robert 1964 Le triste veuvage d Helene Boulle The sad widow of Helene Boulle PDF Revue d histoire de l Amerique francaise in French 18 3 425 doi 10 7202 302392ar Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Liebel Jean September 1978 On a vieilli Champlain They made Champlain older La Revue d histoire de l Amerique francaise in French 32 2 229 237 doi 10 7202 303691ar Litalien Raymonde Vaugeois Denis eds 2004 Champlain the Birth of French America Roth Kathe trans McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 0 7735 2850 4 Malle Barre Modern Nauset Harbor Eastham MA Archeology Program National Park Service Retrieved July 21 2015 Penny Louise 2010 Bury Your Dead New York Minotaur ISBN 978 0 3123 7704 5 Rainguet Pierre Damien 1851 Biographie Saintongeaise ou Dictionnaire Historique de Tous les Personnages qui se sont Illustres dans les Anciennes Provinces de Saintonge et d Aunis jusqu a Nos Jours in French Saintes France M Niox OCLC 466560584 Ritch Janet Discovery of the Baptismal Certificate of Samuel de Champlain The Champlain Society Archived from the original on 2013 12 05 Retrieved 2013 10 03 Samuel de Champlain s Voyages Travel Vermont Archived from the original on November 11 2010 Retrieved July 21 2015 Time Periods Life and Death of Champlain Champlain Travels in the Canadian Francophonie Archived from the original on 2015 07 22 Retrieved July 21 2015 Trudel Marcel 1979 1966 Samuel de Champlain In Brown George Williams ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol I 1000 1700 online ed University of Toronto Press Retrieved 2009 05 28 Vaugeois Denis June 2 2008 Champlain et Dupont Grave en contexte 133e congres du comtie des travaux historiques et scientifiques CTHS in French Quebec City Archived from the original on May 13 2013 Weber E L Sculptor Samuel de Champlain sculpture Art Inventories Catalog Smithsonian American Art Museum Retrieved 2015 07 21 Weiskotten Daniel H July 1 1998 The Real Battle of Nichols Pond Roots Web Ancestry com Retrieved 2013 07 12 Further reading EditChamplain Samuel de 2005 Voyages of Samuel de Champlain 1604 1918 with a map and two plans Elibron Classics ISBN 1 4021 2853 3 Dix Edwin Asa 1903 Champlain the Founder of New France IndyPublish ISBN 1 4179 2270 2 Laverdiere Abbe Charles Honore Cauchon 1870 Œuvres de Champlain in French Quebec City Desbarats Œuvres de Champlain Morganelli Adrianna 2006 Samuel de Champlain from New France to Cape Cod Crabtree Pub ISBN 978 0 7787 2414 8 Samuel de Champlain Morison Samuel Eliot 1972 Samuel de Champlain Father of New France Little Brown ISBN 0 316 58399 5 Sherman Josepha 2003 Samuel de Champlain Explorer of the Great Lakes Region and Founder of Quebec Group s Rosen Central ISBN 0 8239 3629 5 Samuel de Champlain External links Edit Biography portal France portal North America portal History portal Media related to Samuel de Champlain at Wikimedia Commons Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Samuel de Champlain Works by Samuel de Champlain at Project Gutenberg Works by Samuel de Champlain at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Samuel de Champlain at Internet Archive From Marcel Trudel Champlain Samuel de Archived 2017 09 21 at the Wayback Machine at The Canadian Encyclopedia Champlain in Acadia Biography at the Museum of Civilization Samuel de Champlain Biography by Appleton and Klos Description of Champlain s voyage to Chatham Cape Cod in 1605 and 1606 They Didn t Name That Lake for Nothing Sunday Book Review The New York Times October 31 2008 Dead Reckoning Champlain in America PBS documentary 2009 World Digital Library presentation of Descripsion des costs pts rades illes de la Nouuele France faict selon son vray meridienor Description of the Coasts Points Harbours and Islands of New France Library of Congress Primary source portolan style chart on vellum with summary description image with enhanced view and zoom features text to speech capability French Links to related content Content available as TIF One of the major cartographic resources this map offers the first thorough delineation of the New England and Canadian coasts from Cape Sable to Cape Cod A book from 1603 of Champlain s first voyage to New France from the World Digital Library in French Champlain s tomb State of the Art Inquiry in French From Samuel de Champlain Les Voyages de la Nouvelle France 1632 at Rare Book Room in French Baptismal parish register August 13 1574 protestant temple Saint Yon La Rochelle in French Digitized copy of Champlain s Des Sauvages from the John Carter Brown LibraryGovernment officesPreceded byCardinal Richelieu Lieutenant General of New France1632 1635 Succeeded byCharles de Montmagny as Governor of New France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel de Champlain amp oldid 1134659807, wikipedia, 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