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Great Peace of Montreal

The Great Peace of Montreal (French: La Grande paix de Montréal) was a peace treaty between New France and 39 First Nations of North America that ended the Beaver Wars. It was signed on August 4, 1701, by Louis-Hector de Callière, governor of New France, and 1300 representatives of 39 Indigenous nations.[1]

The Great Peace of Montreal
La Grande paix de Montréal
Copy of the treaty including signatures
SignedAugust 4, 1701
LocationMontreal, New France
Signatories
Languages
  • French

The French, allied to the Hurons and the Algonquins, provided 16 years of peaceful relations and trade before war started again.[citation needed] Present for the diplomatic event were the various peoples; part of the Iroquois confederacy, the Huron peoples, and the Algonquin peoples.[2]

This has sometimes been called the Grand Settlement of 1701,[3] not to be confused with the unrelated Act of Settlement 1701 in England. It has often been referred to as La Paix des Braves, meaning "The Peace of the Braves".

The Fur Wars edit

The foundation of Quebec City in 1608 by Samuel de Champlain, one of the first governors of New France, marked the beginning of the gathering of resources of the Great Northern forests by traders from Metropolitan France. Control over the fur trade became a high-stakes game among the Native American tribes, as all of them wanted to be the European's chosen intermediary. The "Fur-Wars" saw the Hurons and Algonquins, supported by the French, pitted against the Iroquois of the powerful League of Five Nations, who were supported first by New Netherlands, and later by the English when they took New Amsterdam in the 1660s and 1670s, renaming it New York City.

In the first half of the 17th century, the Dutch-allied Iroquois made substantial territorial gains against the French-allied First Nations, often threatening French settlements at Montreal and Trois-Rivières. In an attempt to secure the colony, in 1665 the Carignan-Salières Regiment was sent to New France. Their campaign in 1666 devastated a number of Mohawk communities, who were forced to negotiate a peace. A period of prosperity followed for France's colony, but the Iroquois, now supported by the English, continued to expand their territory westward, fighting French allies in the Great Lakes region and again threatening the French fur trade. In the 1680s the French became actively involved in the conflict again, and they and their allied Indians made significant gains against the Iroquois, including incursions deep into the heartland of Iroquoia (present-day Upstate New York). After a devastating raid by the Iroquois against the settlement of Lachine in 1689, and the entry the same year of England into the Nine Years' War (known in the English colonies as King William's War), Governor Frontenac organized raiding expeditions against English communities all along the frontier with New France. French and English colonists, and their Indian allies, then engaged in a protracted border war that was formally ended when the Treaty of Ryswick was signed in 1697. The treaty, however, left unresolved the issue of Iroquois sovereignty (both France and England claimed them as part of their empire), and French allies in the upper Great Lakes continued to make war on the Iroquois.

Prelude to peace edit

The success of these attacks, which again reached deep into Iroquois territory, and the inability of the English to protect them from attacks originating to their north and west, forced the Iroquois to more seriously pursue peace. Their demographic decline, aided by conflicts and epidemics, put their very existence into doubt. At the same time, commerce became almost nonexistent because of a fall in the price of furs. The Indians preferred to trade with the merchants of New York because these merchants offered better prices than the French.

Preliminary negotiations took place in 1698 and 1699, but these were to some degree frustrated by the intervention of the English, who sought to keep the Iroquois from negotiating directly with the French. After another successful attack into Iroquoia in early 1700, these attempts at intervention failed. The first conference between the French and Iroquois was held on Iroquois territory at Onondaga in March 1700. In September of the same year, a preliminary peace treaty was signed in Montreal with the five Iroquois nations. Thirteen First Nations symbols are on the treaty. After this first entente, it was decided that a bigger one would be held in Montreal in the summer of 1701 and all Nations of the Great Lakes were invited. Selected French emissaries, clergies and soldiers, all well-perceived by the First Nations, were given this diplomatic task. The negotiations continued during the wait for the big conference; the neutrality of the Five Nations was discussed in Montreal in May 1701. The treaty of La Grande Paix de Montreal of July 21 to August 7 of 1701[4] was signed as a symbol of peace between the French and the First Nations. In the treaty, the Five Nations agreed to remain peaceful between the French and the British during times of war together. It was a huge example of peace between different nations and honouring an agreement.

Treaty ratification edit

The first delegations arrived in Montreal at the beginning of the summer of 1701, often after long, hard journeys. The ratification of the treaty was not agreed to immediately due to the discussions between the First Nations representatives and Governor Callière's dragging on, both sides being eager to negotiate as much as possible. The actual signing of the document took place on a big field prepared for the special occasion, just outside the city. The representatives of each Nation placed their clan's symbol, such as turtle, wolf or bear, at the bottom of the document. A great banquet followed the solemn occasion, with a peace pipe being shared by the chiefs, each of them praising peace in turn. This treaty, achieved through negotiations according to First Nations diplomatic custom, was meant to end ethnic conflicts. From then on, negotiation would trump direct conflict and the French would agree to act as arbiters during conflicts between signatory tribes. The Iroquois promised to be neutral in case of conflict between the French and English colonies.

Aftermath edit

The treaty was highly symbolic for the aboriginal nations as the Tree of Peace was now established among all the Great Lakes' nations. Commerce and exploratory expeditions quietly resumed in peace after the signing of the treaty. The French explorer Antoine Laumet de La Mothe, Sieur de Cadillac left Montreal to explore the Great Lakes region, founding Fort Pontchartrain du Détroit (now Detroit) in July. Jesuit priests resumed their spiritual mission-based work in the north. The Great Peace of Montreal is a unique diplomatic event in the history of both North and South America. The treaty is still considered valid by the Indigenous people of the American First Nations tribes involved.

The French in negotiating followed their traditional policy in North and South America, where their relationship with some of the natives was characterized by mutual respect and admiration and based on dialogue and negotiation. According to the 19th-century historian Francis Parkman: "Spanish civilization crushed the Indian; English civilization scorned and neglected him; French civilization embraced and cherished him."[5]

Attendees and signatories edit

  • Haudenosaunee
    • Onondaga, Seneca, Oneida and Cayuga, represented by Seneca orators (Tekanoet, Aouenan, and Tonatakout) and by Ohonsiowanne (Onondaga), Toarenguenion (Oneida), Garonhiaron (Cayuga), and Soueouon (Oneida), who were signatories.
    • Mohawk, Teganiassorens
    • Sault St. Louis (Kahnawake) Mohawk, represented by L'Aigle (The Eagle)
    • Iroquois of La Montagne, represented by Tsahouanhos[6]
  • Amikwa (Beaver People), represented by Mahingan, and spoken for by the Odawas in the debates
  • Cree, or at least one Cree band from the area northwest of Lake Superior
  • Meskwaki (the Foxes or Outagamis), represented by Noro & Miskouensa
  • Les Gens des terres (Inlanders), possibly a Cree-related group
  • Petun (Tionontati), represented by Kondiaronk, Houatsaranti and Quarante Sols (Huron of the St. Joseph)
  • Illinois Confederation, represented by Onanguice (Potawatomi) and possibly by Courtemanche
  • Kickapoo (attendance is disputed by Kondiaronk)[6]
  • Mascouten, represented by Kiskatapi
  • Menominee (Folles Avoines), represented by Paintage
  • Miami people, represented by Chichicatalo
  • Mississaugas, represented on August 4 by Onanguice (Potawatomi)
  • Nippissing, represented by Onaganioitak
  • Odawa
    • Sable Odawas (Akonapi), represented by Outouagan (Jean Le Blanc) and Kinonge (Le Brochet)
    • Kiskakons (Culs Coupez), represented by Hassaki (speaker) and Kileouiskingie (signatory)
    • Sinago Odawas, represented by Chingouessi (speaker) and Outaliboi (signatory)
    • Nassawaketons (Odawas of the Fork), represented by Elaouesse
  • Ojibwe (Saulteurs), represented by Ouabangue
  • Potawatomi, represented by Onanguice and Ouenemek
  • Sauk, represented by Coluby (and occasionally by Onanguice)
  • Timiskamings from Lake Timiskaming
  • Ho-Chunk (Otchagras, Winnebago, Puants)
  • Algonquins
  • Abenaki, represented by Haouatchouath and Meskouadoue, likely speaking for the entire Wabanaki Confederacy[6]

See "Nindoodemag": The Significance of Algonquian Kinship Networks in the Eastern Great Lakes Region, 1600-1701 (pp. 23–52) by Heidi Bohaker for a discussion of the significance of these pictographical signatures.

Commemoration edit

A square in Old Montreal was renamed Place de la Grande-Paix-de-Montréal to commemorate the 300th anniversary of the peace. Several locations in Quebec are named for the Petun leader Kondiaronk, one of the architects of the peace, including the Kondiaronk Belvedere in Mount Royal Park overlooking downtown Montreal.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Francis, Daniel. Voices and Visions. Oxford University Press. p. 82.
  2. ^ Charlotte Gray The Museum Called Canada: 25 Rooms of Wonder Random House, 2004
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-09-28. Retrieved 2013-09-17.
  4. ^ Gilles, Havard (2001). Great Peace of Montreal of 1701 : French-Native Diplomacy in the Seventeenth Century. Montreal, Canada: McGill-Queens University Press. pp. 143–144. ISBN 0-7735-2219-0.
  5. ^ Quoted in Cave, p.42
  6. ^ a b c Havard, Gilles; Aronoff, Phyllis; Scott, Howard (2001). The Great Peace of Montreal of 1701: French-native Diplomacy in the Seventeenth Century. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. pp. 119–121. ISBN 9780773522190. Retrieved 1 February 2016.

References edit

  • Alfred A. Cave The French and Indian War 2004 Greenwood Press ISBN 0-313-32168-X
  • Atherton, William. Montreal, 1535–1914
  • Eccles, W. J. Biography of Denonville at DCB

great, peace, montreal, treaty, montreal, redirects, here, other, similarly, named, agreements, montreal, convention, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, . Treaty of Montreal redirects here For other similarly named agreements see Montreal Convention disambiguation This article 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 Great Peace of Montreal news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Great Peace of Montreal French La Grande paix de Montreal was a peace treaty between New France and 39 First Nations of North America that ended the Beaver Wars It was signed on August 4 1701 by Louis Hector de Calliere governor of New France and 1300 representatives of 39 Indigenous nations 1 The Great Peace of MontrealLa Grande paix de MontrealCopy of the treaty including signaturesSignedAugust 4 1701LocationMontreal New FranceSignatoriesKingdom of France Haudenosaunee Confederacy Nionwentsio Nitassinan OmamiwininiwakLanguagesFrenchThe French allied to the Hurons and the Algonquins provided 16 years of peaceful relations and trade before war started again citation needed Present for the diplomatic event were the various peoples part of the Iroquois confederacy the Huron peoples and the Algonquin peoples 2 This has sometimes been called the Grand Settlement of 1701 3 not to be confused with the unrelated Act of Settlement 1701 in England It has often been referred to as La Paix des Braves meaning The Peace of the Braves Contents 1 The Fur Wars 2 Prelude to peace 3 Treaty ratification 4 Aftermath 5 Attendees and signatories 6 Commemoration 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesThe Fur Wars editThe foundation of Quebec City in 1608 by Samuel de Champlain one of the first governors of New France marked the beginning of the gathering of resources of the Great Northern forests by traders from Metropolitan France Control over the fur trade became a high stakes game among the Native American tribes as all of them wanted to be the European s chosen intermediary The Fur Wars saw the Hurons and Algonquins supported by the French pitted against the Iroquois of the powerful League of Five Nations who were supported first by New Netherlands and later by the English when they took New Amsterdam in the 1660s and 1670s renaming it New York City In the first half of the 17th century the Dutch allied Iroquois made substantial territorial gains against the French allied First Nations often threatening French settlements at Montreal and Trois Rivieres In an attempt to secure the colony in 1665 the Carignan Salieres Regiment was sent to New France Their campaign in 1666 devastated a number of Mohawk communities who were forced to negotiate a peace A period of prosperity followed for France s colony but the Iroquois now supported by the English continued to expand their territory westward fighting French allies in the Great Lakes region and again threatening the French fur trade In the 1680s the French became actively involved in the conflict again and they and their allied Indians made significant gains against the Iroquois including incursions deep into the heartland of Iroquoia present day Upstate New York After a devastating raid by the Iroquois against the settlement of Lachine in 1689 and the entry the same year of England into the Nine Years War known in the English colonies as King William s War Governor Frontenac organized raiding expeditions against English communities all along the frontier with New France French and English colonists and their Indian allies then engaged in a protracted border war that was formally ended when the Treaty of Ryswick was signed in 1697 The treaty however left unresolved the issue of Iroquois sovereignty both France and England claimed them as part of their empire and French allies in the upper Great Lakes continued to make war on the Iroquois Prelude to peace editFurther information Louis Thomas Chabert de Joncaire Career as an interpreter The success of these attacks which again reached deep into Iroquois territory and the inability of the English to protect them from attacks originating to their north and west forced the Iroquois to more seriously pursue peace Their demographic decline aided by conflicts and epidemics put their very existence into doubt At the same time commerce became almost nonexistent because of a fall in the price of furs The Indians preferred to trade with the merchants of New York because these merchants offered better prices than the French Preliminary negotiations took place in 1698 and 1699 but these were to some degree frustrated by the intervention of the English who sought to keep the Iroquois from negotiating directly with the French After another successful attack into Iroquoia in early 1700 these attempts at intervention failed The first conference between the French and Iroquois was held on Iroquois territory at Onondaga in March 1700 In September of the same year a preliminary peace treaty was signed in Montreal with the five Iroquois nations Thirteen First Nations symbols are on the treaty After this first entente it was decided that a bigger one would be held in Montreal in the summer of 1701 and all Nations of the Great Lakes were invited Selected French emissaries clergies and soldiers all well perceived by the First Nations were given this diplomatic task The negotiations continued during the wait for the big conference the neutrality of the Five Nations was discussed in Montreal in May 1701 The treaty of La Grande Paix de Montreal of July 21 to August 7 of 1701 4 was signed as a symbol of peace between the French and the First Nations In the treaty the Five Nations agreed to remain peaceful between the French and the British during times of war together It was a huge example of peace between different nations and honouring an agreement Treaty ratification editThe first delegations arrived in Montreal at the beginning of the summer of 1701 often after long hard journeys The ratification of the treaty was not agreed to immediately due to the discussions between the First Nations representatives and Governor Calliere s dragging on both sides being eager to negotiate as much as possible The actual signing of the document took place on a big field prepared for the special occasion just outside the city The representatives of each Nation placed their clan s symbol such as turtle wolf or bear at the bottom of the document A great banquet followed the solemn occasion with a peace pipe being shared by the chiefs each of them praising peace in turn This treaty achieved through negotiations according to First Nations diplomatic custom was meant to end ethnic conflicts From then on negotiation would trump direct conflict and the French would agree to act as arbiters during conflicts between signatory tribes The Iroquois promised to be neutral in case of conflict between the French and English colonies Aftermath editThe treaty was highly symbolic for the aboriginal nations as the Tree of Peace was now established among all the Great Lakes nations Commerce and exploratory expeditions quietly resumed in peace after the signing of the treaty The French explorer Antoine Laumet de La Mothe Sieur de Cadillac left Montreal to explore the Great Lakes region founding Fort Pontchartrain du Detroit now Detroit in July Jesuit priests resumed their spiritual mission based work in the north The Great Peace of Montreal is a unique diplomatic event in the history of both North and South America The treaty is still considered valid by the Indigenous people of the American First Nations tribes involved The French in negotiating followed their traditional policy in North and South America where their relationship with some of the natives was characterized by mutual respect and admiration and based on dialogue and negotiation According to the 19th century historian Francis Parkman Spanish civilization crushed the Indian English civilization scorned and neglected him French civilization embraced and cherished him 5 Attendees and signatories editHaudenosaunee Onondaga Seneca Oneida and Cayuga represented by Seneca orators Tekanoet Aouenan and Tonatakout and by Ohonsiowanne Onondaga Toarenguenion Oneida Garonhiaron Cayuga and Soueouon Oneida who were signatories Mohawk Teganiassorens Sault St Louis Kahnawake Mohawk represented by L Aigle The Eagle Iroquois of La Montagne represented by Tsahouanhos 6 Amikwa Beaver People represented by Mahingan and spoken for by the Odawas in the debates Cree or at least one Cree band from the area northwest of Lake Superior Meskwaki the Foxes or Outagamis represented by Noro amp Miskouensa Les Gens des terres Inlanders possibly a Cree related group Petun Tionontati represented by Kondiaronk Houatsaranti and Quarante Sols Huron of the St Joseph Illinois Confederation represented by Onanguice Potawatomi and possibly by Courtemanche Kaskaskia Peoria Tamaroa Maroa Coiracoentantanons Moingwena Kickapoo attendance is disputed by Kondiaronk 6 Mascouten represented by Kiskatapi Menominee Folles Avoines represented by Paintage Miami people represented by Chichicatalo Miamis of the St Joseph River Sakiwasipi Piankeshaw Wea Ouiatenon Mississaugas represented on August 4 by Onanguice Potawatomi Nippissing represented by Onaganioitak Odawa Sable Odawas Akonapi represented by Outouagan Jean Le Blanc and Kinonge Le Brochet Kiskakons Culs Coupez represented by Hassaki speaker and Kileouiskingie signatory Sinago Odawas represented by Chingouessi speaker and Outaliboi signatory Nassawaketons Odawas of the Fork represented by Elaouesse Ojibwe Saulteurs represented by Ouabangue Potawatomi represented by Onanguice and Ouenemek Sauk represented by Coluby and occasionally by Onanguice Timiskamings from Lake Timiskaming Ho Chunk Otchagras Winnebago Puants Algonquins Abenaki represented by Haouatchouath and Meskouadoue likely speaking for the entire Wabanaki Confederacy 6 See Nindoodemag The Significance of Algonquian Kinship Networks in the Eastern Great Lakes Region 1600 1701 pp 23 52 by Heidi Bohaker for a discussion of the significance of these pictographical signatures Marks and Signatures on the Great Peace of Montreal nbsp Louis Hector de Calliere signed for France nbsp Mark Wader Ouentsiouan signed for Onondagas nbsp Mark Turtle Tourengouenon signed for Senecas nbsp Mark A standing stone between a fork Signed for Oneidas nbsp Mark Great Pipe Signed for Cayugas nbsp Mark Rat Kondiaronk signed for Huron Wyandot nbsp Mark Bear Kinonge signed for Sable Odawas nbsp Mark Bear Outaliboi signed for Sinagos Odawas nbsp Mark Fish Kileouiskingie signed for Kiskakons nbsp Mark A fork Elaouesse signed for Nassawaketons Odawas of the Fork nbsp Mark Thunderbird Onanguice Potawatomi signed for Mississaugas nbsp Mark Crane Ouabangue signed for Ojibwe nbsp Mark Beaver Mahingan signed for Amikwa nbsp Mark Sturgeon Coluby signed for Sauk nbsp Mark Fox Signed for Meskwaki nbsp Mark Thunderbird Signed for Ho Chunk nbsp Mark Thunderbird holding stalk of wild rice Paintage signed for Menominee nbsp Mark Scalp on a pole Signed for Piankeshaw nbsp Mark Crane Chichicatalo signed for Miami nbsp Mark Quarry or furrow French Carriere Signed for Wea nbsp Mark Chief Outilirine possibly signed for Cree nbsp Mark Tree and roots Signed for Potawatomi nbsp Mark Bow and arrow Onanguice Potawatomi signed for the Kouera Kouitanon nbsp Mark Turtle Signed for Peoria nbsp Mark Unknown Signed for Tapouara nbsp Mark Unknown Signed for Moingona nbsp Mark Frog Signed for Maroa nbsp Mark Notched feather Signed for Kaskaskia nbsp Mark Unknown Mescouadoue signed for Abenaki of Acadia nbsp Mark Crane Signed for Algonkin nbsp Mark Deer Haronhiateka signed for Sault Kahnawake nbsp Mark Deer Mechayon signed for the People of the Mountain Iroquois of La Montagne Commemoration editA square in Old Montreal was renamed Place de la Grande Paix de Montreal to commemorate the 300th anniversary of the peace Several locations in Quebec are named for the Petun leader Kondiaronk one of the architects of the peace including the Kondiaronk Belvedere in Mount Royal Park overlooking downtown Montreal See also editNew France List of treaties French and Indian WarNotes edit Francis Daniel Voices and Visions Oxford University Press p 82 Charlotte Gray The Museum Called Canada 25 Rooms of Wonder Random House 2004 Grand Settlement of 1701 Archived from the original on 2009 09 28 Retrieved 2013 09 17 Gilles Havard 2001 Great Peace of Montreal of 1701 French Native Diplomacy in the Seventeenth Century Montreal Canada McGill Queens University Press pp 143 144 ISBN 0 7735 2219 0 Quoted in Cave p 42 a b c Havard Gilles Aronoff Phyllis Scott Howard 2001 The Great Peace of Montreal of 1701 French native Diplomacy in the Seventeenth Century McGill Queen s Press MQUP pp 119 121 ISBN 9780773522190 Retrieved 1 February 2016 References edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Translation Great Peace of Montreal Alfred A Cave The French and Indian War 2004 Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 32168 X Atherton William Montreal 1535 1914 Eccles W J Biography of Denonville at DCB Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Peace of Montreal amp oldid 1168719677, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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