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                  341 to 360 (of 395)
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                  . In 1673 Buade de Frontenac established a fur-trading post on Lake Ontario which
                   
                  them by the governor of the colony, Buade de Frontenac, that they encroached on the
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac; b. c. 1650; d. 1698. Ourehouare was a chief of the Cayuga villages which had been established on the Bay of
                   
                  and Fernow), III, 121-25; IX, 236–39, 247, 255–58, 362, 384–86, 388–93. Eccles, Frontenac, 169–70, 189. Lanctot, Histoire du Canada, II, 118, 142.
                   
                  , Buade de Frontenac in order to make the crossing. After staying nearly two years in France, during which time he held the office of superior
                   
                  Borgia on the occasion of the dedication of the Jesuit church in Quebec in August 1673. He was chaplain of the Château Saint-Louis and was also the confessor of Louis de Buade de Frontenac. These
                   
                  de Frontenac appointed him notary of the seigneury of Lauson. In this capacity Mangue drew up 19
                   
                  Denonville* had desisted from giving any such dramatic presentations. Frontenac [see Buade
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac, who at first took a liking to him; when Frontenac travelled to Lake Ontario in 1673, he entrusted Legardeur with the military command of Quebec. In April 1675 the
                  Governor Buade de Frontenac decided to reply to the attacks directed against New France by
                  Buade de Frontenac went to Lake Ontario to lay the foundations for the settlement of Cataracoui. In the autumn of 1682 he took part in
                  succeeded a man of fine character, who was difficult to replace: the Comte de Frontenac [see
                   
                  de Frontenac to Montreal as his chaplain. There he received from M. Dollier
                   
                  , lieutenant and later captain of Governor Frontenac’s [see Buade] guards; b
                   
                  “Lattoras”). Murdoch, History of Nova-Scotia, I. Parkman, Count Frontenac and New France (24th ed.). Webster, Acadia.
                   
                  monastery and church of Notre-Dame-des-Anges. In the autumn of 1673 he went to the newly built Fort Cataracoui (Frontenac), where he acted as chaplain for nearly three years. He then returned to the monastery
                   
                  . Royal Fort Frontenac (Preston and Lamontagne), 34, 476. Philéas Gagnon, “Noms propres du Canada-Français
                   
                  Frontenac [see Buade] learned that the corrupt practices of the coureurs de
                   
                  . For his son Joseph, who was six, he obtained from Governor Buade de Frontenac the
                   
                  Bay in 1689, and with Jolliet in Labrador in 1694, and it was he whom the king sent to warn Frontenac [see
                  341 to 360 (of 395)
                  1...16  17  18  19  20