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                  61 to 80 (of 395)
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                  appointed sergeant in the Canadian forces, in which rank he accompanied governor Frontenac [see
                   
                   Poterie, on 7 July 1671. Governor Buade de Frontenac, on 23 March 1677, also
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac. After a stay at Quebec and Montreal, he had continued on to France. This then constituted Joseph Robinau’s
                   
                  . Nevertheless, Buade de Frontenac, the new governor, was already thinking of depriving Villeray
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac. The latter informed the minister that d’Auteuil was incompetent and under the influence of the Jesuits. Frontenac, however, had no recourse but to allow the registration of
                  had wanted a military fort, his successor, Buade de Frontenac, two years later
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac wrote on 9 Jan. 1673: “The great zeal that Sieur Abbé de Fénelon has exhibited for several years in the propagation of Christianity in this colony, and the devotion that
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac in 1678 about the sale of spirits to Indigenous people. Saurel approved of this traffic, for according to him they would turn to the Dutch if the French defaulted. He was
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac and Abbé Fénelon [see Salignac
                  surplus: in 1667 and 1668 it exported to the West Indies peas, both green and dried, hops, and barley; in 1672 Frontenac
                  Governor Buade de Frontenac on his journey to Lake Ontario. Although infirm and ill, he
                   
                  Callière* sent Tareha to Quebec, where Frontenac [see Buade] consented to the exchange. As proof of his sincerity the Indian had presented to the governor a letter from the Jesuit Father
                   
                  ) (Québec, 1897), 31–48, 139–143 (extract from Thury’s account of the destruction of Pemaquid, from Charlevoix). Parkman, Count Frontenac and New France
                   
                  Brisay* de Denonville seized some pagan chiefs by treachery at Cataracoui (Fort Frontenac) and sent them to the galleys in France. In the month of July he attacked the Senecas and burned their villages
                  Frontenac and its surroundings. Meanwhile the Intendant de Meulles* instructed him to draw up the plans for a powder-magazine which was to be
                  -Castin was making his report at the Château Saint-Louis, Buade* de Frontenac, good judge that he was, was sizing him up
                   
                  Frontenac appointed him “royal process-server and serjeant-at-law for the whole of Canada,” Adhémar was still living at Sorel, but he regularly
                   
                  to take up his second mandate as governor, Buade* de Frontenac sent him with all speed to Cataracoui (Fort
                   
                  de documents,” APQ Rapport, 1941–42, 192. “Estat des employs vaquans ausquels Monsieur le comte de Frontenac . . . a pourvu en l’année 1691 en attendant les commissions de sa majesté
                   
                  several fur trade convoys back to Montreal, and Buade* de Frontenac often praised his work. In the early 1700s
                  61 to 80 (of 395)
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