- Sports
- Sports before 1800
- Promotion of Sport and Physical Education
- The Amateur Ideal and Professional Sports
- Sports Journalism
- Sports Betting
- Women in Sports
- Violence in Sports
- Sports and Canadian Nationalism
- Creation and Donation of Trophies
- Hockey — The Sport
- Hockey — The Protagonists
- Other Winter Sports
- Summer and Indoor Sports
- Combat Sports
- Water Sports
- Equestrian and Motor Sports
- Recreational Hunting and Fishing
- The Olympic Games
Sports before 1800

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While the settlement of Europeans in America posed many challenges, sports and social activities were an integral part of life in the colonial era. For example, Jean AMIOT, an interpreter and indentured employee of the Jesuits among the Hurons during the New France era, was an outstanding competitive runner:
“Jean Amiot [brother of Mathieu and Charles] spent several years in the Huron country, and seems to have lived at Trois-Rivières from 1645 on. The Indians called him ‘Antaïok.’ In 1647 he outran and captured an Iroquois who had taken part in the martyrdom of Father Isaac Jogues. He was a remarkable athlete; in a tournament at Quebec he beat all the young Indians who tried to race against him, either on foot or on snowshoes.”
Lacrosse, a sport of Indian origin and very popular with a number of native peoples, aroused both the curiosity and the interest of Europeans. In 1763 the shrewd Ojibwa chief MADJECKEWISS organized a seemingly innocent lacrosse game that allowed him to accomplish an amazing feat:
“By his mid 20s [Madjeckewiss] was a respected war chief. In 1763, when
By learning and practising the art of fencing, James BABY, born in 1763 and a future politician, civil servant, judge, militia officer, and landowner, was able to reinforce his social status:
“An elder son of a prestigious family in the Detroit area, James Baby was educated in the province of Quebec under the supervision of his uncle
The following biographies provide additional information about sports and those who engaged in them before 1800: