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Champlain; recounting the events of 1629, he wrote of Pierre Raye, Étienne Brûlé, and Marsolet that he had
 
ACM, B.187, 5655, 5656. Champlain, Works (Biggar). Factum (1614). Couillard Després, Saint-Étienne de La Tour. Huguet, Poutrincourt. Candide de Nant, Pages
 
Thomas Kirke calling upon Champlain to surrender the fort and settlement to the English. After
 
Razilly from La Rochelle to revictual Champlain at Quebec. Razilly was ordered elsewhere, and
 
[Miristou], a Montagnais chief, informed Champlain of proposals made by the Dutch and the Mohicans at
Champlain’s example, adopted three young indigenous individuals. In May 1637 he received, jointly with Jean
Champlain; and he had visited old fishing captains, who knew Newfoundland and the Acadian coasts. He therefore reported what he had himself seen or learned from those who had taken part in the
, Prouville de Tracy. On his return he escorted the army chaplain to Fort Sainte-Anne on Lake Champlain. In addition, in the summer of 1671, he took part, as an interpreter, in a new expedition to
profoundly Christian spirit of the first two governors, Champlain and
 
Espérance, whom Champlain was unable to obtain permission to take to France and whom Couillard adopted
 
Nouvelle-France: le donné Robert Le Coq.” Champlain, Œeuvres (Laverdière), 1246–47. JR (Thwaites).
 
(Shea); New relation of Gaspesia with the customs and religion of the Gaspesian Indians, tr. and ed. W. F. Ganong (Champlain Soc., V, 1910); Premier établissement de la Foy
 
Champlain brought four Recollets to New France; Father Le Caron was among them, as well as Father Jamet
 
, 446–47. John Knox, An historical journal of the campaigns in North America for the years 1757, 1758, 1759 and 1760, ed. A. G. Doughty (3v., Champlain Soc., VIII–X, 1914–16), I, notes
 
Champlain, and reached Quebec in mid-July. Father Le Baillif was the friend and counsellor of Champlain, who had been asked by Henri
Champlain. At that period the Indians of the Laurentian coalition (Algonkins, Montagnais, Hurons) were at war with the Iroquois. The latter, making use of the Richelieu River route, were trying to
Kirke brothers. In 1629, Champlain had written to him from Dover to inform him of what had taken
 
AJQ, Greffe de Claude Auber, 7 juillet 1666. Université de Montréal, Coll. Bâby (land grants (concessions), 1626–1718). JR (Thwaites), passim. Dionne, Champlain, II, 338
 
). In the spring of 1666 he was commissioned to build Fort Sainte-Anne on the island that bears his name (Lamotte), at the entrance to Lake Champlain. It was from there that the troops under
was to return to France for good in 1638. It was he who helped Champlain during his last illness and who
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