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Champlain’s arrival on the St. Lawrence (29 May 1603) he and François Gravé Du
Tessouat whom Champlain visited in 1613; d. 1636
been substantiated in Champlain’s writings. It is clear that Thevet talked with explorers; that he was host
 
. The Great Mohawk fought under his orders. At the end of August he went to Lake Champlain and met some 60 Mohawks who were on their way to attack the colony. The Great Mohawk persuaded them to go back
Canadian usage. It has a curious history. In the 17th century Champlain fixed its present orthography, with the
 
Champlain some time before 1612. In 1611–12, Vignau wintered with
. Honorius Provost ASQ, Documents Faribault, 23, 25. Champlain, Œuvres (Laverdière), II, 1283–87. JR (Thwaites
 
-Anne de la Pérade, Batiscan, Champlain, and even Chambly. He was about to go and set himself up at Champlain. According to documents dated 1681, 1682, and 1684, he added to his offices of royal notary
 
Marguerite Drapeau; b. sometime between 1643 and 1645 in France; buried 28 Oct. 1708 at Champlain. François Bigot arrived in Canada with his
 
supplied. The trade continued, clandestinely, chiefly by the Lake Champlain-Richelieu River route between Albany and Montreal. French wines, brandy, silks, and beaver pelts moved south in exchange for
government of Montreal.” Like Champlain* and Talon, Pierre Boucher believed in the
 
-Anne, at the mouth of Lake Champlain, by a hostile Mohican party. Bruyas arrived in the Oneida village in September. He soon had his chapel dedicated
 
Cap-de-la-Madeleine until 1687, and then in the seigneury of Champlain from 1687 to 1700. In 1700 he moved to Montreal, where he carried on his functions for four years. He lived at Pointe-aux-Trembles
 
), son of Jacques Dandonneau and Isabelle Fain; d. 1702 at Champlain. Pierre Dandonneau was one of the most earnest and tenacious settlers in
 
.” Meanwhile Father Constantin had returned from the pays d’en haut, for we find in the parish registers of Champlain a certificate of baptism dated 25 Sept. 1701 and signed by him
 
1687 and exchanged for Jean Rioux’s seigneury on Île d’Orléans in 1696; a lot on the Champlain quay in Quebec, acquired in 1692; a seigneury at Antigonish, in Acadia, granted in 1697; an arriere-fief in
 
François Desjordy Moreau; m. 22 Nov. 1691 Madeleine Pézard de La Tousche at Champlain; d. there 25 April 1713 and was buried the next day
 
 Feb. 1694, as the scandal had been going on “for several years,” the parish priests of Batiscan and Champlain, the Sieurs Foucault and Bouquin, read from the pulpit a pastoral letter from Bishop
 
Marguerite and Pierre*; buried 13 Feb. 1723 at Champlain. Michel
Champlain Society of Toronto published a critical edition (with an English translation), prepared by Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Webster, and entitled: Relation of the voyage to Port Royal in Acadia
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