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Buade* de Frontenac port captain of Quebec. He had volunteered “to be responsible for preventing the said port from being befouled by the great amount of filth thrown into it by various individuals
Buade* de Frontenac granted him Île-aux-Coudres as a fief and seigneury. As Étienne de Lessard did not intend to establish settlers there, he sold it for 100 livres to
 
Buade* de Frontenac’s campaign against the Onondagas in 1696, and a captain in the colonial regular troops on 12 May 1697. On 11 Nov. 1702
 
. 1694 with Buade* de Frontenac as godfather). This additional responsibility goaded Levasseur to make constant demands
Lahontan left Montreal by canoe in the advance party led by Captain Dutast, and arrived at Fort Frontenac (Cataracoui) in mid-July. He witnessed the ill-fated negotiations at Arise de La Famine (Mexico
 
post of midshipman at Rochefort the following year. He is said to have participated as captain in the 1696 expedition led by Frontenac
 
. Baptiste was married several times. About 1693 he evidently married Madeleine Bourg at Port-Royal (Annapolis Royal, N.S.). However, Frontenac
 
permission, Jacques returned to France in 1693 to request letters of pardon. Considering that he received support from Frontenac
 
24 Dec. 1693, which was concluded before Frontenac [Buade*], the protector of the Recollets, for
 
in 1689. Buade* de Frontenac immediately appointed him first corporal of his guards, and two years later granted
 
de La Malgue set out from Fort Frontenac in 1682 to go among the Iroquois, in order to make inquiries “about the death of one of the important members of the Seneca tribe, murdered among the
 
. 7 Nov. 1729 at Quebec. Martel came to Canada in 1672 as a soldier in the personal guard of Governor Frontenac
 
had been captured in the Bay of Fundy, was sent to Quebec by the governor of Acadia, Joseph Robinau* de Villebon. Frontenac
 
militia at Ville-Marie, gave evidence in an inquiry launched by Buade* de Frontenac, the object of which was to
 
Buade*, Comte de Frontenac, were carefully briefed by the Marquis de Seignelay, Colbert’s son, who was now in charge of Canadian affairs, on the manner in which they must discharge their new
 
Le Febvre* de La Barre, when the latter was going to Fort Frontenac (Cataracoui) on his way to punish the Senecas. He took part in the negotiations at Anse de La Famine (Mexico Bay
 
Buade* de Frontenac, comptroller of the navy and fortifications in New France (1701–18), secretary councillor and chief clerk of the Conseil Supérieur (1705–18
 
 1674 Buade* de Frontenac granted him the seigneury of Kamouraska, which he was to sell in 1680 to
Louis de Buade* de Frontenac, who foresaw an expedition against the Iroquois and the fact that he would need the Hôtel
 
to Governor Buade* de Frontenac, in which he praised his Indians and drew the governor’s attention to the efforts
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