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Buade* de Frontenac as a lifelong ally of the French, and warned him privately against the treachery of the Foxes and Mascoutens, whose spokesmen were also present. A few days later Iroquois were
 
Buade* de Frontenac that he was “a good-for-nothing weakling since he needed a horse to carry him.” In another encounter with the governor recorded by
 
from Fort Frontenac (Kingston) on Lake Ontario to Percé. He returned to France in the autumn of 1677. In 1683 he was guardian of the convent at Rouen
 
Aloigny de La Groye. For ten years Papineau served faithfully under Frontenac [Buade*] and
 
. . . , suivi des relations officielles de Frontenac, Monseignat et Juchereau de Saint-Ignace . . . (Montréal, 1898), Archange Godbout, “Paradis,” SGCF Mémoires, I (1944), 30–33. Ernest
 
Lorimier de la Rivière. Governor Frontenac [Buade*] added to the penalty by relieving the two of their
 
Buade* de Frontenac, he was appointed to the Conseil Souverain in January 1673 in place of Nicolas de Mouchy*, and two years later
 
Joly-Cœur, had attempted to poison Cavelier* de La Salle at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), shortly after Governor
 
with the Chevalier Thomas Crisafy* to Fort Frontenac (Cataracoui, now Kingston, Ont.). He received one more promotion in that year, to sub
 
Meulles. In 1686, after de Meulles’ departure, he worked with his father at the registry of the Conseil Souverain. At the request of Frontenac
 
Bizard*, Buade* de Frontenac appointed him town major of Montreal with “the power to command in the absence of the
 
Buade* de Frontenac to Lake Ontario in 1673. Frontenac always held him in high esteem. In 1683
situation was a source of tension between New France, France, and England. Radisson arrived in Quebec at the end of September 1681. Governor Frontenac
 
deal from gout. When he died it was, therefore, natural to think of his son as his successor. On the recommendation of Frontenac
Buade* de Frontenac. He was first sent to the mission at the falls of the Chaudière River which was directed by Father
dignitaries and being referred to as a “real gentleman” by Governor Frontenac [Buade*] himself must have greatly flattered
 
. Jean Delanglez, Frontenac and the Jesuits (Chicago, 1939), 65. Hamelin, Économie et société en N.-F. F. M. Hammang, The Marquis de Vaudreuil, New France at the
 
. Georges Regnard Duplessis took part in the various commercial activities of the colony. He was also an enterprising seigneur. In October 1696 Frontenac
twice, at Repentigny and at the Long Sault, decisively defeated their war parties. His superiors without exception were greatly impressed by his zeal and his devotion to his duties. Frontenac
the governors and intendants of the colony. Buade* de Frontenac and Duchesneau favoured Riverin. Their successors
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