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                  161 to 180 (of 395)
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                  . In 1682, after the western Iroquois had attacked the French allies, the Illinois and Miamis, Teganissorens came to Montreal and persuaded the governor general, Frontenac
                   
                  everyone were unanimously in favour of La Touche. On 15 Oct. 1698 Buade* de Frontenac and Champigny
                  who had been sent as an emissary to the Iroquois by Buade* de Frontenac, governor of Canada – was taken back to
                   
                   October (16 October, N.S.) to deliver an ultimatum to Buade* de Frontenac to surrender. Savage was “carried
                  ; Buade* de Frontenac wrote in 1697: “It is true that four years ago the Sieur Sarrazin was surgeon-major of the colonial regular troops, and that . . . [he had] retired a year previously to a
                   
                  General Phips* took Acadia in 1690, and lodged a complaint with the Earl of Bellomont, governor of Massachusetts. Late in 1695 La Tour was cited in dispatches by Frontenac
                   
                  detachment in Louis Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition to Lake Ontario in 1673, when Fort Cataracoui (Frontenac) was built
                   
                  Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition during the summer of 1696 against the same enemies. He earned a citation as a “good officer.” In 1702 he became captain of a company of colonial regular troops
                   
                  e partie, lettres à M. Tronson. Jug. et délib., I, 862, 866, 867. Eccles, Frontenac, 68f. Henri Gauthier, La Compagnie de Saint-Sulpice au Canada
                   
                  general. The latter, a victim of the ill-will of Frontenac [Buade*], whose hostility was unrelenting, had been ill for
                  supposed that it was she, because the archives mention her name in close association with the discoverer’s, and because she was the only spinster of her rank to live at Fort Frontenac
                   
                  . In August 1674, Frontenac [Buade*] had the Sulpician François de
                   
                  English and established close relations with the Abenaki Indian tribes. During the winter of 1689–90 Buade* de Frontenac
                   
                  . Buade* de Frontenac requested a lieutenant’s commission for him, and this was granted him on 3 April 1696. He then commanded small ships fitted out for fighting privateers and for protecting
                   
                  . Buade* de Frontenac wrote to the minister in 1690 that, subject to royal confirmation, he had named “Sieur Robineau Becancour the older son to replace Sr. [René] Robineau de Portneuf the
                  the governors and intendants of the colony. Buade* de Frontenac and Duchesneau favoured Riverin. Their successors
                  impressed by his zeal and his devotion to his duties. Frontenac [Buade*] praised his “incredible diligence” during the
                   
                  . In October 1696 Frontenac [Buade*] granted him a piece of land in Acadia, but he did not farm it. It was as the
                   
                  . 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
                  as a means of achieving social status. Hosting the colony’s dignitaries and being referred to as a “real gentleman” by Governor Frontenac
                  161 to 180 (of 395)
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