Symbols of the French presence in Newfoundland: Breton crosses and calvaries - 1680 to today

Crosses and calvaries are strong cultural landmarks on the Petit Nord. Those distinctive features are not, however unique to Breton fishing rooms in Newfoundland; few have been recorded elsewhere in the province. They appeared in the landscape of the Petit Nord as early as 1680. Over time, at least...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Burns, Melissa
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/9352/
https://research.library.mun.ca/9352/1/Burns_Melissa.pdf
Description
Summary:Crosses and calvaries are strong cultural landmarks on the Petit Nord. Those distinctive features are not, however unique to Breton fishing rooms in Newfoundland; few have been recorded elsewhere in the province. They appeared in the landscape of the Petit Nord as early as 1680. Over time, at least thirty crosses and calvaries were built by the fishermen in that region. Two monumental crosses and a calvary are still standing in Cap Rouge Harbour, although these particular monuments were rebuilt by the French Navy in the 1930s - years after the end of the French fishery in Newfoundland. -- The cognitive processes that led the Breton fishermen to build crosses and calvaries in the Petit Nord landscape are deeply rooted in the Breton Catholic traditions. Social and political contexts in Newfoundland from the seventeenth to the twentieth century also explain the presence of such cultural identity markers in the Petit Nord. In this thesis I document the symbolic meanings as well as the functions of these monuments to answer my main research question: Why over centuries did the Breton fishermen build crosses and calvaries in the Petit Nord region?