Religious life in French Newfoundland to 1714

This thesis examines the religious life of the French colony of Plaisance (Placentia) in Newfoundland during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The secular clergy who served the colony during its early years were replaced in 1689 by a group of friars from the Franciscan Récollet province of S...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Taylor-Hood, Victoria
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/9696/
https://research.library.mun.ca/9696/1/Taylor-Hood_Victoria.pdf
Description
Summary:This thesis examines the religious life of the French colony of Plaisance (Placentia) in Newfoundland during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The secular clergy who served the colony during its early years were replaced in 1689 by a group of friars from the Franciscan Récollet province of Saint-Denis (Paris). The Récollets of Saint-Denis were, in turn, replaced by Récollets from Brittany in 1701. Both groups of friars engaged in missionary work in Plaisance and the surrounding areas and often found themselves dealing with problems such as conflict with the secular authorities of the colony, a lack of religious participation by the inhabitants, insufficient or inconsistent funding, an inability to control religious passing through Plaisance aboard ships, and problems of recruitment within their own ranks. -- The religious history of French Newfoundland is examined using a multiplicity of approaches including a study of the documentary evidence surrounding the tangible forms of religious life in Plaisance, a demographic examination of the population background in Plaisance, and an examination of the religious history surrounding the French colonies. Further, the economic and social realities of a populace with close ties to the fishery and the impact of life in a military establishment impinged upon the religious and spiritual life in the communities. -- The first portion of this thesis deals with life prior to 1689, and includes a study of the migratory religious systems of the colony. Links between the fishery and the religious community are established, as are such factors as Protestantism in the North American colonies, connections between religious life and economic means, religious life elsewhere in New France, and the roles of the governors in establishing the religious atmosphere in Plaisance. -- The third through to the fifth chapters examine the establishment and development of the Récollet mission from 1689 to 1701, a significant evolution in the history of the community. The introduction of ...