In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730

Beginning in the late 1630s, a diversity of Algonquian and Iroquoian peoples established under the auspices of Jesuit and, later, Sulpician missionaries a string of village communities in the St. Lawrence Valley. A diversity of peoples, whom the French lumped under the rubrics of “Algonquins”, “Mont...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lozier, Jean-François
Other Authors: Greer, Allan, History
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published:
Subjects:
War
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/36291
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spelling ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/36291 2023-05-15T17:13:14+02:00 In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730 Lozier, Jean-François Greer, Allan History WITHHELD_ONE_YEAR http://hdl.handle.net/1807/36291 en_ca eng http://hdl.handle.net/1807/36291 New France Missions Aboriginals Native Americans Ethnohistory War 0334 0578 0337 0740 Thesis ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T11:22:23Z Beginning in the late 1630s, a diversity of Algonquian and Iroquoian peoples established under the auspices of Jesuit and, later, Sulpician missionaries a string of village communities in the St. Lawrence Valley. A diversity of peoples, whom the French lumped under the rubrics of “Algonquins”, “Montagnais”, “Hurons”, “Iroquois”, “Abenakis” and “Loups”, migrated to these villages in the hope of bettering their lives in trying times. This dissertation retraces the formation and the early development of these communities, exploring the entangled influence of armed conflict, diplomacy, kinship, and leadership on migration, community-building, and identity formation. The historiography of the St. Lawrence Valley – the French colonial heartland in North America – has tended to relegate these Aboriginal communities to the margins. Moreover, those scholars who have considered the formation of mission villages have tended to emphasize missionary initiative. Here, these villages are reimagined as a joint creation, the result of intersecting French and Aboriginal desires, needs, and priorities. The significance of these villages as sites of refuge becomes readily apparent, the trajectories of individual communities corresponding with the escalation of conflict or with its tense aftermath. What also becomes clear is that the course of war and peace through the region cannot be accounted solely by the relations of the French and Iroquois, or of the French and British crowns. Paying close attentions to the nuanced personal and collective identities of the residents of the mission villages and their neighbours allows us to gain a better understanding of the geopolitics of the northeastern woodlands during the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. PhD Thesis montagnais University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
institution Open Polar
collection University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
op_collection_id ftunivtoronto
language English
topic New France
Missions
Aboriginals
Native Americans
Ethnohistory
War
0334
0578
0337
0740
spellingShingle New France
Missions
Aboriginals
Native Americans
Ethnohistory
War
0334
0578
0337
0740
Lozier, Jean-François
In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730
topic_facet New France
Missions
Aboriginals
Native Americans
Ethnohistory
War
0334
0578
0337
0740
description Beginning in the late 1630s, a diversity of Algonquian and Iroquoian peoples established under the auspices of Jesuit and, later, Sulpician missionaries a string of village communities in the St. Lawrence Valley. A diversity of peoples, whom the French lumped under the rubrics of “Algonquins”, “Montagnais”, “Hurons”, “Iroquois”, “Abenakis” and “Loups”, migrated to these villages in the hope of bettering their lives in trying times. This dissertation retraces the formation and the early development of these communities, exploring the entangled influence of armed conflict, diplomacy, kinship, and leadership on migration, community-building, and identity formation. The historiography of the St. Lawrence Valley – the French colonial heartland in North America – has tended to relegate these Aboriginal communities to the margins. Moreover, those scholars who have considered the formation of mission villages have tended to emphasize missionary initiative. Here, these villages are reimagined as a joint creation, the result of intersecting French and Aboriginal desires, needs, and priorities. The significance of these villages as sites of refuge becomes readily apparent, the trajectories of individual communities corresponding with the escalation of conflict or with its tense aftermath. What also becomes clear is that the course of war and peace through the region cannot be accounted solely by the relations of the French and Iroquois, or of the French and British crowns. Paying close attentions to the nuanced personal and collective identities of the residents of the mission villages and their neighbours allows us to gain a better understanding of the geopolitics of the northeastern woodlands during the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. PhD
author2 Greer, Allan
History
format Thesis
author Lozier, Jean-François
author_facet Lozier, Jean-François
author_sort Lozier, Jean-François
title In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730
title_short In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730
title_full In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730
title_fullStr In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730
title_full_unstemmed In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730
title_sort in each other’s arms: france and the st. lawrence mission villages in war and peace, 1630-1730
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/36291
genre montagnais
genre_facet montagnais
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1807/36291
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