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The Seigneurs of Old Canada

William Bennett Munro

Book Overview: 

It was during one of her proud and prosperous eras that France began her task of creating an empire beyond the Atlantic. At no time, indeed, was she better equipped for the work. No power of Western Europe since the days of Roman glory had possessed such facilities for conquering and governing new lands. If ever there was a land able and ready to take up the white man's burden it was the France of the seventeenth century.

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .d for the proper care of all matters relating to the defence and peace of New France. Then there was the Sovereign Council, a body made up of the bishop, the intendant, and certain prominent citizens of the colony named by the king on the advice of his colonial representatives. This council was both a law-making and a judicial body. It registered and published the royal decrees, made local regulations, and acted as the supreme court of the colony. But the official who loomed largest in the purely civil affairs of New France was the intendant. He was the overseas apostle of Bourbon paternalism, and as his commission authorized him to 'order all things as he may think just and proper,' the intendant never found much opportunity for idleness.

Tocqueville, shrewdest among historians of pre-revolutionary France, has somewhere pointed out that under the old regime the administration took the place of Providence. It sought to be as omniscient and as omn. . . Read More

Community Reviews

This is a curious special history book about aristocracy created in the French colonies in north America, with considerable details.

Once again, I was unable to locate the version that I read on GoodReads. I was able to read the originally published version (available from my local library) and highly recommend that route if you are able - just the feel of it alone is worth the trouble!

With a picturesque writing style and a habit