Samuel de Champlain.
Publié le 10/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
From 1616 to 1620 Champlain spent most of each year in France, with brief summer visits to Québec.
In France he had to struggle to keep the Canadian enterprisealive, raise capital, and enlist workers.
He also had to fight to keep his command over Québec.
In 1618 he presented reports on the future of the French colonies inAmerica to the king and to the French Chamber of Commerce.
In these reports he proposed that 300 settler families and 15 Récollets be established at Québec, with 300 soldiers to protect them.
He claimed that this would giveFrance the ability to control the interior of the continent and to convert the pagans to Christianity.
Wealth would pour into France from the land’s resources of fish,timber, copper, iron, silver, and precious stones.
However, he believed that the major benefit would be the revenue from the short water route to the western oceanand China, once this route was discovered.
Then all the maritime nations of Europe would have to use it and pay whatever tolls France chose to levy.
Champlain’s struggles to maintain the infant colony took a turn for the better in 1627 when the king’s first minister, Cardinal Richelieu, took charge of the overseascolonies.
He founded the Company of One Hundred Associates and required each associate to invest a large sum of money.
Champlain became one of the associatesand remained in charge of New France.
But two years later disaster struck.
Anglo-Scots privateers, the Kirke brothers, drew up their ships at Québec in 1629 and demanded its surrender.
Champlain had tocomply because he did not have the manpower to resist: in all of New France—Canada and Acadia together—there were only 107 settlers at that time.
The Kirkes alsoseized the company’s convoy of ships bringing reinforcements and supplies up the St.
Lawrence.
That loss exhausted the company’s capital, and it never recovered.Champlain was taken prisoner and held in England until 1632.
In 1633 he returned to New France and tried to repair the damage done by the Kirkes and reestablishgood relations with his old allies.
However, his health began to fail, and he died at Québec on December 25, 1635.
Toward the end, his mind bewildered, he dictated anew will leaving all his possessions to the Virgin Mary.
Two years later his wife succeeded in having the will annulled.
VIII EVALUATION
Champlain accomplished much during his relatively long life.
He produced the first accurate chart of the Atlantic coast from Newfoundland to Cape Cod and maps of theSt.
Lawrence Valley and Great Lakes Basin.
Many of his observations were published in the large body of writing he left behind, which eventually was printed in sixvolumes.
Champlain’s accounts of the habits and characteristics of indigenous peoples, although flawed by his lack of understanding of their cultures, have been ofgreat value to historians.
Champlain established the commercial and military alliances that endured to the end of the French regime in Canada.
He created and maintained a base for the futureFrench empire in North America in the face of great difficulties.
Reviewed By:W.
J.
EcclesMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
All rights reserved..
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- Samuel Champlain par Benoît Brouillette Professeur à l'École des hautes études commerciales, Montréal Champlain naquit à Brouage (Charente) durant la seconde moitié du XVIe siècle, vers 1567.
- Samuel de Champlain - biography.
- Samuel Champlain
- Samuel de Champlain - explorer.
- CHAMPLAIN, Samuel (vers 1567/1570-1635) Explorateur, colonisateur C'est le 15 mars 1603 que le cartographe de formation qu'est Champlain quitte le port d'Honfleur pour la Nouvelle-France, le Canada.