Friend and Foe: Aspects of French-Amerindian Cultural Contact in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth CenturiesThrough the analysis of contemporary documents, this book provides a contribution to our knowledge of French-Indigenous relations in the 16th and 17th century. |
Contents
Introduction7 | 7 |
Efforts at Evangelization41 | 41 |
Social Problems and Differences84 | 84 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
aboriginal Acadia accepted Algonkian Amer Amerindian societies Amerindians Archives assimilation baptized barbarians barbarism became behaviour believed brandy Canada Canadian captives Cartier Catholic Catholicism Champlain Christian church civilization colony concept converts cultural customs Denonville disease dream epidemics European evangelization experience Father favour feast French French and Amerindians Frenchmen Gabriel Sagard girls Hennepin Histoire History Huguenot hunting Huron Ibid Indian instructed Iroquoian Iroquois Jean Jean de Léry Jesuit missionaries Jeune l'Amérique land language Laval Lescarbot living Louis Louis Hennepin Marc Lescarbot Marie de l'Incarnation Micmacs mission missionaries Montagnais Montaigne nation natives nature Nicolas Perrot North America Nouvelle France Nouvelle-France observed Oury pagan Paris Pierre practices prisoners Quebec Récollets Relation religion religious reported reservation savages scalps settlement seventeenth century Sieur sixteenth social spiritual Sulpicians superior supernatural Tadoussac tion Toronto torture trade traditional tribal tribes tribesmen Ursulines village Voyages warfare warriors women World wrote York