
audiobook
The Jesuits in North America in the Seventeenth Century - by Francis Parkman
INTRODUCTION.
1634.
CHAPTER II.
1632, 1633.
1633, 1634.
1633, 1634.
1634, 1635.
1636, 1637.
1636, 1637.
The work opens a vivid portrait of the French Jesuits who ventured into the wild heart of seventeenth‑century North America, long before English settlements took hold along the Atlantic coast. Drawing on the painstakingly detailed Jesuit Relations—annual reports sent from remote mission houses back to Paris—the author reconstructs daily life among the Algonquins, Hurons, Iroquois and many other nations. Readers encounter the stark contrast between scholarly ambition and the rugged, often perilous conditions of forest lodges, where language barriers and cultural misunderstandings shaped every encounter.
Beyond the missionary zeal, the narrative explores how these early French outposts intersected with the political fortunes of the continent, influencing the future balance of power. By weaving together official dispatches, personal letters, and contemporary scholarship, the book offers a clear, trustworthy window into a formative era of cultural exchange, sacrifice, and the complex foundations of civil and religious liberty in the New World.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (723K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Ken Reeder, Cyrille Héloir and Robert Homa
Release date
2004-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1823–1893
A vivid 19th-century historian and travel writer, he turned firsthand adventure and deep archival research into sweeping narratives of North America. His books are remembered for their energy, dramatic scenes, and lasting influence on how many readers imagined the colonial frontier.
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by Francis Parkman

by Francis Parkman

by Francis Parkman

by Francis Parkman

by Francis Parkman