France and England in North America, Part IV: The Old Régime In Canada

audiobook

France and England in North America, Part IV: The Old Régime In Canada

by Francis Parkman

EN·~10 hours·33 chapters

Chapters

33 total
1

GEORGE EDWARD ELLIS, D.D.

0:20
2

PREFACE.

4:23
3

DETAILED CONTENTS - I. THE PERIOD OF TRANSITION. - CHAPT I. 1653-1658. - THE JESUITS AT ONONDAGA.

5:25
4

CHAPTER I. 1653-1658. THE JESUITS AT ONONDAGA.

1:02:59
5

CHAPTER II. - 1642-1661. - THE HOLY WARS OF MONTREAL.

7:01
6

Jérôme Le Royer de la Dauversière From an engraving by L. Massard.

26:51
7

CHAPTER III. 1660, 1661. THE HEROES OF THE LONG SAUT.

12:01
8

The Ursuline Convent

20:39
9

CHAPTER IV. 1657-1668. THE DISPUTED BISHOPRIC.

7:34
10

François Xavier de Laval-Montmorency, Abbé de Montigny.

24:08

Description

Delving into the heart of New France, this scholarly work paints a vivid portrait of the French monarchy’s reach across the Atlantic during its zenith. Drawing on a treasure trove of letters, dispatches, and council records, the author reconstructs the intricate web of officials, soldiers, missionaries, and indigenous allies who kept the colonial machine turning. The narrative reveals how the absolutist system both flourished and faltered in the rugged Canadian wilderness, exposing the tensions between royal authority and the frontier’s harsh realities.

Through meticulous analysis of original documents—many unearthed from archives in Paris and Quebec—the book offers listeners an intimate glimpse of daily governance, diplomatic intrigue, and the cultural clashes that defined early Canadian society. While the focus remains on the political and social structures of the Old Régime, the study also hints at the seeds of change that would later reshape the continent, inviting reflection on how history’s grand designs are often forged in distant outposts.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (624K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive

Release date

2016-09-07

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Francis Parkman

Francis Parkman

1823–1893

Best known for turning early North American history into vivid, sweeping narrative, this 19th-century historian wrote with the drive of a novelist and the habits of a researcher. His best-known books include The Oregon Trail and the monumental France and England in North America.

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