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MODULE 2 REVIEW

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Title: MODULE 2 REVIEW


1
  • MODULE 2 REVIEW
  • THE FRENCH REGIME
  • 1663-1760

2
SETTLEMENT
  • Factors affecting settlement (Reasons areas were
    settled the way they were!)
  • Economic Religious
  • - fur trade - mission settlement
  • - Quebec City - convert natives
  • - Trois Rivieres - Montreal (Ville Marie)
  • - hospitals/schools
  • BOTH types of settlements all located along the
    St. Lawrence Valley.

3
  • Before 1650
  • Slow growth
  • Fur trade did not need much labour
  • Merchants not interested in encouraging
    settlement
  • Government efforts to populate New France failed
  • After 1650
  • Population increase
  • King subsidizes immigration
  • Disbanded soldiers given land to stay
  • Seigneurial system encourages settlement

4
Jean Talons Policies
  • WHO? Intendant of New France 1665-1672
  • WHAT? Doubled population due to immigration and
    high
  • birth rate
  • Immigration Birth Rate Initiatives
  • filles du roi to large families
  • soldiers given land to marry young
  • (Carignan-Salieres Regiment)
    families with 10
  • hired workers (engages)
    children
  • bachelors penalized
  • fathers fined if

  • children unmarried

5
Seigneurial System
  • PURPOSE
  • Encourage settlement of New France
  • Promote the distribution of land
  • CHARACTERISTICS
  • Long narrow strips of land (concessions)
    perpendicular to a river
  • Seigneurs granted land to tenent-farmers
    (censitaires), built roads and a mill, held court
  • Censitaires cleared land to keep it, paid a rent
    (portion of crops/animals), worked free (corvee)
    3 days, paid a tax if sold their land (lod et
    ventes)

6
LOOKED LIKE THIS
7
POLITICAL STRUCTURE
  • 1663-1760
  • Relations with Mother Country dependant on
    France for
  • population (immigration)
  • economic development
  • military
  • political and civil administration
  • LOUIS XIV revokes charter for the Company of 100
    Associates in 1663. Government switches from
    local administration by fur companies to Royal
    Government directly under the King of France.

8
  • KING (absolute monarch)
  • France
  • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ministry of
    Marine (responsible for colonies)- - - - - - -
  • New France
  • Sovereign Council
  • (court of appeal)
  • governor intendant bishop some others
  • Governor
    Intendant
  • represented King
    administered colony
  • military affairs Bishop justice
  • external relations (religious
    head) finances
  • Captain of Militia
  • named by governor and intendant
  • responsible for local military


  • People

9
SOCIAL STRUCTURE
  • Roles of the Church
  • Religious
  • provide religious services to the colony (parish
    duties)
  • convert the Natives to Christianity
  • Social
  • education, hospitals, charities

10
  • Regular clergy
  • members of missionary orders such as Jesuits,
    Recollets, and the Ursuline Sisters, etc.
  • set up schools and hospitals
  • most in contact with Natives in order to convert
    them
  • many involved in explorations of the interior of
    Canada
  • Secular clergy
  • parish priests responsible for keeping records
    of births, deaths, marriages, plus church
    services
  • Bishops organized the parishes, installed
    priests, sat on Sovereign Council, great deal of
    power

11
SOCIAL STRUCTURE
  • B. Social Groups
  • NOBILITY BOURGEOISIE
    COMMONERS
  • - military and political -
    merchants - farmers
  • authorities (intendant, - civil
    servants - parish priests
  • governor) -
    seigneurs - innkeepers
  • - upper clergy this is the middle -
    coureurs des
  • (bishop) class bois

12
New France VS France
  • same language/dialect spoken
  • no regional difference
  • farms bigger, more land available, more fuel
  • dispersed (widely scattered) settlement
  • People are more equal
  • less rigid social structure
  • more personal freedoms
  • independent, self-reliant people
  • better and more varied diet
  • allowed to hunt
  • no direct taxes
  • upper class not as rich
  • many different languages/dialects spoken
  • regional differences great
  • farms very small, rarely owned by farmers
  • settlements densely located around large cities
    and towns
  • very rigid class structure
  • few personal freedoms
  • less varied diet
  • taxed directly
  • upper class (aristocracy) very wealthy
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