The Seigneurs of Old Canada


Book Description

Feudal system of landholding, instituted in Canada by the French and its part in Canadian history.










A Canadian Manor and Its Seigneurs


Book Description

An account of Murray Bay, Quebec, and the Nairne family, based on family manuscripts.




The Seigneurs of Old Canada


Book Description

William Bennett Munro (1875-1957) was a Canadian social scientist and eugenicist. He was educated at Queen's University, at the University of Edinburgh, at Harvard University, and at the University of Berlin. From 1901 to 1904 he taught history at Williams College, Massachusetts, and was professor of government at Harvard University until 1929, when he went to the California Institute of Technology as professor of history and government. In 1927 he was elected president of the American Political Science Association, and in 1929 president of the American Association of University Professors. His works include: The Seigniorial System in Canada (1907), Documents Related to the Seigniorial Tenure (1908), The Government of European Cities (1909), The Initiative, Referendum and Recall (1912), Bibliography of Municipal Government (1914), Principles and Methods of Municipal Administration (1916), The Government of the United States (1919) and Social Civics (1922).




The Seigneurs of Old Canada


Book Description

Feudal system of landholding, instituted in Canada by the French and its part in Canadian history.




The Seigneurs of Old Canada


Book Description

The Seigneurs of Old Canada-A Chronicle of New World Feudalism is a classic Canadian history text by William Bennett Munro. It was Samuel Champlain, a seaman of Brouage, who first secured for France and for Frenchmen a sure foothold in North America, and thus became the herald of Bourbon imperialism. After a youth spent at sea, Champlain engaged for some years in the armed conflicts with the Huguenots; then he returned to his old marine life once more.




Chronicles of Canada


Book Description




The Seigneurial System in Early Canada


Book Description

With its long thin fields and straggling rows of farmhouses stretching along either bank of the St Lawrence river for two hundred miles and more, the landscape of rural Canada toward the end of the French regime presented a distinctive charm and drew later writers to construct idyllic portraits of the social and legal system which, they believed, had shaped it.




A Canadian Manor and Its Seigneurs


Book Description

An account of Murray Bay, Quebec, and the Nairne family, based on family manuscripts.