User:Evancol/Sandbox/Quebec

Canada   Quebec

Guide to Quebec ancestry, family history and genealogy: birth records, marriage records, death records, census records, family history, and military records.

Getting Started
{| style="vertical-align: top;"| Getting Started with Quebec Research Links to articles on getting started with Quebec research.
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Quebec Research Tools Links to articles and websites that assist in Quebec research.
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 * Quebec Research Outline
 * Mary's Genealogy Treasures - great research resource
 * Originis. Stories of parishes, baptisms directories, marriages and burials, census, clergy biography demographic statistics. (In French)
 * Message boards for localities in Quebec.
 * Tracings by Sam...

Counties
Extinct or Renamed Counties:  Jacques Cartier· Laval

The Fur Trade

 * In New France

Major Repositories
Library and Archives Canada· Salle Gagnon· Eastern Townships Research Centre· Centre d'archives de Québec et de Chaudière-Appalaches· American-Canadian Genealogical Society·

Migration Routes
Lake Champlain· St. Lawrence River· Chambly Canal· Champlain Canal· Halifax Road or Grand Communication Route · Lake Champlain Trail

The Seigneuries
In common with much of New France (La Nouvelle-France), the territory known today as the province of Quebec (Le Québec) was first organized politically along feudal lines. Beginning in 1604, scores of concessions of land, known as seigneuries, were granted by the government to proprietors known as seigneurs. The potential for the creation of new seigneuries effectively ended in Quebec in 1763, with the English conquest, but the system remained intact, with modifications, for decades afterward.

A list of all of the seigneuries of New France, with the dates of their foundation is found at Wikipedia.fr. A list of the seigneuries of Quebec is found at memoireduquebec.com. A map of the seigneuries of Quebec, made by A. E. B. Courchesne in 1923, accompanies the list. Most seigneuries had a frontage of several miles along the Saint Lawrence river and estuary (Le fleuve Saint Laurent), or along a major river, although some seigneuries surrounded large lakes.

Eventually the county system introduced by the English supplanted the seigneuries for most purposes of interest to the family history researcher, but the seigneuries figure importantly in early records. Early baptismal records often refer to a newborn child's residence using the name of a seigneurie rather than a city or town.