INDEX. 



A. 



Abenakis, Indians of Acadia and 

 Maine, 220, 221, 228, 310, 368; 

 attack the Christian Iroquois, 234; 

 their domain, 338 ; missions, 339 ; 

 incited against the English colo- 

 nists, 348; attack on York, 349; 

 visit Villebon at St. John, 351, 

 352; their attack on Wells, 353; 

 is foiled, 355 ; treaty with the Eng- 

 lish at Pemaquid, 360; are won 

 back by the French, 361-363 ; influ- 

 enced by missionary priests, 374-376. 



Acadia (Nova Scotia and westward 

 to the Kennebec) exposed to in- 

 roads from New England, 117, 335 ; 

 the war in, 335-368; the region, 

 337-339 ; relations with New Eng- 

 land, 340 ; hostilities, 342 ; Villebon 

 governor; border war, 347, 353- 

 363 ; New England attacks, 373. 



Albany, an Indian mart, 75 ; Indian 

 council there, 90, 120; Iroquois 

 summoned thither by Dongan, 158 ; 

 by Schuyler, 399 ; expedition 

 against Montreal, 246. 



Albanv, Fort, on Hudson's Bay, taken 

 by Canadians, 134. 



Albemarle, Duke of, aids Phips, 242. 



Alliance, triple, of Indians and Eng- 

 lish, 197. 



Amours, councillor at Quebec, im- 

 prisoned by Frontenac, 51-54 (see 

 247). 



Andros, Sir Edmund, appointed colo- 

 nial governor, 164; his jurisdiction, 

 165; plunders Castine, 221; is de- 

 posed, 223 ; at Pentegoet, 346. 



Auteuil, attorney-general of Canada, 

 an enemy of Frontenac, 47, 247 ; 

 banished, 49. 



Avaux, Count d', French envoy at 

 London, 135. 



. B. 



Bastile, confinement of Perrot, 41. 

 Baugis, Chevalier de, sent by La 

 Barre to seize Fort St. Louis, 86. 

 Beaucour, 299. 



Bellefonds, Marshal de, a friend ot 



Frontenac at court, 59. 

 Bellomont, Earl of, governor of New 



York, 423 ; corresponds with Fron- 

 tenac, 423-426. 

 Belmont, Abbe, cited, 102 n., 154. 

 Bernieres, vicar of Laval in Canada, 



38. 

 Bienville, Francois de, 288. 

 Big Mouth, an Iroquois chief, 95, 98, 



105, 114, 141 ; his speech in defiance 



of La Barre, 107-109 ; his power in 



the confederacy, 170 ; defiance of 



Denonville, 172. 

 Bigot, Jacques and Vincent, Jesuits, 



220-222 ; in Acadia, 375, 378. 

 Bishop of Canada, see Laval, Saint- 



Vauier. 

 Bizard, Lieutenant, despatched by 



Frontenac to Montreal, 31. 

 Boisseau, his quarrel at Quebec, 63. 

 Boston, after the failure at Quebec, 



284, 295 ; plan of attack on, 382- 



384. 

 Bounties on scalps, &c, 298. 

 Bradstreet, at the age of eighty-seven, 



made governor after Andros at 



Boston,>23. 

 Bretonvilliers, superior of Jesuits, 42. 

 Brucy, a lieutenant, agent of Perrot, 



his traffic with Indians, 28, 34. 

 Bruyas, a Jesuit interpreter, 105. 



Cadillac, 324 ; at Michillimackinac, 

 403, 406- 



Callieres, governor of Montreal, 150, 

 153 ; his scheme for conquering the 

 English colonies, 187 ; comes to the 

 defence of Quebec, 259, 270, 279 ; at 

 La Prairie, 290 ; quarrel with the 

 bishop, 329-331; in the Onondaga 

 expedition, 410, 412, 416 ; succeeds 

 Frontenac as governor, 438 ; treats 

 with the Iroquois, 440 ; conference 

 at Montreal, and treaty, 447-451. 



Canada, character of its colonial rule, 

 20; its condition under Denonville, 

 165-168 ; Iroquois invasion, 177-182 

 (see 286, 294, 301). 



