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1600-1609     1610-1619     1620-1629     1630-1639     1640-1649     1650-1659     1660-1669     1670-1679     1680-1689     1690-1699

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Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
Armed Forces
Strategy and Tactics
Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
Politics and Society

1690: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1690: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1690: Armed Forces
1690: Strategy and Tactics
1690: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1690: Politics and Society
1691: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1691: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1691: Armed Forces
1691: Strategy and Tactics
1691: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1691: Politics and Society
1692: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1692: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1692: Armed Forces
1692: Strategy and Tactics
1692: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1692: Politics and Society
1693: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1693: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1693: Armed Forces
1693: Strategy and Tactics
1693: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1693: Politics and Society
1694: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1694: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1694: Armed Forces
1694: Strategy and Tactics
1694: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1694: Politics and Society
1695: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1695: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1695: Armed Forces
1695: Strategy and Tactics
1695: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1695: Politics and Society
1696: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1696: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1696: Armed Forces
1696: Strategy and Tactics
1696: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1696: Politics and Society
1697: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1697: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1697: Armed Forces
1697: Strategy and Tactics
1697: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1697: Politics and Society
1698: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1698: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1698: Armed Forces
1698: Strategy and Tactics
1698: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1698: Politics and Society
1699: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1699: Wars, Battles, and Conflicts
1699: Armed Forces
1699: Strategy and Tactics
1699: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
1699: Politics and Society

Date > 1600 > 1690-1699

Compagnies franches de la Marine (Warships)

Type: Document

The names of troops raised by the French Ministry of Marine often confuse people. There were separate units of Compagnies franches de la Marine to serve aboard warships. These troops had nothing to do with the Compagnies franches found in Canada.

Site: National Defence

Grand Pré National Historic Site of Canada: Putting Down Roots

Type: Document

Families from France first settled in Acadie in the 1630s. In the early 1680s, Pierre Melanson and Marguerite Mius d'Entremont and their children moved from Port-Royal to found Grand-Pré ...

Site: Parks Canada

Soldiers' Daily Lives

Type: Document

It is difficult to reconstruct soldiers' day to day lives, because they would vary depending on where the soldier was stationed and also the time of year. Nevertheless, it can be said that days started early, would often be spent on guard duty, and less frequently doing drill.

Site: National Defence

The Navy's Troops Outside North America

Type: Document

The French Ministry of the Navy was responsible for warships, coastal defence and management of the colonies. As a result, it maintained troops in France and the West Indies as well as in North America.

Site: National Defence

Grand Pré National Historic Site of Canada: Introduction and Background

Type: Document

Grand-Pré National Historic Site of Canada commemorates Grand-Pré area as a centre of Acadian settlement from 1682 to 1755 and the Deportation of the Acadians, which began in 1755 and continued until 1762.

Site: Parks Canada

The Staff of the Navy Troops

Type: Document

Although the Compagnies franches de la Marine were independent from each other, there was a small group of men responsible for them as a body within New France.

Site: National Defence

Quebec batteries firing on Phips' ships during October 1690

Type: Image

Part of Quebec's defences is shown firing upon the invaders’ ships during October 1690. The upper town was protected by a good wall with intermittent batteries. There were more defensive works up towards the Chateau Saint-Louis near Cape Diamond. In the lower town, facing the harbour, there were two strong French shore batteries armed with heavy 18 and 24-pounder naval cannon. Inland, a line of earthworks punctuated with 11 redoubts enclosed the city from the western side. This 19th century print is inaccurate in some details (for instance, the Château Saint-Louis which only had one storey in 1690) but gives a good sense of the general action. (Library and Archives Canada, C-006022)

Site: National Defence

A New Monetary System

Type: Document

Official currency in France and its colonies consisted of 'livres' (pounds), 'sous' (shillings) and 'deniers' (pence), but the shortage of coins led to common use of Spanish silver pieces in New France. The first recorded use of paper money in the modern sense was also in New France.

Site: National Defence

To the Sound of the Drummer's Beat

Type: Document

Fortified towns like Quebec, Montreal, Trois-Rivières and Louisbourg were all governed by military staffs. The lives of French soldiers and Canadian civilians alike were regulated by the different drum beatings of the garrison, from La Diane at dawn to La Retraite at sunset.

Site: National Defence

Treatment Of Prisoners

Type: Document

One problem of raid warfare was the treatment of prisoners - they were often brutally tortured, as was the custom of the Amerindians. This was ironic, as the Canadians themselves had suffered badly this way from the Iroquois.

Site: National Defence