La Prairie, under the French r???gime, was one of the earliest and most populous seigneuries of the Montreal district. Written and published in French, Louis Lavall???e's study of peasant society in La Prairie begins in 1647 when the seigneury was conceded to the Jesuits, the most important landowners in New France, and ends with the Conquest. Lavall???e discusses La Prairie's status as a frontier and way-station, its remarkable demographic growth -- the population had reached nearly two thousand in 1760 -- and the ...
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La Prairie, under the French r???gime, was one of the earliest and most populous seigneuries of the Montreal district. Written and published in French, Louis Lavall???e's study of peasant society in La Prairie begins in 1647 when the seigneury was conceded to the Jesuits, the most important landowners in New France, and ends with the Conquest. Lavall???e discusses La Prairie's status as a frontier and way-station, its remarkable demographic growth -- the population had reached nearly two thousand in 1760 -- and the importance of the seigneurial and parochial frameworks in its development. These last bounded people's lives, giving the inhabitants of La Prairie a sense of financial and domestic structure. The second part of the book covers sociability, inheritance practices, the fur trade, and the form of stratification which prevailed in this traditional society.
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Add this copy of La Prairie En Nouvelle-France, 1647-1760: Etude D to cart. $28.00, very good condition, Sold by Robert Campbell Bookseller rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Montreal, QC, CANADA, published 1992 by Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1992.