Canada (News-France)
The Canada was the area of the the most populated News-France modern French colonial empire. It was the commonplace of identification of the French colonists (being defined themselves as “Canadian” or “Living”) established to the accesses of the the St. Lawrence. Canada was vaguely delimited so that the border between this one, the Acadie, the Louisiana (News-France) and the Thirteen colonies American under British obedience was diffuse. A kind of appendix located in the south of the Ontario and the the contemporary United States, gathered around the Big lakes and having the Strong Pontchartrain (the current city of Strait) as only zone of settlement was fastened to him: the Country of in Top.
History
Administrative cutting
The intendant, the “hand of the King” and the general governor, acting as a representative of his Majesty in the colony, exerted their powers since Quebec. If, in theory, those held an authority on Louisiana and Acadie (then the Royal Île after 1713), it of it was nothing according to the habit. Indeed, from the distance, Louis XIV had formally defended with the two high-administrators in station in Quebec to interfere into the management of the two other French colonies.
Three governments - of legal and concerning nature authority of the intendant and the governor - controlled their periphery. They sat in the three large villages of the time and took their name of this one (of Quebec, the Three-Rivers and Montreal).
References
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