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  1. Standard circulation coin. Copper • 6.81 g • ⌀ 26 mm. KM# 5, Zay# 6, N# 29089. 12 Deniers - Louis XV (Nouvelle France) 1717. Standard circulation coin. Bronze • 12.238 g • ⌀ 30 mm. KM# 4, N# 33128. The Numista referee for coins of this issuer is FeeFoo.

  2. 5 de dic. de 2016 · Charles Vinh’s depiction of a scene from “La Chasse-galerie,” a fable about lumberjacks making a deal with the devil to fly home in a canoe. Tales of flying canoes go far back in Quebec history. Charles Vinh Courtesy of Sleeman Unibroue. In the 1660s, New France was a frightening place. Its tiny population of about 3,200 French settlers ...

  3. Canada - French Settlement, Culture, Diversity: The fur trade was not New France’s sole enterprise. By 1645 settlers in Canada and Acadia were producing provisions for the fur traders and the annual ships. A characteristic mode of landholding, known as the seigneurial system, began to evolve. Under the system, the state granted parcels of land to seigneurs, who were responsible for securing ...

  4. New France stood at the height of its fortunes. However, over the next 50 years, the English and their American colonists would conquer all of New France. It happened in two stages. The first occurred during the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14), while England and France were at war.

  5. El virreinato de Nueva Francia (en francés: Vice-royauté de Nouvelle-France ), comúnmente conocido como Nueva Francia ( Nouvelle-France ), fue la entidad territorial del Imperio colonial francés que comprendía todas las colonias francesas de Norteamérica, desde la desembocadura del río San Lorenzo hasta el delta del Misisipi, pasando por ...

  6. A History of the Canadian Dollar – New France ( PDF) Read about how the use of playing cards contributed to the development of New France’s economy. View documentaries and films which explore the tensions and conflicts between the French, English and Indigenous inhabitants of the continent.

  7. When talking about the settlement of New France, we often evoke the filles du roi, or the “king’s daughters,” the young women sent by Louis XIV and his Minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert to marry bachelors already settled in the colony. However, many other people left their country for New France. In the following article, Leslie Choquette ...