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Louis Hébert (French pronunciation: [lwi ebɛʁ]; c. 1575 – 25 January 1627) is widely considered the first European apothecary in the region that would later become Canada, as well as the first European to farm in said region. He was born around 1575 at 129 de la rue Saint-Honoré in Paris to Nicolas Hébert and Jacqueline Pajot.
Français : « Le monument Louis-Hébert (1575-1627) avait été initialement installé à la place de l'Hôtel de Ville, où il fut dévoilé le 3 septembre 1918, pour commémorer le troisième centenaire de l'arrivée en 1617 de cet apothicaire français qui est devenu le "premier colon canadien". Le monument fut démonté en 1971 et ...
1617: Louis Hebert, an apothecary who had stayed at Port Royal twice, brings his wife and children to Quebec, thus becoming the first true habitant (permanent settler supporting his family from the soil). [19] [20]
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Louis Hébert died January 7, 1901, on the east bank of Bayou Teche, 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, where he was interred. [3] Because his burial site was located on private land, with assistance from the Sons of Confederate Veterans on October 26, 2002, Hébert's remains were disinterred and moved to St. Joseph Catholic ...
1547–1575: Charles III 1543–1608 Duke of Lorraine: Louis 1549–1550 Duke of Orléans: Charles IX 1550–1574 King of France r. 1560–1574: Elisabeth of Austria 1554–1592: Henry III 1551–1589 King of France r. 1574–1589: Louise of Lorraine 1553–1601 Bourbons: Marie de' Medici 1575–1642: Henry IV 1553–1610 King of Navarre and ...
To redress the severe imbalance between single men and women, and boost population growth, King Louis XIV sponsored the passage of approximately 800 young French women (known as les filles du roi) to the colony. [33] In 1666, intendant Jean Talon organized the first census of the colony and counted 3,215 Habitants. Talon also enacted policies ...
It is named for Henri II, Duke of Montmorency, the viceroy of New France, 1619–1625, under the French king, Louis XIII. The site sits above the St. Lawrence River and bounded by Côte de la Montagne and Rue Port Dauphin. The last building was demolished in 1883 and in 1894 city opened it as Parc Frontenac. [1]