This thesis examines the illicit fur trade in New France between 1663 and 1740, and focuses on the relationship between illicit trade and colonial governance. It argues that French illicit fur traders (coureurs de bois) undermined New France governance by subverting licensed trade, which was crucial to France's economic, diplomatic, and military policies in North America
The present study is the first installment of a work in which I hope eventually to recount the histo...
This Master’s thesis examines how social networks impacted the changing composition of French settle...
Scholars have long noted the prevalence of smuggling on the imperial borderland between New France a...
This thesis examines the illicit fur trade in New France between 1663 and 1740, and focuses on the r...
This dissertation analyzes the changing political relationships between European agents of empire, w...
The liquor trade has been a popular topic of study for many historians examining colonial North Amer...
This dissertation analyzes French-Indigenous relations in the Hudson Bay watershed from the early 16...
The trading of furs in the north eastern regions of the American continent during the 17th century b...
Candidates for the Ph.D. degree are required to justify their addition of still another thesis to th...
This research examines the often-glorified relationship between New France and the American Indians ...
The fur trade has a long and complex history in which several different fur trade companies have par...
This dissertation explores the history of the Compagnie des Indes (French East India Company), the p...
The beginning years of British rule in Quebec are examined from a new perspective: the influence of ...
This thesis focuses on Mi’kmaq-French-Acadian relations in Northeastern North American between 1763 ...
As recent scholarship has recognized, administrative knowledge-making was crucial to the formation o...
The present study is the first installment of a work in which I hope eventually to recount the histo...
This Master’s thesis examines how social networks impacted the changing composition of French settle...
Scholars have long noted the prevalence of smuggling on the imperial borderland between New France a...
This thesis examines the illicit fur trade in New France between 1663 and 1740, and focuses on the r...
This dissertation analyzes the changing political relationships between European agents of empire, w...
The liquor trade has been a popular topic of study for many historians examining colonial North Amer...
This dissertation analyzes French-Indigenous relations in the Hudson Bay watershed from the early 16...
The trading of furs in the north eastern regions of the American continent during the 17th century b...
Candidates for the Ph.D. degree are required to justify their addition of still another thesis to th...
This research examines the often-glorified relationship between New France and the American Indians ...
The fur trade has a long and complex history in which several different fur trade companies have par...
This dissertation explores the history of the Compagnie des Indes (French East India Company), the p...
The beginning years of British rule in Quebec are examined from a new perspective: the influence of ...
This thesis focuses on Mi’kmaq-French-Acadian relations in Northeastern North American between 1763 ...
As recent scholarship has recognized, administrative knowledge-making was crucial to the formation o...
The present study is the first installment of a work in which I hope eventually to recount the histo...
This Master’s thesis examines how social networks impacted the changing composition of French settle...
Scholars have long noted the prevalence of smuggling on the imperial borderland between New France a...