Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2009
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6 The territory of seventeenth-century Canada corresponded basically to that of the present-day province of Quebec.
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11 These biological and marital ties include the relations between spouses, parents and children, brothers and sisters, cousins, an uncle and a nephew, son-in-law and mother-in-law, grandfather and grandson, etc.
12 Moogk, Peter N., ‘“Triste endroit”: the failure of private emigration to French North America, 1640–1760’Google Scholar, paper read at the annual meeting of the Canadian Historical Association, Guelph, June 1984.
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18 The various regions have been classified as follows. To the north of the Loire were those of Brittany, Normandy (including Perche), Paris (including He de France, Brie and Beauce), Loire (including Anjou, Maine, Orléanais and Touraine), North (including Artois, Flanders and Picardy), and East (including Alsace, Burgundy, Champagne, Franche-Comté, Lorraine and Lyonnais). T the south of the Loire were those of West (including Angoumois, Aunis, Poitou and Saintonge), Centre (including Auvergne, Berry, Bourbonnais, Limousin, Marche and Nivernois), and South (including Béarn, Comte de Foix, Dauphine, Gascony, Guyenne, Languedoc, Périgord, Provence, Roussillon and Savoy).
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21 For practical reasons, this group will henceforth be designated as ‘unmarried adults’.
22 Those French immigrants whose region of origin is unknown are obviously not included in this calculation.
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24 Laslett, Peter, ‘Introduction: the history of the family’, in Laslett, Peter and Wall, Richard, eds., Household and family in the past time (Cambridge, 1973) 1–89.Google Scholar Despite the use of Laslett's terminology, family networks are not households, since they are not residence groups but groups of kins migrating together or in successive waves.
25 As observation closed in 1699, it is not unreasonable to suppose that this time-lapse might be even greater as more relatives arrived in subsequent years.
26 Ostergen, ‘A community transplanted’, 193.
27 Robert E. Beider, ‘Kinship as a factor in migration’, 435.
28 Beauregard et al., ‘Famille, parenté et colonisation en Nouvelle-France’, 402.