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Merchants who traded from the port of Quebec between 1717 and 1745 are the subject of this study. As shippers and suppliers of fur, fish, forest and agricultural products in exchange for metropolitan merchandise, they played an important role in the import-export trade of the French colonial empire. The book examines the seventy-six men and women of Lower Town, their kin relations, and the commerce that took place. It is sketched in by an analysis of material culture and collective biography. Several detailed case studies reveal these merchants to be more than itinerant traders to Quebec.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Merchants who traded from the port of Quebec between 1717 and 1745 are the subject of this study. As shippers and suppliers of fur, fish, forest and agricultural products in exchange for metropolitan merchandise, they played an important role in the import-export trade of the French colonial empire. The book examines the seventy-six men and women of Lower Town, their kin relations, and the commerce that took place. It is sketched in by an analysis of material culture and collective biography. Several detailed case studies reveal these merchants to be more than itinerant traders to Quebec. Rather, their attachment to the colony suggests that they were the beginning of a Canadian commercial society.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Kathryn A. Young is an assistant professor of History at the University of Manitoba, Canada, where she received her M.A. and Ph.D. degrees. Her graduate work was supported with a Special M.A. scholarship and Doctoral Fellowships awarded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Dr. Young's writing on the history of early eighteenth-century French Canada has been published in professional journals.
Rezensionen
"...Young deserves praise for exploring the merchants' values and way of life through accounts of their homes, their families, and their possessions." (Peter N. Moogk, William and Mary Quarterly)
"Young's main goal is to bring the Québec merchants' material culture and kinship networks to life, and this she does admirably...No scholar of colonial Canada or Atlantic trade will want to be without this book." (Daniel A. Rabuzzi, The Northern Mariner)