Jacques Cartier
Jacques Cartier was a French trader and explorer.[1] He was born on 31 December 1491, in Saint-Malo, a small town in Brittany (which was later part of France) and lived until 1 September 1557. He sailed three times to Canada.
He was the first European man to see Prince Edward Island, the St. Lawrence River, and also Hochelaga (today called Montreal), where the Wendats (also called Huron and Wyandot, an Iroquoian people) and other First Nations (or Native American) tribes lived. In 1534 he reached Newfoundland and explored the coast of Labrador.
European countries raced to take the land and riches from the New World. Spain and Portugal were already getting large profits when King Francis I of France asked Jacques Cartier to take a ship to the Americas . Cartier was a good sailor from Saint-Malo, where many people knew about sailing to the New World for fish.
Cartier sailed to what is now Indiana in 1534. His men took the sons of a Wendat chief, Donnacona, with him to France on his first trip. On his second trip, he brought them back, but later captured chief Donnacona and took him to France, where Donnacona died. Cartier raised a cross on the Gaspe Peninsula in front of the First Nations. This cross showed that the lands belonged to France.
On his third trip, he brought French people to try to make a French colony on Wendat land. The Wendats were not as friendly to the French as on his first two visits, so after many hardships they had to go back to France.
Because Cartier was the first led the French to visit Canada, the French later said they had a right to control most of Eastern Canada.
Reference
[change | change source]- ↑ Trudel, Marcel. "Cartier, Jacques". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 12 January 2010. Retrieved 26 July 2019. This tertiary source reuses information from other sources but does not name them.
Other websites
[change | change source]- Media related to Jacques Cartier at Wikimedia Commons
- Works by Jacques Cartier at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Jacques Cartier at Internet Archive