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result(s) for
"Illinois -- History -- To 1778"
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Jolliet and Marquette
2023
Often viewed in isolation, the Jolliet and Marquette expedition in
fact took place against a sprawling backdrop that encompassed
everything from ancient Native American cities to French colonial
machinations. Mark Walczynski draws on a wealth of original
research to place the explorers and their journey within
seventeenth-century North America. His account takes readers among
the region's diverse Native American peoples and into a vanished
natural world of treacherous waterways and native flora and fauna.
Walczynski also charts the little-known exploits of the
French-Canadian officials, explorers, traders, soldiers, and
missionaries who created the political and religious environment
that formed Jolliet and Marquette and shaped European colonization
of the heartland.
A multifaceted voyage into the past, Jolliet and
Marquette expands and updates the oft-told story of a pivotal
event in American history.
St. Louis Rising
2015
The standard story of St. Louis's founding tells of fur traders Pierre Laclède and Auguste Chouteau hacking a city out of wilderness. St. Louis Rising overturns such gauzy myths with the contrarian thesis that French government officials and institutions shaped and structured early city society. Of the former, none did more than Louis St. Ange de Bellerive. His commitment to the Bourbon monarchy and to civil tranquility made him the prime mover as St. Louis emerged during the tumult following the French and Indian War. Drawing on new source materials, the authors delve into the complexities of politics, Indian affairs, slavery, and material culture that defined the city's founding period. Their alternative version of the oft-told tale uncovers the imperial realities--as personified by St. Ange--that truly governed in the Illinois Country of the time, and provide a trove of new information on everything from the fur trade to the arrival of the British and Spanish after the Seven Years' War.
Land of big rivers : French & Indian Illinois, 1699-1778
Land of Big Rivers is an environmental study of how diverse groups of people – Indians, French, and British – lived in pre-American, 18th century Illinois. Their lives, interactions, and recorded histories were shaped by both the abundant rivers and extraordinary upland prairies.