Courcelles, Sieur de, governor of New France, [34].

Coureurs de bois, the, [12-13], [46], [49].

Denonville, Marquis de, governor of New France, [103-4]; his correspondence with Dongan, [104-6], [108]; fails to cope with the Iroquois, [103-11], [135-136], [138]; recalled, [115-16].

Dongan, Thomas, governor of New York, [90-1], [96], [97], [104-5], [109].

Duchesneau, Jacques, intendant, [51-2], [64]; his relations with Frontenac, [52-3], [63-70], [80], [94]; and the coureurs de bois, [79-80].

Du Lhut, Daniel Greysolon, explorer and pioneer, [77-81], [106], [109], [150].

Fénelon, Abbé, espouses Perrot's cause against Frontenac, [48-9], [50], [74].

Five Nations. See Iroquois.

Fort Frontenac, [38], [43], [44], [45], [76], [98], [106-7]; destroyed, [135-6].

France, under the Bourbons, [1-4], [11], [29] n., [31-2], [85], [90]; her policy in New France, [5], [10-11], [68]; the Thirty Years' War, [19-21]; the outbreak of the Fronde, [21]; the dispute between Gallicans and Ultramontanes, [55-7]; war with Holland, [85], [90]; war with Britain, [114]; her colonial system compared with that of Britain, [131-4]. See New France.