Frontenac, Comte de, his birth and parentage, [17-18]; his early career, [18-21], [26] n.; his marriage and domestic affairs, [21-6], [113]; selected by Turenne to assist Venice in the defence of Crete, [26-8]; gossip concerning his appointment as governor of New France, [28-30]; his arrival in Quebec, [33-4]; summons the Three Estates, [35-7], [44-5]; his tour of inspection and conference with the Iroquois, [38-44], [95]; his quarrel with Perrot, [45-50]; and Laval, [51-3], [55], [58-63]; and Duchesneau, [52-3], [63-70], [80]; and the Sulpicians, [54]; his antagonism towards the Jesuits, [54-5], [57-8], [69-70], [81-3]; favours the Récollets, [55]; upholds the brandy traffic, [61-3]; his influence with the Indians, [72-3], [93-4]; encourages exploration, [74-5], [79]; supports the coureurs de bois, [80]; his recall, [70-2]; an estimate of his work, [72-4], [83-86], [93-4]; his return to New France, [112-15], [116], [135-6]; his campaign against New England, [117-19], [121]; his reply to Phips, [125-7]; his Indian policy, [135-7], [138], [141]; at war with the Iroquois, [137-42], [144], [148-50]; his expedition against the Onondagas and Oneidas, [148-50]; his reply to Bellomont's threat, [151-2]; his dispute with Champigny, [152-3]; his death, [153-4]; his character, [24], [25-26], [31], [32], [44], [57], [58], [150], [154-161].
Frontenac, Madame de, [22-5], [154].
Goyer, Father, [115]; pronounces eulogy on Frontenac, [153].
Grangula, an Onondaga chief, [99-102], [109].
Great Britain, [29] n., [90]; and war with France, [114], [142]; her colonial system, [131-4]. See New England States.
Hébert, Louis, a seigneur of New France, [14].
Hennepin, Father, his rescue, [78].
Hertel, François, his raid on English settlements, [118], [119-121].
Holland, and war with France, [29] n., [85], [90]; and the fur trade, [89].
Howard of Effingham, Lord, governor of Virginia, [96].