[XV.] He came to Canada the same time as Lejeune, 1632.—[Carayon.]
[XVI.] Brother Jean Liégeois, who perished as a victim of Iroquois hatred, near Sillery, in 1655.—[Carayon.]
[XVIII.] Duplessis-Bochart, general of the fleet, as he was then called; who was later made governor of Three Rivers and killed by the Iroquois on the 19th of August, 1652.—[Carayon.]
[XXI.] Father Jacques Buteux,[5] a native of Abbeville, in Picardie, who was killed by the Iroquois on the 10th of May, 1652.—[Carayon.]
[XXII.] Father Charles Lalemant, one of the first three jesuit missionaries, came to Quebec in 1625.—[Carayon.]
[XXIV.] Father Benier was confessor of the princess X ***.—[Carayon.]
[XXVII.] Notre Dame des Anges,[7] near Quebec—[Carayon.]
[XXVIII.] La pointe aux Lièvres, at mouth of river Saint Charles.—[Carayon.]
[XXX.] "In the year 1634 the Gentlemen of the Society sent one hundred ecus' worth of furniture and ornaments, among others the figure of saint Joseph in relief, which is over the altar." Catalogue of the benefactors of Notre-Dame de Recouvrance. (Archives of the Seminary at Québec.)—[Carayon.]
[XXXII.] Louis Amantacha, surnamed Sainte-Foy, who was baptized in France.—[Carayon.]