Timeline of Quebec history (1608 to 1662)
Timeline of Quebec history
| 1534 to 1607 |
1608 to 1662 |
1663 to 1759 |
This section of the Timeline of Quebec history concerns the events between the foundation of Quebec and establishment of the Sovereign Council.
- 1632 - Signing of the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye on March 29. Acadia and Quebec are given back to France.
- 1632 - The Couillard-Hébert family receives the colony's first slave. He is a black boy from the West Indies. See Slavery in Canada.
- 1632 - Gabriel Sagard publishes Le Grand Voyage au pays des Hurons (The Great Voyage in Huron country) and a dictionary of the Huron language.
- 1634 - Sieur de La Violette founds a fur trading post and a fort, which later becomes the town of Trois-Rivières.
- 1635 - The Jesuits found the Collège de Québec.
- 1635 - Samuel de Champlain dies on December 25.
- 1636 - Arrival of the new governor Charles Huault de Montmagny on June 12.
- 1639 - Foundation of the Société de Notre-Dame de Montréal.
- 1639 - Arrival of the Ursulines and the Hospitalières in the colony.
- 1651 - Jean de Lauson becomes governor of New France.
- 1653 - The population of Quebec now stands at 2,000.
- 1657 - Arrival of the Sulpiciens in Montreal.
- 1657 - Pierre de Voyer d'Argenson replaces Jean de Lauson as governor of New France.