Documents found

  1. 181.

    Dickinson, John A.

    Comptes rendus

    Review published in Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 38, Issue 4, 1985

    Digital publication year: 2008

  2. 182.

    Allard, Francine, Beaulac, Guy, Belu, Françoise, Brunet, Odile, Chaput, Alain, Chevrier, Lise, Condello, Christophe, Coppens, Patrick, Daigle, Stéphan, Dandois, Aimée, Dutelly, Marie Yanick, Gravel Galouchko, Annouchka, Grimard, Julie, Lalonde, Jeannine, Landry, Diane, Leblanc Caron, Gaétan, Leclerc, Monique, Ndeze, Danielle, Pagé, Monique, Panneton, Danièle, Philpot, Simone, Piché, Leslie, Rojas Benavente, Lady, St-Hilaire, Suzanne, Thivierge, Anne, Tousignant, Thérèse, Tremblay, Carole, Vachon, Louise and Vermette, Michel

    Rendez-vous – Fête nationale du Québec à Laval 2023 – Entrez dans la danse – Mots dansant sur les cordes à poèmes

    Article published in Entrevous (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 23, 2023

    Digital publication year: 2023

  3. 183.

    Béliveau, Jason

    6 Pacifiction

    Article published in Séquences : la revue de cinéma (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 337, 2024

    Digital publication year: 2024

  4. 184.

    Thesis submitted to McGill University

    1951

  5. 185.

    Article published in Les Cahiers des dix (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 41, 1976

    Digital publication year: 2013

  6. 186.

    Article published in Cap-aux-Diamants (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 62, 2000

    Digital publication year: 2010

  7. 188.

    Article published in Ontario History (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 110, Issue 2, 2018

    Digital publication year: 2018

    More information

    This article posits that the earliest map to have ever used the name Toronto as a place is uncovered. Previously unnoticed, the name “Tarontos Lac,” for today's Lake Simcoe, is on a 1678 map by Jean-Baptiste-Louis Franquelin. His map, “Carte pour servir a l'eclaircissement du Papier Terrier de la Nouvelle France,” is now recognized as Toronto's cartographic birth certificate. The article describes the map, discusses how the discovery came about and why the name may have gone unnoticed until now. This cartographic study is set in the history of the exploration of the Great Lakes region and the Mississippi River. Three other unsigned and undated period maps, often claimed as “Toronto” firsts, are also examined. These claims are dismissed, as revised attributions show them to have been by different cartographers and dated later than originally thought, making Franquelin's map the oldest. The cartographic genealogy of the name Toronto is traced back through three and a half centuries to its initial appearance on Franquelin's map.

  8. 190.

    Article published in Les Cahiers des dix (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 43, 1983

    Digital publication year: 2013