- Charles Albanel
-
Charles Albanel (1616 – 11 January 1696) was a French missionary explorer in Canada, and Jesuit priest. In 1649, he arrived in Canada, at Tadoussac. In 1672, at the time when the Hudson's Bay Company was beginning operations, he was a leader of a French party that went by the Saguenay River, Lake Mistassini, and the Rupert River to Hudson Bay. He may have been the first European to reach Hudson Bay from the Saint Lawrence. In 1674, on another journey to the Rupert River he was captured by the English and taken to England. On his journey to England he induced Medard des Groseilliers to return to the French service. After returning in 1688 to Canada, he served at missions in western Canada and died at Sault Ste. Marie.
Legacy
Lake Albanel, which runs parallel and to the east of Lake Mistassini, is named after him. The Charles Albanel rose, developed by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, was named in his honour. [1]
External links
- Charles Albanel
- Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- the Catholic Encyclopedia - Diocese of Marquette
References
Categories:- 1616 births
- 1696 deaths
- Explorers of Canada
- 17th-century French Jesuits
- Canadian clergy
- Kingdom of France stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.