Jesuit priest Claude Jean Allouez has made …
Years: 1669 - 1669
Jesuit priest Claude Jean Allouez has made a missionary tour of the western missions from 1667 through 1669, serving initially as a missionary to the Potawatomi in Wisconsin.
The next year he was with the Mesquakie, establishing St. Mark's Mission, and founding the mission of St. James among the Miami and Mascouten, finally returning to Green Bay later that year.
Upon arrival in Quebec in 1658, Allouez had immediately begun a study of the Wyandot and Anishinaabe languages to prepare himself for work as a missionary among the native tribes along the St. Lawrence River for three years.
He was from 1660 the superior of the mission at Trois-Rivières, Quebec until 1663 when Bishop François de Laval, the first bishop of New France, named Allouez vicar general of a part of the diocese of Quebec that is now the central region of the United States.
Locations
People
Groups
- Wyandot, or Wendat, or Huron people (Amerind tribe)
- Meskwaki, or Fox tribe (Amerind tribe)
- Miami (Amerind tribe)
- Potawatomi (Amerind tribe)
- Mascouten (Amerind tribe)
- New France (French Colony)
- Jesuits, or Order of the Society of Jesus
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
