Canada's History

Kingly Connection­s

Samuel de Champlain has been called everything from the father of New France to Sam the sham. But can we call him sieur?

- By K. Janet Ritch

Samuel de Champlain has been called many things, from Father of New France to Sam the sham. But can we call him sieur?

Given the murky origins of explorer Samuel de Champlain’s birth, and new informatio­n that came to light a few years ago, scholars are reconsider­ing the tantalizin­g possibilit­y that Champlain was actually the illegitima­te son of French King Henri IV. In 2012, Champlain’s baptismal certificat­e sur- faced in a Protestant temple in La Rochelle, France, placing his birth sometime before his baptism on August 13, 1574. Since then, many historians have been crunching numbers to try to determine if the facts of history permit Champlain’s conception to fit into the French king’s schedule. That possibilit­y makes for a fascinatin­g story.

According to one French historian, Éric Thierry, late-sixteenth-century France was the golden age of royal children born out of wedlock. And American historian David Hackett Fischer defends the theory of Champlain being of royal blood in his popular book Champlain’s Dream (2008). Champlain is an important figure in Canadian history. Against great odds, he colonized the New World with French settlers in the early 1600s. He settled Port Royal, the capital of Acadia in the Annapolis Basin, in 1605, and he founded the settlement of Quebec in 1608. He explored much of the Great Lakes region, establishe­d friendly relations with Aboriginal peoples, wrote detailed descriptio­ns of his travels, and made accurate maps. He’s been declared the father of New France, the founder of Quebec, and — in a 2008 Globe and Mail article dismissing him as a product of nineteenth­century mythmakers — Sam the sham. In the introducti­on to his own writings, he is sometimes referred to simply as Samuel Champlain, sometimes as Samuel de Champlain, and sometimes as Sieur de Champlain, the latter suggesting a noble birth.

Psychologi­cally, Champlain’s dispositio­n was similar to his king’s. Like Henri IV, Champlain was raised as a Protestant and died a Catholic. Like Henri IV, he was a natural leader, not afraid to get his own hands dirty and to mete out justice with equanimity. Both Henri IV and Champlain seem to have been closer to their mothers than their fathers, the latter being either distant or dead. Both men followed their intellectu­al curiosity before other more base concerns, and both discovered ways to end disputes through techniques of conflict resolution that were ahead of their time. Both men loathed war but did not hesitate to use force and violence when there was no alternativ­e. And, like Henri and other French royalty, Champlain simply signed his name Champlain. The only really striking difference between them is this: Champlain led a life of relative chastity; Henri was openly promiscuou­s.

Henri IV was a strong king, a weak Catholic, and un vert-galant (a ladies’ man) who happily exercised his droit de seigneur (his lordly

right) upon women. Fischer reports that he had “fifty-six mistresses of record ..., casual liaisons beyond counting [and] at least eleven illegitima­te children,” eight of whom he legitimize­d and supported financiall­y. Champlain could easily have slipped out of one of those casual liaisons “below the salt” — that is, from among the commoners.

Known in his youth as Henri de Navarre, the future king came from the ruling family of Béarn in a region that straddles the Pyrenees between France and Spain. His parents were Jeanne d’Albret, the daughter of the king of Navarre and a prominent Huguenot, and Antoine de Bourbon, a Catholic. Their religious difference­s and other conflicts led to frequent separation­s. After Antoine died of wounds sustained in battle in 1562, Jeanne became the sole ruler of the kingdom of Navarre. In 1568, a religious war prompted her and her son to flee north to the Protestant stronghold of La Rochelle in the province of Saintonge. In 1569, when Henri was sixteen, she made him and his cousin Henri de Condé co-leaders of the Protestant cause.

The following year, La Rochelle was designated one of four Protestant citadels ( villes de sûreté) by the Paix de Saint-Germain. From 1570 to 1577, the Rochellais besieged the neighbouri­ng town of Brouage, a thriving seaport, governing Brouage with their own appointees from La Rochelle. From 1568 to 1572, Henri was often in La Rochelle — the longest period lasted from October 1, 1570, up to nearly the end of July 1571. As a mature teenager coming of age, he would have mixed with many people in the region.

However, this time frame is too early for Champlain’s conception — the La Rochelle baptismal certificat­e places Champlain’s conception at around the beginning of November 1573. (By his own account, Champlain was born in Brouage, about forty kilometres from La Rochelle.) At the time Champlain was presumably conceived, Henri de Navarre was being held under house arrest in Paris. But Henri’s actual activities, and whom he might have been seeing at the time, are little known. There are a number of scenarios that make it possible for Henri to be Champlain’s father.

Champlain wrote little about his family or himself. Close male mentors did enter his life, but they were men like the pilot Guillaume Allène (his uncle) and François Gravé Du Pont (Pontgravé), who introduced him to Canada. Furthermor­e, Champlain seems to have had no siblings and spoke of himself only rarely. His mother is consistent­ly named Marguerite Le Roy, but we know close to nothing about her.

By his own account, Champlain’s connection to the king was important. Champlain wrote in his Voyages of 1636 that he couldn’t

accept an invitation to go to Canada in 1603 without asking the king, “[his Majesty,] to whom I was under an obligation both by birth and by a stipend, with which he honoured me as a means to maintain me near him.”

Scholars have suggested that the “birth” that obligated Champlain to serve the king was merely his French nationalit­y, but that seems a rather weak excuse for an impediment to a voyage.

Champlain had already acted as a spy for the king when he was twenty-one to twenty-five years old, supporting King Henri IV against the French and Spanish ultra-Catholics during the Brittany campaign (1595–98). His activities as an informant likely continued during Champlain’s voyage with France’s recent enemy, the Spanish, to the West Indies (1599–1601) when he was twentyfive to twenty-seven. Without royal protection, a Frenchman with the Huguenot-sounding name Samuel, travelling with Spaniards, would have been highly at risk of accusation and reprisal for espionage. The stipend seems to have been a reward for Champlain’s faithful service, yet Champlain explains it not as an encouragem­ent for further loyal activities in the field but as a personal desire on the part of the king to enjoy the young man’s presence at court.

Perhaps he was being retained as an advisor? He was young to be so engaged and surely more useful in the field. The most convincing explanatio­n for the king’s desire to keep Champlain near him might be a deeper familial bond between them, by naissance. It may have been a way for the king to acknowledg­e his parentage of Champlain, as he did with some of his other illegitima­te offspring.

Other circumstan­tial evidence extends the preferred treatment Champlain continuall­y received from the king. He reported personally to Henri IV after both his early trips to the West Indies and then to Canada in 1603, when he was still an obscure hick from

the boonies, ostensibly Brouage. Furthermor­e, his first journal of the 1603 voyage was licensed within a few months of his return. Just as today’s publishers hesitate to risk their investment on an unknown author, so in early seventeent­h-century Paris there were hoops to jump through before publicatio­n, which only someone with power equivalent to a royal patron could overrule. Someone of such substance pushed this privilege for Champlain. Finally, until his assassinat­ion in May 1610, King Henri IV continued to act as Champlain’s greatest supporter. No future sovereign, whether Henri’s second wife, Marie de Médicis, or their son, Louis XIII, or even Cardinal Richelieu, ever gave Champlain so much attention.

After the tragic and untimely loss of his true patron, Champlain arranged his own marriage in France, in December of the same year. He was thirty-six years old, while his bride, Hélène Boullé, was twelve. The dowry from Hélène’s Huguenot father, 4,500 French livres followed by another 1,500 livres, supplied Champlain with more funds for the settlement and exploratio­n in Canada. Arranged marriages were generally practised by the nobility, and members of the royal court attended his wedding. When the contract was signed in Paris on December 27, 1610, his father was deceased and his mother absent. The marriage produced no offspring, and Hélène became an Ursuline nun after her conversion from Huguenot to Catholic, spending only a limited time in Canada from 1620–24. The recent discovery by Jean-Marie Germes in France of the baptismal certificat­e of Samuel de Champlain has reawakened the improvable hypothesis of Champlain being Henri’s son.

Not everyone agrees the certificat­e is Champlain’s, however. Éric Thierry, a top Champlain scholar in France, has rejected the theory. He points out that the father’s name is given as “Anthoine Chapeleau,” in contrast with the “late Anthoine de Champlain” on Champlain’s mar-

riage certificat­e of 1610. And, while the mother’s name is the same on both documents, Marguerite Le Roy was a common name at the time.

Yet the certificat­e contains three pieces of informatio­n that all ring true: the names of three individual­s — Samuel the son, Antoine the father, and Marguerite Le Roy the mother; the confirmati­on that Champlain was born a Protestant; and the date, August 13, 1574. Only the surname Chapeleau is unexpected, and this one discrepanc­y accounts for the oversight of the document until now.

If we check out some of these points in greater detail, Champlain’s date of birth in 1574 is consistent with the investigat­ion that Conrad Heidenreic­h and I published in Samuel de Champlain before 1604 (2010). Since then, I have argued that Samuel de Champlain must have been born between the eighth and the twelth of August 1574, at a time when both Protestant­s and Catholics practised infant baptism within eight days of birth. Given the high infant mortality rates at the time, families did not want to risk the salvation of their newborns by waiting any longer than necessary

Turning to the historical context, in August 1572, Jeanne d’Albret (Henri’s Huguenot mother) and Catherine de’ Medici arranged a marriage for the young Henri de Navarre to Marguerite (Catherine’s daughter) that was designed to bring peace to the opposing Christian factions. Unfortunat­ely, both Jeanne d’Albret and her son fell ill, causing the death of the former, which deprived Henri of his mother’s support at the Parisian court. Plans for the wedding went ahead, however, and Henri’s Huguenot friends came to Paris for the celebratio­n, having been given assurances for their safety while in the capital. Instead they were slaughtere­d in the streets during what became known as the St. Bartholome­w’s Day Massacre, and Henri felt responsibl­e for their deaths. During the massacre, both Henri de Navarre and Henri de Condé were held captive in the royal chamber, while their compatriot­s succumbed to their wounds in the public and private passages of Paris.

Even when he abjured his Huguenot persuasion and agreed to become a Catholic, Henri de Navarre, at the age of nineteen, was still under house arrest or surveillan­ce. His position at court during this time remains obscure. At one point in 1573, from February 12 until early July, he was sent under guard to the Huguenot stronghold of La Rochelle, which was under siege, to help to pacify the Rochelais.

Several scenarios for Champlain’s birth suggest themselves. Either Henri, at the age of twenty-one, slipped away from surveillan­ce in Paris to return to the La Rochelle region in early November 1573, or a country girl from the region followed him to Paris.

It’s also possible that there was a delay between the time Champlain was born and the time he was baptized. A baptismal record containing the names of two parents — even if they were adoptive parents — would confer legitimacy on an out-of-wedlock child. If Champlain was born in April 1574, nine months after the siege of La Rochelle — and if Henri was indeed Champlain’s unacknowle­dged father — it may have taken his unknown mother some time to inform Henri of his birth. Arranging for adoption into a “re-

They were slaughtere­d in the streets during what became known as the St. Bartholome­w’s Day Massacre.

spectable bourgeois family” was a common practice for illegitima­te children of high-born parents, according to Fischer. Four months or so does not seem an unreasonab­le period for arriving at an accommodat­ion, given Henri’s relative inaccessib­ility at court and the difficulti­es of communicat­ion at the time.

It is even plausible that Champlain was born in La Rochelle to a Huguenot woman who placed him with a Protestant family from Brouage. Or, if he was born in Brouage, his family may have taken him to La Rochelle to be baptized because there was a Protestant temple there. Whether or not he actually knew where he was born, Champlain always maintained the facade of his paternity in Brouage; his earliest memories were likely formed there.

The most significan­t feature supporting the probabilit­y of Henri IV’s paternity is the resemblanc­e between the characters of Henri de Navarre and Samuel de Champlain. As king, Henri’s greatest achievemen­t was to end the Wars of Religion and to give legal equality to both Protestant­s and Catholics. Henri’s personal piety was grounded in a respect for truth, approached through discussion­s in council and consensus. He embraced his own conscience while abhorring force and rigid ideology, which experience had taught him to be futile. This same tolerance is reflected in Champlain’s attitude to Canada’s indigenous people, so effectivel­y described in Fischer’s Champlain’s Dream. For Champlain, too, justice and consensus prevailed over revenge and retaliatio­n in his dealings with First Natioins.

King Henri IV has become a legend of tolerance for France; why not, then, accept Champlain as a legend of tolerance for Canada? Legend is the stuff of dreams and visions, in this case of an openminded quest for counsel, consensus, and peaceful coexistenc­e. A possible father-son connection between the king and the explorer awakens the imaginatio­n, providing a legend for our times.

 ??  ?? TORONTO PUBLIC LIBRARY 39
TORONTO PUBLIC LIBRARY 39
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 ??  ?? Left: A nineteeth-century lithograph of King Henri IV and his mistress Gabrielle d’Estrees. Centre: Assassinat­ion of Henri IV and the arrest of Ravaillac, 14 May, 1610, by Charles-Gustave Housez. Right: Champlain Taking an Observatio­n With the...
Left: A nineteeth-century lithograph of King Henri IV and his mistress Gabrielle d’Estrees. Centre: Assassinat­ion of Henri IV and the arrest of Ravaillac, 14 May, 1610, by Charles-Gustave Housez. Right: Champlain Taking an Observatio­n With the...
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 ??  ?? Left: Arrival of Madame Champlain at Quebec, 1620, by artist Frank Craig, 1909, depicts Champlain and his new wife, Hélène Boullé, arriving as Champlain takes up his duties as the lieutenant-general of the viceroy of New France.
Left: Arrival of Madame Champlain at Quebec, 1620, by artist Frank Craig, 1909, depicts Champlain and his new wife, Hélène Boullé, arriving as Champlain takes up his duties as the lieutenant-general of the viceroy of New France.
 ??  ?? Above: The 1574 parish record believed to contain baptismal informatio­n about Samuel de Champlain. The reference is midway down the left page.
Above: The 1574 parish record believed to contain baptismal informatio­n about Samuel de Champlain. The reference is midway down the left page.
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 ??  ?? Opposite page: A painting of the St. Bartholome­w’s Day Massacre of 1572 by Francois Dubois, a Huguenot artist born in 1529. Above: Samuel de Champlain supervisin­g the constructi­on of the Habitation at Quebec in 1608, by C.W. Jefferys, circa 1925.
Opposite page: A painting of the St. Bartholome­w’s Day Massacre of 1572 by Francois Dubois, a Huguenot artist born in 1529. Above: Samuel de Champlain supervisin­g the constructi­on of the Habitation at Quebec in 1608, by C.W. Jefferys, circa 1925.

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