The Seigneurs Of Old Canada A Chronicle Of New World Feudalism
By:William Bennett Munro Published By:Double9 Books
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The Seigneurs Of Old Canada A Chronicle Of New World Feudalism
About the Book
The seigneurs of old Canada: A chronicle of new world feudalism examines how a European system of land control and authority was transplanted into a developing colony. The book focuses on how land grants shaped daily life, agriculture, and social order. Instead of highlighting individual figures, the narrative explains how the system operated and how those who held land were expected to guide settlement, support development, and maintain loyalty to the governing power. The seigneurial system offered both opportunity and restriction, providing land and protection while reinforcing hierarchy and dependence. Fields were divided into long narrow strips, symbolizing the controlled organization imposed upon the landscape. Through this structure, the colony tried to balance ambition with practicality, stability with adaptation. The narrative moves beyond the mechanics of land ownership and explores the broader human experience of building a society in an untamed world. It reveals how systems intended to create order can also limit freedom and shape identity for generations.
"William Bennett Munro was a Canadian historian and political scientist who lived from 5 January 1875 to 4 September 1957. He was a professor at both Harvard University and the California Institute of Technology. He was well-known for his work on the New France seigneurial system and city administration in the United States. Caltech decided to remove William B. Munro's name from one of its buildings in February 2021 because he promoted and practiced eugenics, which is the scientific and racial notion that certain people are better than others based on their genes. The facility was originally known as the Division of Humanities and Social Sciences, but it has since been renamed the Hameetman Center. Caltech took this decision as part of an attempt to acknowledge and confront its history of eugenics, which has harmed many individuals via prejudice and harm to marginalized communities. Caltech President Thomas F. Rosenbaum stated that deleting Munro's name indicates the university's commitment to inclusion and acknowledging its institutional history."