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Canadian Martyrs : ウィキペディア英語版
Canadian Martyrs

Also known as The North American Martyrs, these were eight Jesuit missionaries from Sainte-Marie among the Hurons. They were ritually tortured and killed on various dates in the mid-17th century in Canada, in what is now southern Ontario, and in upstate New York, during the warfare between the Iroquois (particularly the Mohawk people) and the Huron. They are considered martyrs of Catholicism.
The Martyrs are St. René Goupil (1642),〔(Jesuit Relations: 28, "Account of René Goupil (donné)," by Father Isaac Jogues )〕 St. Isaac Jogues (1646),〔(Jesuit Relations: 31, VIII )〕 St. Jean de Lalande (1646),〔(Jesuit Relations vol 34, LXIV )〕 St. Antoine Daniel (1648),〔(Jesuit Relations vol 33, LXVII )〕 St. Jean de Brébeuf (1649),〔(Jesuit Relations vol 35, IV )〕 St. Noël Chabanel (1649),〔(Jesuit Relations vol 40, LXXXIII )〕 St. Charles Garnier (1649),〔 and St. Gabriel Lalemant (1649).〔
==Background==
Jesuit missionaries worked among the Huron (Wendat), an Iroquoian-speaking people who occupied territory in the Georgian Bay area of Central Ontario. (They were not part of the Iroquois Confederacy, initially made up of five tribes south and east of the Great Lakes.) The area of their traditional territory is called Huronia. The Huron in this area were farmers, fishermen and traders who lived in villages surrounded by defensive wooden palisades for protection.〔("Canadian Martyrs and Huronia", Athabasca University )〕 Sainte-Marie among the Hurons was the headquarters for the French Jesuit Mission to the Huron Wendat people.〔(Sainte Marie among the Hurons )〕
By the late 1640s the Jesuits believed they were making progress in their mission to the Huron, and claimed to have made many converts. But, the priests were not universally trusted. Many Huron considered them to be malevolent shamans who brought death and disease wherever they travelled; after European contact, the Huron had suffered high fatalities in epidemics after 1634 of smallpox and other Eurasian infectious diseases, to which aboriginal peoples had no immunity. (Epidemiological studies have shown the diseases were likely carried by the increased number of children immigrating after 1634 with families from cities in nations where smallpox was endemic, such as France, England and the Netherlands).
The nations of the Iroquois Confederacy considered the Jesuits legitimate targets of their raids and warfare, as the missionaries were nominally allies of the Huron and French fur traders. Retaliating for French colonial attacks against the Iroquois was also a reason for their raids against the Huron and Jesuits.
In 1642, the Mohawk captured René Goupil,〔(Jesuit Relations: 28, "Account of René Goupil (donné)," by Father Isaac Jogues )〕 and Father Isaac Jogues,〔(Jesuit Relations: 31, VIII )〕 bringing them back to their village of Ossernenon south of the Mohawk River. They ritually tortured both men and killed Goupil. After several months of captivity, Jogues was ransomed by Dutch traders and the minister Johannes Megapolensis from New Netherland (later Albany). He returned for a time to France, but then sailed back to Quebec. In 1646 he and Jean de Lalande were killed during a visit to Ossernenon intended to achieve peace between the French and the Mohawk.〔(Jesuit Relations vol 34, LXIV )〕
Other Jesuit missionaries were killed by the Mohawk and martyred in the following years: Antoine Daniel (1648),〔(''Jesuit Relations,'' vol 33, LXVII )〕 Jean de Brébeuf (1649),〔 Noël Chabanel (1649),〔 Charles Garnier (1649),〔 and Gabriel Lalemant (1649).〔 All were canonized in 1930 as the Canadian Martyrs, also known as the North American Martyrs.

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