Domaine du roy

{{short description|Region of New France}}

{{Infobox former subdivision

| conventional_long_name = Domaine du roy

| common_name = Domaine Du Roy

| subdivision =

| nation = New France

| image_flag = Royal Standard of King Louis XIV.svg

| image_coat =

| image_map = Carte du domaine du Roy en Canada.jpg{{!}}250px

| image_map_caption = Domaine du Roy, 1731

| national_anthem =

| capital = Quebec

| stat_area1 =

| stat_year1 =

| stat_pop1 =

| p1 =

| image_p1 =

| s2 = Province of Quebec (1763–1791)

| flag_s2 = Flag of Great Britain (1707-1800).svg

| year_start = 1652

| event_end = Ceded to Britain

| year_end = 1763

| date_end = 10 February

| political_subdiv =

}}

The Domaine du roy ("King's Domain") was a vast region of New France extending north from the shore of the Saint Lawrence River between the seigneurie of Les Éboulements (near the City of Quebec) and Cape Cormorant (near the present-day town Lourdes) towards the Hudson Bay watershed, an area claimed by Great Britain as Rupert's Land, the territory covered an area of 460,000 km2.

Established in 1652, the Domaine du roy was renamed "King's Domain" after the French and Indian War.Michel Lavoie, Le Domaine du roi 1652-1859, Septentrion, 2010 A present-day regional county municipality in the Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region of Quebec also inherited the name Le Domaine-du-Roy.

References

See also