Dictionary Definition
habitation
Noun
1 the native habitat or home of an animal or
plant
2 housing that someone is living in; "he built a
modest dwelling near the pond"; "they raise money to provide homes
for the homeless" [syn: dwelling, home, domicile, abode, dwelling
house]
3 the act of dwelling in or living permanently in
a place (said of both animals and men); "he studied the creation
and inhabitation and demise of the colony" [syn: inhabitancy, inhabitation]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
habiterPronunciation
- /ˌhæb.ɪˈteɪ.ʃən/, /%h
Extensive Definition
The Habitation at Port-Royal
was an early French colonial settlement and is presently a National
Historic Site located at Port
Royal in the Canadian province of
Nova
Scotia.
The settlement
Port Royal was founded after the French nobleman Pierre Dugua de Monts (Sieur de Monts) spent a disastrous winter in Île-Saint-Croix. He was accompanied by Sieur de Champlain, Louis Hébert and Sieur de Poutrincourt. The latter asked the king of France to become the owner of the Seigneurie which encompassed the Habitation. They decided to move their settlement to the north shore of present-day Annapolis Basin, a sheltered bay on the south shore of the Bay of Fundy which had been recorded by Champlain earlier in the spring of 1605 during a coastal reconnaissance. Champlain would note in his journals, that the bay was of impressive size; he believed it an adequate anchorage for several hundred ships of the French Royal Fleet, if ever necessary. As such, he would name the basin "Port-Royal", the Royal Port; this was, for many years, the name of both the body of water, and the subsequent French and Acadian settlements in that region.Nestled against the North
Mountain range, they set about constructing a log stockade
fortification called a "Habitation." With assistance from members
of the Mi'kmaq Nation and
a local chief named Membertou,
coupled with the more temperate climate of the fertile Annapolis
Valley, the settlement prospered.
Mindful of the disastrous
winter of 1604-1605 at the
Île-Saint-Croix settlement, Champlain established l'Ordre de Bon
Temps (the Order of Good Cheer) as a social club ostensibly to
promote better nutrition and to get settlers through the winter of
1606-1607. Supper every few
days became a feast with a festive air supplemented by performances
and alcohol and was primarily attended by the prominent men of the
colony and their Mi'kmaq neighbours while the Mi'kmaq women,
children, and poorer settlers looked on and were offered scraps.
Marc
Lescarbot's "The Theatre of Neptune in New France", the first
work of theater written and performed in North
America, was performed on November 14th, 1606. It was arguably
the catalyst for the Order of Good Cheer.
Unfortunately in 1607, Dugua had his
fur trade monopoly revoked by the Government of France, forcing
settlers to return to France that fall. The Habitation was left in
the care of Membertou and the local Mi'kmaq until 1610 when Sieur de
Poutrincourt, another French nobleman, returned with a small
expedition to Port-Royal. Poutrincourt converted Membertou and
local Mi'kmaq to Catholicism,
hoping to gain financial assistance from the government. As a
result, Jesuits became
financial partners with Poutrincourt, although this caused division
within the community.
In May, 1613 the Jesuits moved
on to the Penobscot
River valley and in July, the settlement was attacked by
Samuel
Argall of Virginia. Argall
returned in November that same year and burned the Habitation to
the ground while settlers were away nearby. Poutrincourt returned
from France in spring 1614 to find
Port-Royal in ruins and settlers living with the Mi'kmaq.
Poutrincourt then gave his holdings to his son and returned to
France. Poutrincourt's son bequeathed the settlement to
Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour upon his own death in
1623.
Replica construction
In the 1900s, chiefly under the leadership of Harriet Taber Richardson, native of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and summer resident of Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotian preservationists and historians began lobbying the Government of ]. The government agreed after much persuasion and a replica was built in 1939-1940. Today, this replica serves as the cornerstone of Port-Royal National Historic Site of Canada, and coupled with the nearby Fort Anne National Historic Site of Canada in Annapolis Royal, continues to commemorate this important historic region for Canadians and visitors.External links
habitation in French:
Habitation de Port-Royal
habitation in Simple English:
Habitation at Port-Royal
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abiding place, abode, address, apartment, cantonment, colonization, commorancy, crash pad,
crib, digs, domicile, domiciliation, domus, dwelling, dwelling place,
fireside, flat, haunt, haven, hearth, hearthstone, home, homestead, house, housing, inhabitancy, inhabitation, lodging, lodging place, lodgment, nest, nook, occupancy, occupation, pad, peopling, place, place to live, quarters, residence, residency, roof, rooftree, roost, seat, settlement, sojourning, tenement