Treatment in progress...
Close notification

Did you know that ?

SIDE has worked with its suppliers to make our parcels environmentally friendly.
No more plastics !
The tape that keep our parcels tightly shut and the wedging material that immobilizes books within the cartons are now made of fully recyclable and biodegradable materials.

Display notification

Return From Exile - The Acadian gaspesian Deportation Odissey

RIVIERE Sylvain
Publication date 31/12/2099
EAN: 9782898094453
Availability Not yet published: 31/12/2099
Son of Acadian deportees, Olivier Barillot, known as Tipon, landed in Paspéya in 1774, on one of the three schooners of the Robin Pipon Company, which would exercise a monopoly on fisheries in Gaspésie and throughout the Baie des Chaleurs for nearly ... See full description
Attribute nameAttribute value
Common books attribute
PublisherDU TULLINOIS
Page Count210
Languageen
AuthorRIVIERE Sylvain
FormatPaperback / softback
Product typeBook
Publication date31/12/2099
Weight-
Dimensions (thickness x width x height)0.00 x 14.80 x 21.00 cm
Son of Acadian deportees, Olivier Barillot, known as Tipon, landed in Paspéya in 1774, on one of the three schooners of the Robin Pipon Company, which would exercise a monopoly on fisheries in Gaspésie and throughout the Baie des Chaleurs for nearly two centuries. Return from Exile is much more than the story of a return, it is also the one of the population of Gaspésie, of Jersey slavery, of the corsair war and of the long quest of these people from the sea towards freedom and the almost mystical autonomy of this country still to be achieved... Return from Exile, a half century of history which coincides with the first Acadian contingent arriving in Gaspésie working for the Jersey firm until the departure of its all-powerful god: Charles Robin. The ancestors of Sylvain Rivière suffered the British ignominy from the Deportation of the Acadians, the prisons of England and the too long wandering in France, which led them from Poitou to Saint-Malo, before homesickness brought them back, in the spring of 1774, with seven Acadian families, to Paspébiac, working for the Robins, true slavers, who dominated, as good Huguenots of Jersey Island, the Gaspesian economy through the monopoly exercised around the cod trade, to the detriment of the Gaspesian fisherman, reduced in some way to slavery, from generation to generation.