Ahuntsic (missionary)
Ahuntsic | |
---|---|
Ahuntsic and Visitation Church in background | |
Born | unknown |
Died |
June 25, 1625 Sault-au-Récollet |
Cause of death | drowning, possibly assassination |
Occupation | Missionary |
Known for | His death |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
- For other usages of the name, please refer to Ahuntsic (disambiguation).
Ahuntsic (died June 25, 1625) was a Huron, converted by the French Recollet missionary to the Hurons, Nicolas Viel in the 1620s.
Biography
![](../I/m/Croix_au_parc-nature_de_l'%C3%8Ele-de-la-Visitation_en_septembre_2009.jpg)
After almost two years spent in the Huron territory, Nicolas Viel decided to return to Quebec City in May 1625. Ahuntsic accompanied him during this trip. After a long period of travel, they were intentionally drowned by Native companions on June 25, 1625 near present-day Sault-au-Récollet.
Contested history
Almost nothing is known about the life of Ahunsic before his death. In his definitive history of the Huron people, Canadian ethnohistorian Bruce Graham Trigger wrote "Auhaitsique [Ahunsic] was not a Huron, but the nickname the Huron had given to a young Frenchman who was probably a servant of the Recollets." That Viel and Ahunsic might have drowned when their canoe accidentally flipped in a rapid is not at all unlikely according to Trigger, and the myth of martyrdom was likely a "tendentious fabrication" to leverage Indian alliances.[1]
References
- ↑ See Bruce G. Trigger, The Children of Aataentsic: A History of the Huron People to 1660 (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1987): 396.