Jacques Bigot (Jesuit)
French missionary
Intro | French missionary | |
Places | France | |
was | Missionary | |
Gender |
| |
Religion: | Catholicism | |
Birth | 26 July 1651, Bourges, Cher, Centre-Val de Loire, France | |
Death | 1 April 1711Quebec City, Quebec, Capitale-Nationale, Quebec (aged 59 years) | |
Star sign | Leo |
Jacques Bigot (26 July 1651 – April 1711) was a Jesuit priest who arrived in Canada in 1679 as a missionary to the Abenakis.
Bigot's first mission posting was at Sillery, Quebec where the Abenakis had fled from the English. By 1683 he had relocated them to a site on the Chaudière River. The site had been granted to him by the Governor General of New France, Le Febvre de La Barre
Jacques strength was in his missionary work where he worked continually for the good of his community. His brother, Vincent Bigot was active in the missions at the same time and rose to the position of superior general and, subsequently, the procurator of Canadian missions.