Encyclopedia

Quebec

Also found in: Dictionary, Wikipedia.
(redirected from Quebecer)

Quebec

1. a province of E Canada: the largest Canadian province; a French colony from 1608 to 1763, when it passed to Britain; lying mostly on the Canadian Shield, it has vast areas of forest and extensive tundra and is populated mostly in the plain around the St Lawrence River. Capital: Quebec. Pop.: 7 542 760 (2004 est.). Area: 1 540 680 sq. km (594 860 sq. miles)
2. a port in E Canada, capital of the province of Quebec, situated on the St Lawrence River: founded in 1608 by Champlain; scene of the battle of the Plains of Abraham (1759), by which the British won Canada from the French. Pop.: 169 076 (2001)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Quebec Parks

Parks Directory of the United States, 5th Edition. © 2007 by Omnigraphics, Inc.

Quebec

Canada’s French-speaking province has often attempted to attain independence from rest of country. [Canadian Hist.: NCE, 2555]
Allusions—Cultural, Literary, Biblical, and Historical: A Thematic Dictionary. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Quebec

 

a province in eastern Canada. Area, 1,540,000 sq km; population, 6,000,000 (1971). The population is made up primarily of French-Canadians. Most of the provice is located on the Labrador Peninsula. To the south are the Appalachian Mountains (maximum elevation, 1,311 m) and the lowlands of the St. Lawrence River. The average January temperature ranges from -24°C in the north to - 10°C in the south, and the July temperature, from 11°C in the north to 21°C in the south. The northern part of the province lies in the tundra belt, and the central and southern parts, in the forest belt. The administrative center is the city of Quebec.

Of Canada’s provinces, Quebec is second in the level of economic development, first in the production of aluminum, and first in the capacity of electric power stations, which account for more than one-third of the country’s electric capacity. The mining industry, which produces approximately one-sixth of the value of the country’s output, is well developed. (In mining, Quebec ranks third among Canada’s provinces.) Iron ore (at Schefferville and Gagnon, for example), asbestos (90 percent of the country’s output), copper, polymetals, gold, silver, and nickel are mined. In 1970, the province produced 76 billion kilowatt-hours of electric power, primarily at hydroelectric power stations (Shawinigan, Shipshaw, Bersimis, Beauharnois, Manicouagan, and Outardes).

Quebec’s manufacturing industry, which is concentrated in the south, accounts for about one-third of the value of Canada’s industrial output. The cellulose-paper and aluminum industries (Arvida, which produces one-third of Canada’s total output) are very important. The petroleum-refining, machine-building, textile, garment, fur, leather footwear, and food-processing industries are well developed.

Dairy farming is the most important branch of agriculture. Poultry farming has been developed. Fodder grasses, silage corn, oats, and potatoes are grown. Fishing is also important. The largest industrial center and port is Montreal.

The territory of the present-day province of Quebec was originally inhabited by Indian tribes and, in the north, by Eskimo tribes. For a long time the name “Quebec” referred only to the French settlement (now Quebec) that was founded in 1608 on the St. Lawrence River. The settlement became the center of the French colony in North America, which became a British possession as a result of the Seven Years’ War of 1756–63 and received the name “Quebec” in 1774. Quebec was divided into two provinces (colonies) in 1791: Lower Canada (south of the present-day province of Quebec) and Upper Canada (south of the present-day province of Ontario).

In 1837 uprisings against British rule broke out in two provinces. Upper and Lower Canada were united in 1841 into the province of Canada, which was again divided into two provinces—Quebec and Ontario—when the Dominion of Canada was created in 1867. The northern boundaries of Quebec province were extended in 1898 and 1912. In the 20th century (particularly after World War II), the movement of the French-Canadian population for complete equality of rights with the English-Canadians grew more intense. At the same time, the separatist movement became more active.


Quebec

 

a city in eastern Canada; administrative center of the province of Quebec. Population, 170,000 (1971; with suburbs, 476,300). Most of the inhabitants are French-Canadians.

A large port near the mouth of the St. Lawrence River, Quebec is accessible to ocean vessels. Lumber, paper, grain, and asbestos are exported. The city is also an important railroad junction. The principal branches of industry are sawmilling, paper, and shipbuilding. The leather footwear, textile, and food-processing industries are also well developed. Laval University, a Catholic school, is located in the city. Among Quebec’s museums are the Provincial Museum and the museum at Laval University. Quebec is a tourist center.

In the old Lower Town there are narrow, crooked streets and northern French-style stone houses characteristic of the 17th through the early 19th century. The wide streets, parks, and sumptuous edifices of the Upper Town were built in the 19th and 20th centuries. Among Quebec’s main tourist attractions are its 17th- and 18th-century buildings and churches, the city walls (1820–31), the provincial parliament buildings (1878–92), the hotel Chateau Frontenac (1889–1923), and an 11-km cantilever bridge across the St. Lawrence (1907–17).

REFERENCE

Traquair, K. The Old Architecture of Quebec. Toronto, 1947.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mentioned in
References in periodicals archive
Compared to Francophone Quebecer and Franco-Ontarian respondents, Acadians were least willing to have English-speakers settle as migrants within their own province.
However, he had no authority to take Canada away from those Quebecers who wanted to keep their country.
Quebecers welcome visitors and demonstrate a joie de vivre not always found in the mother country.
Once again the Quebecers have earned their reputation as a canny electorate.
This is especially true for those born in Vietnam who may refer to Vietnam as "my country", even if they would simultaneously claim that they are Canadian and/or Quebecer.
Part of this is the result of growing up in Quebec, where normal definitions of duty and loyalty and identity have been smashed to pieces over the past 40 years, as two generations of politicians told Quebecers they can be both independent and loyal, both Canadians first and Quebecers first, both distinct and equal, have "sovereignty association" and be a "nation within a nation." Such impossibilities--nuances, as the French might say--are ways of obscuring and blurring the truth.
Had another NDP leader been chosen, more Quebecers would have seen the Bloc Quebecois as the party best able to articulate this difference, and the Bloc would have had a better chance of regaining seats from the NDP.
Centre-right, pro-Canada Quebecers have no difficulty in voting one way in a federal election, and quite differently in a provincial one.
"We invite our elected leaders, and all Quebecers, to join us in trying to foster a safe and welcoming environment for all who make Quebec their home, whatever their culture or religion," the bishops' statement concludes.
Fonds de solidarite is a development capital investment fund that channels the savings of Quebecers into investments.
Quebecers place a slightly higher priority on quality of service than those in other provinces, for instance, while 43% of women cite quality as the highest priority, compared with 34% of men.
Most Quebecers come from a French culture, live in an English society and have an American lifestyle.
Copyright © 2003-2025 Farlex, Inc Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.