Lake Lescarbot

Lake Lescarbot
Location La Tuque (urban agglomeration), Mauricie, Quebec
Coordinates 47°48′42″N 72°04′04″W / 47.81167°N 72.06778°WCoordinates: 47°48′42″N 72°04′04″W / 47.81167°N 72.06778°W
Type natural
Primary inflows Bostonnais River
Primary outflows Bostonnais River
Basin countries Canada

The Lake Lescarbot is located in the La Tuque (urban agglomeration), in Mauricie, in Quebec, in Canada. The territory is administered by Zec Kiskissink.

Geography

Lake Lescarbot is shaped like a large V, with three peninsula emerging from the eastern shore, south of the lake. The left arm of the V has a length of 4.8 km, against 3.5 km for the right arm of V.

Lake Lescarbot is fed by six main discharges:

The mouth of the lake is at the top of the left arm of the V. River outlet of Lake Lescarbot is 3.2 km long (measured by water) and flows to the south of Lake Kiskissink.[1]

Lescarbot lake is located near (west side) of the boundary waters between the Métabetchouane River and Bostonnais River.

Toponymy

The origin of the name is related to Marc Lescarbot, a Frenchman born at Versins in Picardy, in 1570, a scholar, lawyer, traveler, writer, broker. He came to settle in Port Royal, Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, in 1606. However, in 1607, he had to return to France because of the revocation of the monopoly of the fur trade held by Pierre du Gua de Monts. Upon his arrival back in France, Lescarbot began writing a history of New France, which during his lifetime was published in three editions (1609, 1611-1612 and 1617-1618), enriched whenever he was able to get new information from people who returned to France after living in French Canada. Each edition of this work includes "The Neptune Theatre", a play composed and performed in 1606 to celebrate the return of Jean de Biencourt Poutrincourt from his posting as commander of Port Royal. This play was probably the first stage performance in North America.[2][3]

The name "Lake Lescarbot" was officially registered on 6 December 1968 in the databank of place names of the Commission de toponymie du Québec (Geographical Names Board of Québec).

See also

References

  1. Geographical audit conducted on December 27, 2013 by historian Gaétan Veillette (Saint-Hubert, QC) from the website of Google Map.
  2. Names and places of Quebec, the work of the Commission de toponymie du Québec published in 1994 and 1996 as an illustrated printed dictionary, and in a CD produced by THIERRY company Micro-Intel in 1997 from this dictionary
  3. Honoré Campion, A man in the service of New France (Paris, 2001), 440 pp.