First Jesuit Missions
St. Ignace II In the mid-1600s, the Jesuit mission to the Hurons was headquartered in the mission village named Sainte Marie. From there, the missionaries and their helpers were sent to work in the surrounding native villages. One of these was named after St. Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus. St. Ignace was a Wendat Catholic community. In the autumn of 1648, the village was relocated closer to Ste. Marie (approximately twelve kilometers away) so as to be better protected from any attack by the Iroquois, the traditional enemy of the Wendat. St. Ignace II was only a few months old when, in the very early morning of March 16, 1649, it was overwhelmed by more than a thousand Iroquois warriors. After quickly making the village a stronghold, these invaders attacked the neighbouring village of St. Louis. There, after an intense battle, they captured Sts. Jean de Brebeuf and Gabriel Lalemant as well as the surviving Wendat warriors who remained to defend their village. The prisoners were brought to St. Ignace II where …