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Trois-Rivières (2001 population 46,264; metropolitan population 137,507) is a city on the St. Lawrence River at the mouth of the Saint-Maurice River in central Quebec, Canada, located in the densely populated Quebec City-Windsor Corridor.

Description


Trois-Rivières is the centre (and unofficial capital) of the Mauricie region. Its inhabitants are known as "Trifluviens" (Trifluvians). It was known to early English settlers as Three Rivers (the name of the Three Rivers High School is a historical witness to this) and is the birthplace of poet and Parti Québécois minister Gérald Godin, writer Madeleine Ferron and Premier of Quebec Maurice Duplessis. Songwriter Félix Leclerc also worked in a Trois-Rivières radio station.

It is a world capital of the pulp and paper industry. Notable historic landmarks include the Ursulines convent and the Saint-Maurice forge. Trois-Rivières hosts the Grand-Prix de Trois-Rivières, the Trans-Am Series, prestigious American Le Mans series and the Formula Atlantic *. It is officially the "National Poetry Capital of Quebec". Numerous plaques displaying poetic verses are installed across the centre of the city and its International Festival of Poetry honours this title.

History


The city was second to be founded in New France, in 1634 by the Sieur de Laviolette, (after Quebec City, before Montreal, making it the second oldest city in Canada) and played an important role in the colony. On June 8, 1776, it was the theatre of the Battle of Trois-Rivières (part of the Invasion of the province of Quebec by Americans, who came from the Boston area) during the American Revolutionary War. It has now relinquished some of its importance to the two major cities of Quebec, the metropolis of Montreal and capital of Quebec City but remains one of the principal medium-sized cities of Quebec, along with Saguenay, Sherbrooke and Gatineau.

Basilica:*

Demographics


Age Structure
  • 0-14 years: 16.1%
  • 15-64 years: 68.6%
  • 65 years and over: 15.3%

Trois-Rivières Metro Area - 2001

Ethnic Origin

Ethnic Origin Population Percent
Canadian 112,300 83.40%
French 44,075 32.73%
Irish 3,030 2.25%
North American Indian 1,645 1.22%
Québécois 1,620 1.20%
English 1,380 1.02%

The information regarding ethnicities at the left is from the 2001 Canadian Census. The percentages add to more than 100% because of dual responses (e.g. "French-Canadian" generates an entry in both the category "French" and the category "Canadian".) Groups with greater than 1,250 responses are included.

Religious Groups

Media


Radio

Television

Print

See also


External links


Cities in Quebec | 1634 establishments

Trois-Rivières | Trois-Rivières | Trois-Rivières, Canadá | Trois-Rivières | Trois-Rivières | Trois-Rivières

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Trois-Rivières, Quebec".

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