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・ Louis-Guillaume Le Monnier
・ Louis-Guillaume Otto
・ Louis-Guillaume Perreaux
・ Louis-Guillaume Pécour
・ Louis-Guillaume Verrier
・ Louis-Gustave Martin
・ Louis-Gérard Gosselin
・ Louis-Hector de Callière
・ Louis-Hector de Callières
・ Louis-Henri Blais
・ Louis-Henri Brévière
・ Louis-Henri de Baugy, Chevalier de Baugy
・ Louis-Henri Foreau
・ Louis-Henri Mercier
・ Louis-Hippolyte Boileau
Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine
・ Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine Bridge–Tunnel
・ Louis-Hippolyte Lebas
・ Louis-Honoré Fréchette
・ Louis-Honoré Gauvreau
・ Louis-Honoré Pâquet
・ Louis-Häfliger-Park
・ Louis-Hébert (electoral district)
・ Louis-Hébert (provincial electoral district)
・ Louis-Isaac Lemaistre de Sacy
・ Louis-Israël Côté dit Fréchette
・ Louis-Jacques Casault
・ Louis-Jacques Cathelin
・ Louis-Jacques Goussier
・ Louis-Jean Cormier


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Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine : ウィキペディア英語版
Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine

Sir Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine (or La Fontaine, or LaFontaine), 1st Baronet, KCMG (October 4, 1807 – February 26, 1864) was the first Canadian to become Prime Minister of the United Province of Canada and the first head of a responsible government in Canada. He was born in Boucherville, Lower Canada in 1807. A jurist and statesman, Lafontaine was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada in 1830. He was a supporter of Papineau and member of the ''Parti canadien'' (later the ''Parti patriote''). After the severe consequences of the Rebellions of 1837 against the British authorities, he advocated political reforms within the new Union regime of 1841.
Under this Union of the two Canadas he worked with Robert Baldwin in the formation of a party of Upper and Lower Canadian liberal reformers. He and Baldwin formed a government in 1842 but resigned in 1843. In 1848 he was asked by the Governor-General, Lord Elgin, to form the first administration under the new policy of responsible government. The Lafontaine-Baldwin government, formed on March 11, battled for the restoration of the official status of the French language, which was abolished with the Union Act, and the principles of responsible government and the double-majority in the voting of bills.
While Baldwin was reforming Canada West (Upper Canada), Lafontaine passed bills to abolish the ''tenure seigneuriale'' (seigneurial system) and grant amnesty to the leaders of the rebellions in Lower Canada who had been exiled. The bill passed, but it was not accepted by the loyalists of Canada East who protested violently and burned down the Parliament in Montreal.
Lafontaine retired to private life in 1851 but was appointed chief justice of Canada East in 1853. In 1854 he was created a baronet by Queen Victoria and a knight commander in the pontifical Order of St. Sylvester by Pope Pius IX in 1855.
==Family==

He first married on July 9, 1831 to Lynzee Rickard (1813–1859). Their union produced at least three children. His real family name is Ménard. He is the son of Antoine Ménard.
The Hon. Sir Louis Hypolite Ménard, Bart., then Chief Justice of Lower Canada then married Montreal, January 3oth, 1861, the widowed Jane Élisabeth Geneviève Morrison, (1822–1905) daughter of Charles Morrison, on January 30, 1861. Julie had married in Montreal, December 18, 1848, Thomas Kinton, of the Royal Engineers Department. This second marriage produced two sons who died in infancy; Louis-Hippolyte (born July 11, 1862) and Charles François Hypolite Lafontaine, born April 13, 1864 who died the following year. The elder son succeeded to the baronetcy at eighteen months old in February, 1864, but died in 1867. The family residence was St. Denis Street, Montreal.〔Morgan, Henry James Types of Canadian women and of women who are or have been connected with Canada : (Toronto, 1903) ()〕

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