Lower Canada is known as Quebec.
Lower Canada, primarily known today as Quebec, historically had a significant Catholic population, primarily of French descent. While there were Protestant communities, particularly among English-speaking settlers and loyalists, the predominant religious influence in Lower Canada was Catholicism. Thus, it is more accurate to say that Lower Canada was predominantly Catholic rather than Protestant.
The Act of Union, 1840, which was proclaimed on February 10, 1841, joined the colonies of Upper Canada and Lower Canada into a single colony known as the Province of Canada.
they were lower and upper Canada which today is Ontario and Quebec. The Atlantic countries joined later on.
Canada did not exist in the 1790s. The Hudson's Bay Company owned most of the land under British title to facilitate the fur trade. The main regions of the nation at the time were known as Upper Canada and Lower Canada, These (very roughly) equate to Ontario and Quebec today. They were an amalgamation of British and French colonies and forts.
The united states, Canada
Lower Canada ended in 1841.
Lower Canada College was created in 1861.
Upper Canada & lower Canada
By 1837 Canada the colony had been broken off into two separate entities called Upper and Lower Canada. Violent rebellions were breaking out in both Upper and Lower Canada. Today, Canada describes a Confederation of many colonies and Nations, Open violent rebellions are limited to small easily contained protests, usually by Aboriginal groups. Canada has gone from referring to a few tens of thousands colonists clinging to a river to one of the worlds largest and most prosperous Confederations.
Canada
It divided Canada in half, Upper and Lower Canada.