The beginnings of the Quebec Bar go back to 1693 when, as a Royal Province of the
French colonial empire,
Canadien advocates first tried to obtain official recognition and were refused by
Governor Louis de Buade de Frontenac, who upheld the 1678 edict by the
Sovereign Council denying recognition of the legal profession in
New France. At that time, legal advocacy was carried out largely at the local level by an elected
syndic, who would normally have had some education if not in the legal profession specifically, the
Provost of Quebec (equivalent to an
attorney general) being the only person required to have obtained formal legal education and training during that period in
Canada. French Canadian advocates would not be recognized for nearly a century, by which time (after the
Battle of the Plains of Abraham) they had become
British colonial subjects. In 1765,
Governor James Murray of the new British
Province of Quebec authorized the creation of the "Community of Lawyers" (
Communauté des avocats), which granted commissions to its members allowing them to practise law as advocates,
notaries and
land surveyors. The precursor to the present-day Bar of Quebec, the Community of Lawyers, adopted the first-ever code of ethics and conduct. The Bar of Quebec became an independent corporation in 1849 through the
Act to incorporate the Bar of Lower Canada (11-12 Vict. [1849], c.46.) and was granted sole responsibility for admission to the study and practice of law. The Act authorizing the incorporation of the Bar of Quebec was influential elsewhere and inspired the formation of similar corporations, such as the
State Bar of California. ==Admission==