A written source indicates that, in 1828, the Roggan was dubbed the "Pishop Roggan". The spelling "Bishoproggin R." (later "Bishop Roggan River" or "Bishop Roggan's River") appears on an Arrowsmith British North America map (1822). According to geographer
J. Keith Fraser, in
Place Names of the Hudson Bay Region (1968), the term "Bishoproggin" is an
anglicization of the
Cree words
pichipouian or
peshipwaytok, or "fish tank". However, no source shows a
toponymic link with the country's clergy or religious history. Locally, the Cree people designate the Roggan
Amistustikwach, which means "three rivers". The toponym
Rivière Roggan was formalised on 5 December 1968, at the Bank of Place Names of the
Commission de toponymie du Québec (i.e., at the foundation of this commission). == See also ==