Rimouski, city, Bas-Saint-Laurent region, eastern Quebec province, Canada. The city lies on a hillside sloping gently toward its deepwater port (sheltered by the Île Saint-Barnabé) on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River estuary. The land was granted to Augustin Rouer de la Cardonnière in 1688. Germain Lepage was the first settler (1696), and Recollet missionaries and Jesuits followed in 1701. The name was probably derived from a Micmac Indian word meaning “land of the moose.” About half the city was destroyed by fire in 1950, but it has since been rebuilt.
Rimouski’s diversified economy includes food processing and the manufacture of lumber, pulpwood, mattresses, carpeting, leather, and footwear. It is also a transportation and service centre for the lower St. Lawrence and Gaspésie areas. Educational institutions include a branch of the University of Quebec and a marine institute. Rimouski is the seat of a Roman Catholic archbishop. Inc. town, 1869; city, 1963. Pop. (2006) 42,240; (2011) 46,860.