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Ville-Marie. Julie Céré, dite Sœur Mance, therefore nobly bore the name of Jeanne Mance*, the founder of the Hôtel-Dieu of Montreal, and
LE BER, JEANNE, famed recluse; b. 4 Jan., 1662 at Montreal, daughter of Jacques Le Ber and Jeanne Le Moyne; d. 3
principal positions of responsibility in the community were all entrusted to her. In 1655 she was involved in a controversy with Jeanne
Gabriel de Campan; his godmother was Jeanne de Chabert. The arms of Paul de Chomedey’s grandfather, Hierosme, were “or, three flames gules.” They were
 
Thubières] at La Rochelle 8 June 1659. With his wife, Marie, and his father-in-law, Jérémie Fonteneau, he arrived in Montreal the same year. Jeanne
 
assistant to Mother Moreau de Brésoles. On 7 Sept. 1659 she arrived at Quebec with her, and with Mother Maillet and Jeanne
 
a member of the contingent accompanying the Religious Hospitallers of La Flèche, who had been authorized to come to Ville-Marie (Montreal). His sister Perrinne, one of Jeanne
held in the fort for all the French prisoners in the hands of the Onondagas. Thus the young Moyen girls, half dead with fear and grief, reached Ville-Marie. Jeanne Mance received them at her Hôtel-Dieu
 
de La Dauversière himself, “who was her director and who asked for her to be the third person in his establishment at Ville-Marie.” She arrived at Quebec on 7 Sept. 1659 with Jeanne
. Arriving in Canada on 7 Sept. 1659 with Jeanne Mance, Mother Macé, and Mother Maillet, she organized her little
daughter of Guillaume de Chauvigny, Sieur d’Alençon et de Vaubougon, and of Lady Jeanne Du Bouchet; d. 18 Nov. 1671 at Quebec. Since
: history of the nursing profession in Quebec from the Augustinians and Jeanne Mance to Medicare, trans. Hugh Shaw (Montreal, 1971). H. E. MacDermot, History of the School of Nursing of the
 
, where his nephew Joseph Oumasasikweie was then living. (Joseph and his wife, Mitigoukwe (later Jeanne) were the first Indians to be baptized and married with full church rites at Ville-Marie.) To the
at Ville-Marie, which was administered by Jeanne Mance pending the arrival of Hospitallers from La Flèche
Desjardins, Heritage: history of the nursing profession in Quebec from the Augustinians and Jeanne Mance to Medicare, trans. Hugh Shaw ([Montreal], 1971). S. B. Frost, McGill University: for
[Dufrost* de Lajemmerais], and Jeanne Mance*. In this way Faillon shared in the religious revival of the 1840s in the diocese of Montreal
. Marie Morin was educated at the convent of the Ursulines in Quebec. She was a boarder there when in 1659 the monastery welcomed, on their arrival from France, Jeanne
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