Governor Jean de Lauson had created at Quebec a seneschal’s court of justice. Godet was its first notary, and in
JUCHEREAU DE MAUR, PAUL-AUGUSTIN, receiving-agent of the Compagnie de la Colonie de la Nouvelle-France; b. 13 June 1658 at
LA CORNE DE CHAPTES, JEAN-LOUIS DE, king’s lieutenant at Montreal; b. 23 Oct. 1666 at Chaptes, in the commune of Beauregard
LEFEBVRE DE BELLEFEUILLE, FRANÇOIS, seigneur; baptized 4 March 1708 at
MARGANE DE BATILLY, FRANÇOIS-MARIE, ensign; b. 13 Nov. 1672 at Montreal, son of Séraphin Margane de Lavaltrie and Louise
ROBUTEL DE LA NOUE, ZACHARIE, lieutenant on half-pay and on the active list, captain, seigneur of Châteauguay; b. 4 June
TONTY DE LIETTE (Deliette, Desliettes), CHARLES-HENRI-JOSEPH DE, officer in the Louisiana colonial regular troops; b. 13 May
.
In 1705, Baudeau was performing his duties at Montreal; he had occasion to examine a soldier of M. de Ramezay
BÉCART DE GRANVILLE ET DE FONVILLE, CHARLES (he signed de Fonville, but was often called Sieur de Granville
CHAMPION DE CICÉ, LOUIS-ARMAND (baptized Louis), priest, Sulpician, missionary in Canada, vicar apostolic to Siam
de Lino, who did not arrive until October 1717.
Can we maintain, as does the historian Jouve, that from 1702 to 1724 “he prepared and supervised
.
Jean-Pierre Guéguen, who was a pupil at the Collège de Lesneven in France from 1852 to 1858, finished his classical studies there in brilliant fashion, winning seven first prizes. In September 1858
AJQ, Greffe de Pierre Duquet, Contrat de mariage de Louis Maheust et Geneviève Bissot, 29 mai 1673. ASQ, Séminaire, XCII, 19, p.6. Jug. et délib., passim. Papier terrier de la Cie
Nov. 1687.
Abbé Morel had had the church of Sainte-Anne de Beaupré rebuilt because it was too near to the tides. In addition to the parish
.
In August 1674, Frontenac [Buade*] had the Sulpician François de
ANDRÉ DE LEIGNE, PIERRE, king’s counsellor; lieutenant general for civil and criminal affairs of the provost court of Quebec; b. 1663
AUBERT DE LA CHESNAYE, LOUIS, officer in the colonial regular troops; b. 8 July 1690 in Quebec, son of Charles
BOUCHER DE GRANDPRÉ, LAMBERT, officer and town major of Trois-Rivières, where he had been baptized on 21 Nov. 1656 and where
Feb. 1696 at Montreal.
A first cousin of the Prince de Monaco, Crisafy belonged to the house of Grimaldi, one of the most powerful families in
CAËN, GUILLAUME DE, nephew of Ézéchiel de Caën [see
BLAIN DE SAINT-AUBIN, EMMANUEL-MARIE, educator, song-writer, story-teller, and translator; b. 30 June 1833 at Rennes, France
to the Hôtel-Dieu and surgeon-major of the town. Governor Charles de Beauharnois* hoped to get him the latter position
was disbanded. On 9 Jan. 1666 Basset appears to have accompanied Rémy de Courcelle on his
BOUILLET DE LA CHASSAIGNE (Chassagne), JEAN, esquire, career soldier, knight of the order of Saint-Louis; b. June 1654 at Paray
CÉLORON DE BLAINVILLE, JEAN-BAPTISTE, midshipman, lieutenant, captain, knight of the order of Saint-Louis; baptized 19 Feb
priest at Bayeux on 21 Sept. 1787, he was admitted as a member of the community of the Congrégation de Jésus et Marie (Eudists) the following year. Then he taught the Philosophy program at the
MAUFILS, MARIE-MADELEINE, dite de Saint-Louis, Religious Hospitaller at the Hôtel-Dieu of Quebec; baptized 21
July 1665 M. de Prouville de Tracy granted him, along with his sons and four other persons
buried on 20 December in his native parish.
After commercial studies at the Collège de Lévis from 1855 to 1858, and classical and theological
Neuilly-sous-Clermont.
An account of a voyage in America by Jean Paumart is said to exist, apparently in the Borel de Bretizel private collections, which
PIOT DE LANGLOISERIE, CHARLES-GASPARD, soldier, town major and lieutenant at Montreal and at Quebec, knight of the order of Saint-Louis
SAVEUSE DE BEAUJEU, JACQUES-PHILIPPE, office
ophthalmologists, and they had eight children, including Henri, a rector of the Collège de Saint-Boniface in Manitoba, and Edmond, a physician in Ottawa; m. secondly 31 July 1911 Georgine Gagnon in Montreal; they
priest; b. 22 Sept. 1841 in Saint-Germain-de-Rimouski (Rimouski), Lower Canada, son of Pierre Gauvreau, a notary, and Élisabeth Dubergès; d. 26 Feb. 1911 at Quebec
TESTARD DE MONTIGNY, CASIMIR-AMABLE (he usually signed C.T. de Montigny
VIGER, AMANDA (baptized Marie-Louise-Amanda), named Saint-Jean-de-Goto, Religious
LESTAGE, PIERRE DE (in the early years of the 18th century he referred to himself as Pierre de Lestage Desperoux or
ANGER, MARIE-ELMINA (baptized Marie-Mélina), named Marie de Jésus, member of the Sisters of the Good
AUBERT DE LA CHESNAYE, FRANÇOIS, seigneur of Maur and of Mille-Vaches, member of the Conseil Supérieur, director general of the
Boucher’s farmers at Cap-de-la-Madeleine. He seems to have had a deep love for the land, and was a farmer a long time, if not all his life. On 30 June 1666 he received from Quentin Moral two
CHAMBLY, JACQUES DE, captain in the Carignan-Salières regiment, seigneur of Chambly, and governor of Acadia, son of Philippe de
LA FAYE, LOUIS-FRANÇOIS DE (when he arrived in Canada he signed Delafaye, but from 1704 on he adopted de la Faye
LEGARDEUR DE BEAUVAIS, RENÉ, midshipman, officer in the colonial regular troops
PICOTÉ DE BELESTRE, PIERRE, merchant, fur trader, officer of the garrison of Montreal; b. c. 1637 in France, son of
POLLET DE LA COMBE-POCATIÈRE, FRANÇOIS, came to Canada in the summer of 1665 with the headquarters of the Carignan-Salières regiment
PUISEAUX, PIERRE DE, seigneur of Montrénault in France, of Saint-Michel and of Sainte-Foy in New France; b. c. 1566
VOLANT DE SAINT-CLAUDE, PIERRE and CLAUDE
VOLANT DE SAINT-CLAUDE, PIERRE and CLAUDE
Dufrost* de Lajemmerais. In the autumn of 1747 the foundress recorded in the new registry of the Hôpital Général of Montreal that the aspirant, Agathe Véronneau, had not yet “been admitted into the