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TANGUAY, GEORGES-ÉMILE (baptized George-Elzéar-Émile)
 
girl Marie-Félix at Quebec in 1662 and who was probably born in 1634, according to the census of 1667, or in 1636 according to Tanguay. If we accept either of these two dates, we must be dealing with two
 
. Chaudillon was wounded in the battle of 2 July 1690 against the Iroquois, fought at Rivière-des-Prairies, on the small stream called the Grou. In À travers les registres Tanguay writes that
 
communauté des frères Charon et l’Hôpital Général de Montréal sous le régime français,” APQ Rapport, 1923–24, 187. Tanguay, Dictionnaire, I, 31f.; II, 152 [Tanguay’s confusion about Jacques
 
death confirm it. His functions are not known, but Cyprien Tanguay* asserts that the grave scruples that led him to give up almost entirely the
 
. Does this imply that Father Côme made a trip to Quebec, as stated by Abbé Tanguay? Not at all; it was the child’s parents who, passing through Sillery, had the baptismal certificate registered at the
 
(according to Tanguay); he came from Dieppe (province of Normandy), and was the son of Jacques de Horné and Catherine Duval; buried 7 March 1730 at Sainte-Croix
 
during his command at Fort Saint-Joseph). Tanguay, Dictionnaire, I, 154, 194, 530; III, 412. [Tanguay gives Villedonné’s dates as 1663-1726. In 1701, however, Callière stated that Villedonné was
 
AJTR, Greffe de Séverin Ameau, 17 sept. 1680, 4 mars 1689, 14 janv., 24 août 1693; Registres d’état civil de Notre-Dame-de-la-Conception, 26 fév. 1732. Tanguay, Dictionnaire
 
. Hélène Bernier Juchereau, Annales (Jamet). Tanguay, Dictionnaire
 
justice,” RSCT, 3d ser., X (1916) sect.i, 273–303. Tanguay, Dictionnaire, I, 504.
 
Lechasseur* (secretary of Buade de Frontenac), which is not, of course, necessarily an indication that the abbé was then in France. Tanguay, Allaire, and Sulte, after Noiseux – whose information is
 
. On 7 Nov. 1667 he married Marie Moyen, daughter of Jean-Baptiste and Élisabeth Le Ber (Le Bret, according to Tanguay), in the parish of Notre-Dame de Montréal; she died at Île Sainte
 
Auber, widow of Martin Grouvel. She was still living on 22 April 1693. Tanguay is therefore wrong when he attributes to him a second marriage in 1667. More probably the marriage in question was
 
at Fort de Chartres 6 March 1755. Saint-Ange’s widow was buried at Fort de Chartres 23 Feb. 1762, said to be 79 years old, although Tanguay gives the date of her baptism as 1
 
was a brief one for, according to Tanguay, he was already dead when his fifth child was born in July 1701. As his wife requested an inventory of his estate in August, it is probable that Guion had
 
(1923), 315f.; XXXII (1926), 524–28; XL (1934), 341f. Tanguay, Dictionnaire.
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