


New France Genealogy
Montjoie Saint Denis!
Notes
Matches 2,051 to 2,100 of 3,768
# | Notes | Linked to |
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2051 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1266)
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2052 | listed on gravemarker http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~murrayp/sudbury/sudbury/chelmsfo/catholic/sect4/poulin1.jpg | Brabant, Euphemie (I14998)
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2053 | Lived 3 years, 4 months | Gauthe, Philip Joseph (I6702)
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2054 | Lived 9 days | Gauthe, Joseph (I6354)
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2055 | Lived for 250 years and reigned as king for 150 years. Ancestry and Progeny of Captain James Blount - Inmigrant. by Robert Ffafman p. E- 19. | King Of Ireland Siorna Saoghalach (I25911)
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2056 | Lived to be 905 y/o | Enos (I25975)
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2057 | Living w/ the family of Frederic Poulin durring 1901 and 1911 Woburn Census. Adel not listed in 1911 Woburn Census. | Cyr, Charles (I515)
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2058 | Llyr Lediaith, who married Penardim, her line continue on, her Father is Baran who is found on col.5. continued from Chart 801 & 804 in the book compiled by Michel L Call, called the Royal Ancesters of Some L.D.S. Families. | Lediaith, King Lear Llyr (I26105)
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2059 | Louis-Michel Duheme is mentioned in the Jesuit Relations as having been miraculously cured of a feaver by a relic of Father Francois Regis, who is now canonized a saint. This is all the information I have on these files. Many have little additional information other then what is here. You will need to do your own additional research to confirm or disconfirm my findings. | Duheme, Louis-Michel (I6747)
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2060 | Louise married Simon Guyon, son of Jean Guyon dit Du Buisson and Mathurine Madeleine Robin dite Boule, on 10 Nov 1653 in Québec City, Québec, Québec, Canada. (Simon Guyon was born on 2 Aug 1621 in Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France and died on 8 Feb 1682 in Québec City, Québec, Québec, Canada.) | Family F2105
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2061 | Lucy died in her 73rd year according to a Woolwich Record. | Wade, Lucy (I6815)
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2062 | Lucy, living 1130, widow susscessively, of Ives Taillebois and Roger Fitz Gerold; m. probably c 1098 Ranulph III le Meschin. He [Ranulph le Meschin] married Lucy, widow of Roger FITZ-GEROLD (by whom she was mother of William de Roumare, afterwards Earl of Lincoln). He died 17 or 27 January 1128/9, and was buried at St. Werburg's, Chester. The Countess Lucy confirmed, as his widow, the grant of the Manor of Spalding to the monks of that place (f). [Complete Peerage III:166, XIV:170, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] (f) She paid 500 marks to King Henry in 1130 for license to remain unmarried for 5 years. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------- The following copied from www.linacre.ox.ac.uk/research/prosop/PRSPN2.stm, gives the latest research on the ancestry of Lucy: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------- Antecessor Noster: The Parentage of Countess Lucy Made Plain A lot of ink has flowed on the subject, but there can be no doubt that the 'mysterious' Countess Lucy of Chester was William Malet's thrice-married granddaughter, the daughter of Robert Malet's sister and Turold the Sheriff of Lincoln (dead by 1079). The suggestion was first made by R. Kirk in 1888. As N. Sumner has more recently observed: 'This account has the merit of explaining why the lordship of Spalding and other places in Lincolnshire were held after Ivo's death not by Beatrice, his direct heir and the daughter of his marriage to Lucy, but by the later husbands of Lucy, Roger fitz Gerold and Ranulph Meschines.' It is clear from her charters that Lucy was an heiress; as was to be expected, her estates passed to the sons of her second and third marriages. Kirk's work was based upon conjecture, and contained a number of errors. The question of Lucy's parentage has therefore remained open. Nevertheless, there is proof that Kirk was right. A spurious charter of Crowland Abbey made Turold of Bucknall (the Sheriff) the founder of the priory of Spalding as a cell of Crowland. It also called Turold brother of Godiva countess of Mercia, but subsequently described Godiva's son Earl Algar as Turold's cognatus (cousin). A genealogia fundatoris of Coventry Abbey made Lucy a daughter of Earl Algar and sister and heiress of earls Edwin and Morcar. The Peterborough Chronicle and the Pseudo-Ingulf's Chronicle of Crowland both made Lucy the daughter of Algar and niece or great-niece of Turold. We know that William Malet was half-English, so these traditions probably boil down to a relationship between Countess Godiva and William's English mother. In 1153 a charter [RRAN, III, 180] of the future Henry II for Lucy's son Ranulf II of Chester referred to her uncles Robert Malet and Alan of Lincoln. Alan of Lincoln was the successor, and almost certainly the son, of Domesday's Alfred of Lincoln. Chronologically, it is most unlikely that Alan was Lucy's uncle. It was probably another of Alfred's sons whom Domesday described as Alfred nepos [nephew or grandson] of Turold, then holding a fee which was certainly thereafter held with the rest of the senior Alfred's fee by his heir Alan. Domesday provides a further indication that Alfred senior married another of William Malet's daughters when it names a William as Alfred's predecessor in two of his manors. Other parts of each of these manors (Linwood and Rothwell) were held in 1086 by Durand Malet, who was probably William's son. It seems that Henry's charter can be explained by seeing a scribe, perhaps in search of rhetorical balance, commit the error of ascribing two uncles to Lucy, instead of a niece (Lucy) and a nephew (Alan of Lincoln) to Robert Malet, who was uncle to both. Turold is evidenced in Domesday Book as a benefactor of Crowland Abbey, to which he gave a parcel of land at Bucknall. The abbey also held land at Spalding that had probably been granted to it by Earl Algar and there is evidence to suggest that Turold the Sheriff gave further land there to the abbey of St Nicholas, Angers, before 1079. Lucy and her first husband Ivo Taillebois subsequently founded, or perhaps re-founded, a priory at Spalding subject to St Nicholas, Angers. A revealing phrase from the Register of Spalding Priory reads: 'mortuo quia dicto Thoraldo relicta sibi herede Lucia predicta' [at his death Turold left an heir, the aforesaid Lucy]. The word heres, 'heir', was often used of the child who was to inherit his/her father's property. Lucy later confirmed the gifts of all three of her husbands: 'pro redempcione anime patris mei et matris mee et dominorum meorum et parentum meorum' [for the souls of my father and mother, my husbands and my (other) relatives]. The association of the priory with such a small group of people and the description of Lucy as heres of Turold strongly hint at Lucy's parentage. But we can go further still. In their initial benefaction Ivo and Lucy referred to 'antecessorum suorum Turoldi scilicet uxorisque eius regine' [our 'ancestors' Turold and his wife]. The reference to Turold's wife indicates that some part of his landholding had come to him through his wife, something also indicated by the occurrence of William Malet amongst those who had held the Domesday lands of Lucy's first husband Ivo Taillebois before him. The apparently vague Latin words antecessor and predecessor can both be used to mean something like 'predecessor'. Each of them conveys a range of very precise meanings in different circumstances. The description of Turold and his wife as antecessores of Ivo and Lucy may be compared to the usage in a charter in the cartulary of Mont-Saint-Michel by which the Angevins Hugh Chalibot and his wife confirmed the grants of her father, who was described as antecessor noster. Other examples of this phrase show clearly that it was used by a married man to describe the parent from whom his wife had inherited the property she brought to the marriage. Acting on her own account (normally after her husband's death), the heiress will often describe herself as the daughter of the parent her husband described as antecessor noster. A rare use of the phrase was to indicate the couple's immediate predecessor, not her father but her brother. In Lucy and Ivo's case the plurality of their antecessores, Turold and his wife, puts the matter beyond doubt. Lucy's parents were indeed Turold the Sheriff and a daughter of William Malet. Source: Jim Weber (Research):Alt. Birth; 1060. Lucia married Ives DE TAILLEBOIS 1st Baron of Kendal, son of Foulques (Fulk) III "le Noir" D' ANJOU 5th Count of Anjou and Ctse Hildegarde D' ANJOU ET LORRAINE, after 1086(Ives DE TAILLEBOIS 1st Baron of Kendal was born about 1036 in Cristot, Calvados, Normandy, France and died in 1094 in Kendal, Cambria, England Lucia also married Roger FitzGerold DE ROUMARE Seigneur de Roumare, son of Gerold DE ROUMARE Seigneur de Roumare, Castellan de Neufmarche and Aubreye, after 1094 (Roger FitzGerold DE ROUMARE Seigneur de Roumare was born about 1050 in Roumare, Seine Inferieure, Normandy, France and died before 15 Jul 1098 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England Lucia also married Ranulph "De Briquessart" LE MESCHIN 1st Earl of Chester, son of Ranulph II LE MESCHIN Viscount of Bayeux and Maud (Margaret) D' AVRANCHES Heiress of Chester, about 1098 (Ranulph "De Briquessart" LE MESCHIN 1st Earl of Chester was born about 1070 in Briquessart, Livry, , France, died in Jan 1128-1129 in Chester, Cheshire, England and was buried in St Werburgh, Chester, Cheshire, England.) | of Mercia, Lucia (I21990)
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2063 | Ludwig, Count of SIMMERN | Pfalz-Simmern, Prince of France Louis (I27406)
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2064 | Luke 3 : 23 - 38 | Levi (I26059)
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2065 | Luke 3 : 23 - 38 | Melchi (I26060)
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2066 | Luke 3:33 I Chron. 2:9 Ancestry and Progeny of Captain James Blount - Inmigrant. by Robert Ffafman p. E- 15. 1st Chapter of Matthew | Ram (Aram) (I25796)
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2067 | Malcolm I (Máel Coluim mac Domnaill), the son of Donald II of Scotland, became the King of Scotland in 942 or 943 after his cousin King Constantine II of Scotland abdicated and became a monk. Malcolm was a prince of great abilities and prudence, and Edmund I of England courted his alliance by ceding Cumbria, the consisting of Cumberland and part of Westmorland, to him, in the year 945, on condition that he would defend that northern county, and become an ally of Edmund. This, therefore, required Scotland to send military support if England was attacked by either the Danes of Northumbria or the Norwegians of Ireland. The alliance between England and Scotland remained after the death of both kings. Edred of England, the brother and successor of Edmund, accordingly applied for, and obtained, the aid of Malcolm against Anlaf, king of Northumberland, whose country, according to the barbarous practice of the times, he wasted, and carried off the people with their cattle. Later, when Norsemen again invaded the land, the Scots sent raids against the English and, in 954, Edred reunited the northern counties to his dominions. In this same year, after putting down an insurrection of the Moray-men under Cellach, their Maormor (chief), whom he killed, Malcolm was slain, probably at Ulurn or Auldearn in Moray, by one of these men, in revenge for the death of his chief. He was buried on the Isle of Iona. At some point in his life, he married. But as was the case with many monarchs in this period, the details are no longer known. A son from this marriage would later succeed to the throne as Kenneth II of Scotland. | mac Domnaill, Rí Alban Máel Coluim (I8014)
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2068 | Malcolm II of Scotland (Máel Coluim mac Cináeda) (c. 954 - November 25, 1034) was King of Scotland (Alba) from 1005 to 1034. He was the son of King Kenneth II and first cousin of his predecessor, King Kenneth III (Cináed mac Duib), who was murdered by Malcolm at the Battle of Monzievaird in 1005. He was the last king of the House of Alpin. His rule was contested for ten years during the reign of Kenneth III but Malcolm finally gained the throne after Kenneth's death. It appears that he only ruled part of Scotland during his reign, in opposition to leaders from Moray such as Findláech mac Ruadrí (d. 1020, probably father of Macbeth), and Máel Coluim mac Máel Brigte (d. 1029), both of whom were also called kings of Alba (and therefore Scotland) in the Irish annals, though neither are called kings of Scotland in modern texts. In 1006, Malcolm was defeated by Northumbrian forces at Durham. The English then became preoccupied with the Danish allowing Malcolm to march south, avenging the loss at Durham by winning the Battle of Carham against the Anglo-Saxons in 1018 and, thereby, regaining Lothian. Thirteen years later, however, Canute, king of England, Denmark, and Norway, travelled to Scotland. What happened is lost to time, but claims that Malcolm submitted to Canute seem very unlikely. However, Canute seems to have recognised Malcolm's possession of Lothian. In the west, Malcolm made an alliance with King Owen the Bald of Strathclyde and together they defeated King Canute at the Battle of Carham in 1018. At the same time, the marriage of his daughter to Sigurd the Stout, Norse Earl of Orkney, extended Malcolm's influence to the far north. He battled to expand his kingdom, gaining land down to the River Tweed and in Strathclyde. When King Owen died without an heir, Malcolm claimed Strathclyde for his grandson, Duncan. This caused dissent throughout the kingdom of Strathclyde which resulted in Malcolm's murder at Glamis in 1034. He was buried on the Isle of Iona shortly after. As the last of the House of Alpin, he did not have any sons to succeed him. He, therefore, arranged good marriages for his daughters. One daughter married Earl Sigurd of Orkney and their son Thorfinn brought the lands of Caithness and Sutherland under the control of the King of Alba. His elder daughter, Bethoc, married the Abbot of Dunkeld and their son became Duncan I(c.1010-1040), who succeeded Malcolm upon his death in 1034. After Malcolm II's reign, Scottish succession changed to be based on the principle of direct descent. (Previously, succession was determined by tanistry - during a king's lifetime an heir was chosen and known as tanaiste rig - 'second to the king'.) | mac Cináeda, Rí Alban / Rex Scotiae Máel Coluim (I8012)
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2069 | Margaret is named as a daughter in this family in the 1554 will of her grandfather. | Gooch, Margaret (I7594)
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2070 | Margaret went by the name Jane. | Harnden, Margaret Jane (I7052)
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2071 | Marguerite Poulin Name-Var: Marguerite Fontaine This is all the information I have on these files. Many have little additional information other then what is here. You will need to do your own additional research to confirm or disconfirm my findings. | Poulain, Marguerite (I32)
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2072 | Marie Judith (Rigault) Rigaud MARIE JUDITH RIGAUD Birth: 1633 in St-Jean-d'Angly, Saintonge (Charente-Maritime), France Death: 3 May 1703 in Louiseville, PQ Marie Judith (Rigault) Rigaud MARIE JUDITH RIGAUD Birth: 1633 in St-Jean-d'Angély, Saintonge (Charente-Maritime), France Death: 3 May 1703 in Louiseville, PQ Birth: 1633 in St Jean Angely,Saintonge,France 1 Death: 13 AUG 1711 in Trois Rivieres,St Maurice,Quebec Note: Hired by Marguerite LeGardeur in La Rochelle in 1651as domestic for 5 yrs.and emigrated to Trois Rivieres, arrested in 1679 for living with Pierre Cavelier, banished from Montreal for 10 yrs Court of Trois-Rivi?res, 1655-1662 Lawyers were not allowed to immigrate or even visit Nouvelle-France, by royal decree. Nevertheless or maybe because of it, it was common practice for everybody to go to court to ensure that justice would prevail. Between 1655 and 1662 at the "Pr?v?t? de Trois-Rivi?res", there were 907 cases tried, for a population of about 700 for the whole area ! The "Pr?vot?" was not only filling the role of today's legal system but also acted as collecting agency at a time and place where cash for transactions was physically rare and more often than not replaced by bartering. The ten persons with the highest attendance records were: 44 times - Jacques Aubuchon dit LeLoyal, master carpenter, married to Mathurine Poisson 44 times - Barth?l?mi Bertaut, gunsmith, single 32 times - Louis Pinard, master surgeon, married to Marie-Madeleine Hertel 31 times - M?dard Chouart DesGroseillers, fur trader, married to H?l?ne Martin 29 times - Jacques Besnard, unknown profession, single 29 times - Quentin Moral, sieur de St-Quentin, government attorney (civil and criminal), married to Marie Marguerie 27 times - Christophe Crevier, sieur de La M?l?e, baker, owner of the Crevier Estate (Seigneurie), married to Jeanne vard 26 times - Jacques M?nard dit Lafontaine, wheel and cartwright, married to Catherine Forestier 24 times - Fran?ois Lema?stre dit Le Picard, master tailor, married to Judith Rigaud 22 times - Ren? Besnard dit Bourjoli, corporal, married to Marie S?dilot April 8, 1679 Marie Judith Rigaud was charged with leading a scandalolus life, with Pierre Cavelier (ten letters were presented as evidence, which they had written each other). She was found guilty. Effective April 14, 1679, she was banished from the district of Montreal for ten years, and if she returned before the expiration of this term, she would be whipped, branded with the fleur-de-lis and fined 300 livres. Pierre was forbidden either to write, or visit her, under penalty of jail, a fine of 1,000 livres and coperal punishment. The sentence was ordered to be posted in large characters on the main door of the parish churces of Montreal, Lachine, and Pointe-aux-Trembles. It is beleived that Marie Judith Rigaud then returned to rehabilitate herself in the face of her neighbors, at Trois-Riveierers. It is also beleived in 1681 she is listed under the name Judith Desauneaux, 45, living with her daughter Marguerite who married Guillaume-Christopher Gerbault. Judith Rigaud was an educated servant of Huguenot ancestry. This is all the information I have on these files. Many have little additional information other then what is here. You will need to do your own additional research to confirm or disconfirm my findings. Birth: 1633 in St Jean Angely,Saintonge,France 1 Death: 13 AUG 1711 in Trois Rivieres,St Maurice,Quebec Note: Hired by Marguerite LeGardeur in La Rochelle in 1651as domestic for 5 yrs.and emigrated to Trois Rivieres, arrested in 1679 for living with Pierre Cavelier, banished from Montreal for 10 yrs Court of Trois-Rivières, 1655-1662 Lawyers were not allowed to immigrate or even visit Nouvelle-France, by royal decree. Nevertheless or maybe because of it, it was common practice for everybody to go to court to ensure that justice would prevail. Between 1655 and 1662 at the "Prévôté de Trois-Rivières", there were 907 cases tried, for a population of about 700 for the whole area ! The "Prévoté" was not only filling the role of today's legal system but also acted as collecting agency at a time and place where cash for transactions was physically rare and more often than not replaced by bartering. The ten persons with the highest attendance records were: 44 times - Jacques Aubuchon dit LeLoyal, master carpenter, married to Mathurine Poisson 44 times - Barthélémi Bertaut, gunsmith, single 32 times - Louis Pinard, master surgeon, married to Marie-Madeleine Hertel 31 times - Médard Chouart DesGroseillers, fur trader, married to Hélène Martin 29 times - Jacques Besnard, unknown profession, single 29 times - Quentin Moral, sieur de St-Quentin, government attorney (civil and criminal), married to Marie Marguerie 27 times - Christophe Crevier, sieur de La Mêlée, baker, owner of the Crevier Estate (Seigneurie), married to Jeanne Évard 26 times - Jacques Ménard dit Lafontaine, wheel and cartwright, married to Catherine Forestier 24 times - François Lemaîstre dit Le Picard, master tailor, married to Judith Rigaud 22 times - René Besnard dit Bourjoli, corporal, married to Marie Sédilot April 8, 1679 Marie Judith Rigaud was charged with leading a scandalolus life, with Pierre Cavelier (ten letters were presented as evidence, which they had written each other). She was found guilty. Effective April 14, 1679, she was banished from the district of Montreal for ten years, and if she returned before the expiration of this term, she would be whipped, branded with the fleur-de-lis and fined 300 livres. Pierre was forbidden either to write, or visit her, under penalty of jail, a fine of 1,000 livres and coperal punishment. The sentence was ordered to be posted in large characters on the main door of the parish churces of Montreal, Lachine, and Pointe-aux-Trembles. It is beleived that Marie Judith Rigaud then returned to rehabilitate herself in the face of her neighbors, at Trois-Riveierers. It is also beleived in 1681 she is listed under the name Judith Desauneaux, 45, living with her daughter Marguerite who married Guillaume-Christopher Gerbault. Judith Rigaud was an educated servant of Huguenot ancestry. FamilySearch showed this additional information: Death - Date: 14 mai 1704 Place: Montr?al, Qu?bec, Canada | Rigaud, Marie Judith (I6745)
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2073 | MARRIAGE: 2 _PREF YMARRIAGE: Also shown as Married WFT Est 1621-1656 | Family F1258
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2074 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 02 Mar 979 | Family F9437
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2075 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 09 février 1739 FamilySearch showed this additional information: Marriage - Date: 09 Feb 1739 Place: Laval, ?le-J?sus, Qu?bec, Canada FamilySearch showed this additional information: Marriage - Date: 09 Feb 1739 Place: Laval, Île-Jésus, Québec, Canada | Family F3159
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2076 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 09 Jul 1290 | Family F3202
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2077 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 1101 MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Abt 1119 | Family F9464
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2078 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 1195 | Family F9441
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2079 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 13 Feb 1176 | Family F3227
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2080 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 16 Nov 1637 | Family F2104
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2081 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 1676 | Family F1305
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2082 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 1698 | Family F238
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2083 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 18 Feb 1685, Lachine, Montréal, , Québec,Canada. | Family F2500
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2084 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 23 Fév. 1857 CHAN31 Oct 2005 | Family F2396
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2085 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 4 novembre 1664 | Family F9528
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2086 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 7 Janv. 1715 | Family F2499
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2087 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 7 Janv. 1715 | Family F2527
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2088 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 7 mars 1731 | Family F11909
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2089 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 8 Jun 1663 | Family F3869
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2090 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Bolongne. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 22 Jan 1307/1308 | Family F3187
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2091 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Bordeaux, France. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 11 May 1152 | Family F3118
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2092 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Bordeaux. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 26 Aug 1200 | Family F3101
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2093 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Boucherville, Montérigie, , Québec,Canada. | Family F6270
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2094 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Burgos. | Family F3110
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2095 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Canterbury, Cathedral. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 08 Sep 1299 | Family F3198
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2096 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Ecoupahag, NB, Canada. | Family F617
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2097 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Fawley, Bucks. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 30 Mar 1231 | Family F3189
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2098 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Kaiserslautern, Germany. | Family F3218
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2099 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married L'Ange Gardien, Montmorency, Quebec. | Family F9262
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2100 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Las Huelgas. | Family F3114
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