DCB/DBC Mobile beta
+

Results per Page: Go
Modify search on Advanced Search page

Type of Result

      Region of Birth

          Region of Activities

              Occupations and Other Identifiers

                  61 to 80 (of 713)
                  1...2  3  4  5  6  ...36
                   
                  Mémoires, XI (1960), 21–23), Claude de La Tour usually signed his name “de Saint-Étienne,” but two notarial acts call him “Turgis, dit Saint-Étienne, écuyer, sieur de La Tour” and “Claude
                  bringing together the inhabitants, who could better help one another, and of placing them near the priest, the surgeon, and the notary
                   
                  . The king induced Champlain to undertake such a voyage. After Vignau had reaffirmed his statement before two notaries, Champlain set off with him
                   
                  ADHÉMAR DE SAINT-MARTIN, ANTOINE (baptized Anthony), royal notary, clerk of court, process-server, and prison
                   
                  Charles Aubert de La Chesnaye. Official correspondence and notarial acts show that he was involved in the fur trade from 1699 up to the year of his death, 1709, when he was sentenced to pay
                   
                  AMEAU, dit Saint-Séverin, SÉVERIN, soldier, royal notary, clerk of court, court officer
                   
                  routine problems. His inconsistency, as usual, made his work more difficult than necessary. He had always believed in using Acadians as rent-gatherers and notaries, and as far back as 1727 had appointed
                  military governor of Picardy. Charles’ godfather was Charles Parmentier, the Duc’s maitre d’hôtel. Mention is also made, in a notarial deed of 1695, of a second son, Louis, who was residing in
                   
                  Bégon*, seigneurial judge, and royal notary; b. c
                   
                  BARRAT, CLAUDE, clerk of court and notary at Placentia (Plaisance), Newfoundland; b. c. 1658 at Troyes; d. after 1711
                   
                  Ancienne Lorette with Mother Bourgeoys* for this purpose. Philéas Gagnon has noted that for want of a notary in his region, Abbé Basset
                   
                  AJQ, Contrat de mariage de Claude de Beauharnois Chevalier de Beaumont, capitaine de frégate, avec Mademoiselle Renée Hardouineau (before Masson and Soullard, notaries at La Rochelle, 11 May
                   
                  , legal practitioner, seigneurial attorney, and notary; b. c. 1640 in France; buried 1 Dec. 1729 at Quebec. Hilaire Bernard de La
                   
                  BIGOT, FRANÇOIS, seigneurial attorney, royal notary, court officer, son of François Bigot, dit Lamothe
                  , drawn up by notary Guillaume Tronquet on 12 Sept. 1638, specifies that Boucher and his family made the crossing on a ship commanded by
                   
                  Anne’s dowry. Marie de l’Incarnation gave him eight years to complete his payments. According to the terms of the contract drawn up by the notary Guillaume
                   
                  BOURDON, JACQUES, process-server, clerk of court, and notary; baptized 5 June 1645 in the church of Saint-Godard at Rouen
                   
                  background and character. In 1731 he described him to the minister as well-born, of a respected Parisian family, and having a brother who was a notary in Paris. In addition, he was “. . . intelligent
                   
                  CABAZIÉ, PIERRE, court officer, jail-keeper, acting king’s attorney and judge, clerk in the court registry, and notary; b. c
                  near. On 25 May the notary Louis Chambalon was summoned to the dying man’s bedside to draw up his last will
                  61 to 80 (of 713)
                  1...2  3  4  5  6  ...36