Matches 201 to 250 of 582
# | Notes | Linked to |
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201 | Death, burial: 1729 06 June 09 (ANOM) - Saint-Paul (La Reunion) Civil status B-M-S 1729 page 15 | RICQUEBOURG, Marie Anne (I1113)
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202 | Descendant from noble Dauphin | DE MANIQUET DU FAYET, Dame Marie Thérèse (I500335)
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203 | Died at 10 a.m. in his home. | HÉLIE, Louis Mathieu (I135)
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204 | Died at her son’s house (Arnaud ADAM de VILLIERS) | BELLIER DE BEAUMONT, Louise Michelle Augustine (I500717)
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205 | Died before his daughter married | DIAS, ** Antonio (I506285)
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206 | Died of TB | MENEZES, Francisco Goncalves (I509177)
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207 | Died young | DE MENESES, Luisa (I505977)
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208 | Diplomat in London, Paris and Vienna | PERRENOT DE GRANVELLE, Comte Thomas (I320)
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209 | Discrepancy with sister marriage, parents and gparents. Found this record under sisters marriage with the same names. Likely the names are correct for sebastio/isabel and their parents but record not available in the index? | GONçALVES, Antonio (I702)
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210 | Document translated by Denise De Freitas D'Antona on FB group | GONçALVES, Maria (I589)
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211 | Document translated by Denise De Freitas D'Antona on FB group | RODRIGUES, Domingos (I588)
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212 | Document translated by Margarida Reis and Gabrielle Soares - FB group | RODRIGUES DE MENESES, Francisco (I693)
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213 | Document translated by Margarida Reis and Gabrielle Soares - FB group | CATANHO, Ângela (I694)
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214 | Edmond Albius (1829 – 9 August 1880)was born into slavery and became an important figure in the cultivation of vanilla. At the age of 12, he invented a technique for pollinating vanilla orchids quickly and profitably. Albius' technique revolutionized the cultivation of vanilla and made it possible to profitably grow vanilla beans away from their native Mexico. Albius was born in St. Suzanne, Réunion. His mother, a slave, died during his birth. The colonist keeping Edmond in slavery was Féréol Bellier Beaumont. He was a gift from his sister Elvire. | BELLIER, Pierre ferreol edme (I501174)
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215 | Edward was a decorated soldier and he was instrumental in building the Great Ocean Road. | MORLEY, Edward (I504210)
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216 | Ehepartner: Edward III | |
217 | Embarked in the West Indies on a slave ship, he is captured by the pirate Georges Booth, whose exhilarating life he embraces. Booth dies prematurely in Zanzibar, Boyer then goes to the service of the pirate John Bowen (Jean Bouin). He is certainly on the same ship as Robert TARBY said Robin (another ancestor). Boyer was certainly on board the pirate ship the Speaking Trumpet when it ran aground during a gale on January 7, 1702 on the islet of Rochers (Saint-Thomas reef, Mauritius, the wreck was found by Patrick Lizé in 1981) and sent back on a rowboat on March 24, 1702 to Madagascar (via Réunion on April 2, 1702); but John Bowen last decides to become honest and settles in Reunion in 1704, he pirate for some time with Nathaniel North (companion of John Bowen), then sailor of the pirate Thomas White (who would be the grandfather of Queen Betty) on the Île Sainte-Marie in Madagascar, and would have died in Saint-Paul Réunion in 1719), with which he sacked in Bourbon on December 18, 1706. Abjured the Reformed religion in 1701 during a previous trip to Bourbon. Previously filibuster (1711). He represents Sainte-Suzanne at the Provincial Council of Réunion (in 1717), he lives in Butor. According to Desforges-Boucher: "No other profession than that of sailor. Drunkard to the last point, little attached to the Roman religion, without education, dissolute in his words and in his manners. He has four blacks and one negress. inclination to work and instead thought of planting his land of sugar cane to make frangorin in order to have room to get drunk. He has no cash, having dispelled by his continual debauchery the fruit of his forbearance. " (Bénard-Monge, p.87) Children: Jacques 1708-1776, Marie-Jeanne 1710-1795, Anne 1714-1749, Joseph 1716-1777, DENIS 1717-1806, Mathurin 1719-1786 https://gw.geneanet.org/lamendour?lang=de&n=bouyer&oc=0&p=jacques | BOUYER, Jacques (I1303)
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218 | Employment in USA: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manomet_Mills?fbclid=IwAR2dmzWobOzt54_3TYvOnLe0HdkSuXOsrdiN7ZV_n53ioPAX5umbu8B4IrE | GONZALVES DE MENESES / MONIZ, Antonio (I503257)
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219 | Evidence of the Nobility of Auvergne - Ribier (1907) p. 360 | DE ROCHEMAURE, Pierre (I501104)
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220 | Evidence of the Nobility of Auvergne - Ribier (1907) p. 360 | DE LA ROCHE, Beatrix (I501105)
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221 | Father name incorrect on marriage certificate. Fathers name is correct on baptism as Dionísio (not Domingos) Gonçalves Baeta & Maria da Silva | DE JESUS DA SILVA, Isabel (I506131)
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222 | Father unknown | SARDINHA, Maria (I1144)
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223 | Father: Manuel Sardinha Fernandes Mother: Maria de jesus Paternal - Jose Sardinha Duarte and Ana Pereira Maternal - Januario Rodrigues Fogareu and Maria de jesus | FERNANDES, Maria (I507997)
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224 | Father: Manuel Sardinha Fernandes Mother: Maria de jesus Paternal - Jose Sardinha Duarte and Ana Pereira Maternal - Januario Rodrigues Fogareu and Maria de jesus | DE JESUS, Julia (I507996)
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225 | Father: Manuel Sardinha Fernandes Mother: Maria de jesus Paternal - Jose Sardinha Duarte and Ana Pereira Maternal - Januario Rodrigues Fogareu and Maria de jesus | SARDINHA DUARTE / FERNANDES, Manuel (I506730)
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226 | Father: Manuel Sardinha Fernandes Mother: Maria de jesus Paternal - Jose Sardinha Duarte and Ana Pereira Maternal - Januario Rodrigues Fogareu and Maria de jesus | FERNANDES, Manuel (I507995)
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227 | Fathers surname is identified as Goncalves Coveiro | GONCALVES MENESES, Manuel (I1338)
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228 | FB group translation: "Manuel, age 22, single laborer, parishioner of this parish, legitimate son of..." | Manuel (I244)
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229 | FB Margarida Reis - assisted with generation gap | SARDINHA ROSA, Manuel (I609)
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230 | FB Margarida Reis - assisted with generation gap | DA ASCENSãO, Maria (I608)
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231 | Fernandes surname listed on passport stored offline | DE JESUS, Maria (I506731)
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232 | For his affair with Maria Jans Visser, wife of Willem Willemsz van Devenster, see my notes. While the Council of Policy was dealing with the problem of the husband and wife, sometime in the middle of 1676, Ocker Cornelisz was confined on Robben Island, presumably being released after the departure of the couple to Batavia during September 1676. It was ordered by the Council of policy (C9, 18 August 1676) that on his return from Robben Island, Ocker Cornelisse was to be obliged to support properly the two children he had fathered in his adultery with the wife of Willem Willemsz, and in 1677 we find, in the muster roll of that year, Hendrik and Ocker Corneliss with two children, unnamed, but presumably these two. His inventory of 1705 states that he left 12 children, majors and minors, but does not name them. http://www.ballfamilyrecords.co.uk/olivier/I001.html | VISSER, Maria (I508129)
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233 | For his affair with Maria Jans Visser, wife of Willem Willemsz van Devenster, see my notes. While the Council of Policy was dealing with the problem of the husband and wife, sometime in the middle of 1676, Ocker Cornelisz was confined on Robben Island, presumably being released after the departure of the couple to Batavia during September 1676. It was ordered by the Council of policy (C9, 18 August 1676) that on his return from Robben Island, Ocker Cornelisse was to be obliged to support properly the two children he had fathered in his adultery with the wife of Willem Willemsz, and in 1677 we find, in the muster roll of that year, Hendrik and Ocker Corneliss with two children, unnamed, but presumably these two. His inventory of 1705 states that he left 12 children, majors and minors, but does not name them. http://www.ballfamilyrecords.co.uk/olivier/I001.html | OLIVIER, Ockert Corneliszoon (I508128)
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234 | Found possible baptism record that indicates father as Joao Sardinha which matches Manuels chosen surname. Joao's fathers name is Duarte Sardinha as per the marriage record of his parents. This brings more validity that this is the correct baptism record | SARDINHA DUARTE, Manuel (I1128)
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235 | François Bernard Chenard de la Giraudais was an 18th century French explorer, naval officer and privateer. He toured the world in command of the L'Étoile flute, accompanied by Louis-Antoine de Bougainville. The 1760 Expedition and the Battle of Ristigouche in the spring of 1760, the French government entrusted him with a mission of assistance and supplies for New France, then at war with England. Despite his young age (33), La Giraudais has extensive experience which earned him the rank of lieutenant of frigate. He left Bordeaux on April 10, 1760 at the head of a small squadron of five requisitioned merchant vessels (the Beneficent, the Sun, the Dawn, the Loyalty and the Marquis of Malauze) and some twenty small ships loaded with ammunition and provisions 1.2. The flagship, the frigate Machault is armed with 28 guns and 150 crew members. François Chenard de la Giraudais knows this ship well for having already escorted several convoys to New France in 1759. He has secret instructions in the event that the English prevent him from entering the Saint- Laurent; he must, if necessary, notify Governor Vaudreuil and go to Louisiana or to Santo Domingo to unload his vessels. The day after departure, April 11, 1760, the English who blockaded the port chased the convoy which was to disperse. But, weighed down by their goods, the Aurora and the Sun are boarded by the enemy. Two weeks later, while the convoy crossed off the Azores, the Fidélité sank. On May 15, there are only three ships left when the diminished fleet anchors in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. There, La Giraudais learns that the British arrived first and destroyed Jean Vauquelin's flotilla outside Quebec. He then decides to take refuge in Chaleur Bay. On May 18, he dropped anchor in the Ristigouche estuary. Local natives, allies of the French, promise to fight the English alongside La Giraudais. Despite the support of local nations, La Giraudais can do nothing against the five British warships led by Captain John Byron, who arrived from Louisbourg. And, after several days of battle, La Giraudais must resign itself to scuttling its buildings, on the morning of July 8, having them evacuated. So that the enemy does not take food, he blows up the Machault and the Beneficent. Only the Marquis de Malauze who had prisoners on board was spared. Once on the ground, the French established a small fort and garrisoned there. Chenard de la Giraudais cocks the remaining schooner which he calls the Petit Marquis de Malauze and, on August 10, he leaves for France. Returning to France, and after leaving the army, La Giraudais made several scientific exploration trips. Commander of the sloop Le Sphinx during the trip to the Falklands by Louis Antoine de Bougainville in 1763-1764, he was captain of the ship l'Étoile during the trip around the world of Bougainville. He died aboard L'Espérance on February 27, 1776. | CHENARD LAGIRAUDAIS, François Jean (I83)
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236 | François Mussard (1718-1784), often designated by his only patronym, was one of the most famous slave hunters active on the island of Reunion in the course of the 18th century when it was still a French colony of the Indian Ocean known as Bourbon Island. Explorer of the Hauts, he left his name to several remarkable geographical entities, including the Mussard cave. In addition, he appears in several works of fiction, notably in Eugène Dayot's novel entitled Bourbon picturesque, which puts him in conflict with several brown chefs. | MUSSARD, François (I505594)
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237 | From parents marriage: Date: 1883 Local: Paróquia do Estreito da Calheta HUSBAND: Manuel Rodrigues de Araújo Dad: Mom: WOMAN: Luísa de Jesus Dad: Mom: Book: 4481 Leaf: 2 v.º-3 Note: https://arquivo-abm.madeira.gov.pt/viewer?id=176432&FileID=316849 and then https://abm.madeira.gov.pt/pesquisa/casamento/index.php?id=462052 and then https://arquivo-abm.madeira.gov.pt/viewer?id=2019&FileID=314175 Translated to Manuel Francisco de Meneses and Maria Rodrigues and then https://abm.madeira.gov.pt/pesquisa/casamento/index.php?id=463406 https://arquivo-abm.madeira.gov.pt/viewer?id=41696&FileID=312875 Translated to Jose Fransisco de Meneses and Isabel Maria - Match on tree https://abm.madeira.gov.pt/pesquisa/casamento/index.php?id=463692 | GONCALVES MENESES LOURENCO, Maria (I508840)
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238 | Gabriël Roussouw farmed Drieversvallei near the Bergrivier | ROSSOUW, Gabriel (I507895)
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239 | Gae Nuneson FB group: Jose Sardinha Duarte was 42 years old, Domingas Rodrigues da Conceicao was 33 years old, not previously married, The witnesses testimonies were from Pedro Fernandes, married farmer (probably the father of Domingas) and Manuel Sardinha Duarte, married farmer (probably Jose's brother since Jose's parents were deceased). | SARDINHA DUARTE, Jose (I508061)
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240 | Godparents were Antonio Sardinha Duarte and Maria Rosa de menezes (my great grandparents on grans side) | GONCALVES DE MENESES, Paixao (I509175)
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241 | Governor | PORCHER DES SOUCHES, Abraham Pierre (I504978)
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242 | Governor of Besançon between 1505 and 1533 | Family F472
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243 | Grandparents listed but need to have record translated | DE FREITAS, Jacinta (I508020)
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244 | He catholically married Maria Rosa, born in Prazeres, Calheta, on April 29, 1901, in the Parish Church of Prazeres, Calheta, reg. No. 4. He died on July 13, 1960, in Prazeres, Calheta, reg. No. 112. | FERNANDES, Manuel (I507995)
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245 | He died Jul 2 1896 at 6:00 in the evening at the age of 40 of dysentery. He was married to Rosa de Jesus and the son of Luis Pereira Rosa and Antonia de Jesus . It states he did not leave a will . Translated by B.F Costa on FB group | PEREIRA ROSA, Antonio (I1762)
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246 | He died on April, 4th, 1897 at 8pm in Lombo da Ribeira Funda, Parrish of Estreito da Calheta. He was only 2 years old and his parents were José Pereira Luís e Maria Luísa. Translated by L. Paulino on FB group | PEREIRA LUIS, Francisco (I507005)
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247 | He joined the National Scouts on the 03/01/1902. he was a Joiner. He fought with the British against the Boers. He was considered a traitor (possible reason as to why Suanna was told she was born in germany?) They burned the farms and forces families into concentration camps. Susanna was 5 at this time. He would have done it because they gave bigger rations to the wives and children of joiners. It caused a lot of animosity which long outlasted the war and Susanna Wilhelmina would either have been ashamed of it, or simply not wanted it to be known. | BRITZ, Petrus Wilhelemus Benjamin (I507601)
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248 | He was 41. She was 26 at the time of marriage | DE JESUS, Maria (I506731)
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249 | He was 41. She was 26 at the time of marriage | SARDINHA DUARTE / FERNANDES, Manuel (I506730)
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250 | He was a gentleman of Gaston, Duke of Orléans, until his death in 1660, of the Duchess of Longueville. He followed in Poland Madame Marie Casimire de La Grange d'Arquiem (1640-1716), who became La Grande Maréchale Sobieski, Queen of Poland. | DE FEDERBE, Jean (I313)
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