Clymer Weir Cox Genealogy » Jeanne l'Emond (± 1622-1689)

Données personnelles Jeanne l'Emond 

  • Elle est née environ 1622.
  • Elle est décédée le 1 janvier 1689.
  • Cette information a été mise à jour pour la dernière fois le 19 janvier 2023.

Famille de Jeanne l'Emond

Elle est mariée avec Jean Lefevre.

Ils se sont mariés


Enfant(s):



Notes par Jeanne l'Emond


JeanneBroucardformerlyL'EmondakaLeman, Le Mont
Bornabout1622inRekkem, Menen, Flandre occidentale[uncertain]
Daughterof [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife ofJean (Lefevre) le Fevre– married about 1633 (to 18 Dec 1666) [location unknown]
DESCENDANTS
Mother ofCatherine (le Fevre) Broucard
Died1 Jan 1689at about age 67inMannheim, Rhineland Palatinate, Holy Roman Empire[uncertain]
Profile managers:Chet Snow[send private message] andHuguenot Migration Project WikiTree[send private message]
Profile last modified8 Dec 2022| Created 14 Sep 2010
This page has been accessed 1,278 times.

Jeanne (L'Emond) Broucard was a Huguenot emigrant.
Join:Huguenot Migration Project
Discuss:HUGUENOT
Biography
Jeanne L'Emond (aka Leman or Le Mont) was born about 1622, if 19 years old when she marriedJean (Lefevre) le Fevreabout 1641. Protestant women generally married between 18 and 22 years old at that time and place.[1]Jean Lefevre was later called a "bourgeois and weaver of this city," indicating a middle-class social standing.
Jean and Jeanne Lefevre are said to have had 7 children. Birth records are missing for their 2 oldest children, indicating they were most-likely born before the family emigrated to Mannheim.[2]
1Jean Lefevre, "Jr.," b: ca. 1642, in Artois or Flanders (uncertain)
2Catherine Lefevre b: ca. 1645, in Artois or Flanders (uncertain)
3Pierre Lefevre b: 15 NOV 1656 in Mannheim, Palatinate
4Jacques Lefevre b: 27 JAN 1659, Mannheim, Palatinate
5Jeanne Lefevre b: 7 OCT 1660 in Mannheim, Palatinate
6Michel Lefevre b: 25 MAR 1663 in Mannheim, Palatinate
7Marie Madeleine Lefevre b: 21 APR 1665 in Mannheim, Electorate of the Palatinate, Germany
As can be seen from the above-cited list and church records in Mannheim, between 1648 and 1652 Jean Lefevre, his wife and their oldest children emigrated from Artois or Flanders to Mannheim, in the Protestant-ruled German Palatinate (Pfalz).
Jean Lefevre, "the older," died in Mannheim, probably during the Plague of the summer of 1666, which killed half the town's population. His widow re-married to Roger ("Royer" or "Rogier") Broucard, b: 1641 in Mouscron, Hainault, Spanish Netherlands (today's Belgium), also a recent Plague widower, on 18 December 1666, at the French/Walloon Church in Mannheim. French persecution of its Reformed Protestant population rose significantly after the accession to the throne by King Louis XIV in 1643, as he was determined that his subjects would be Roman Catholics. The equally-intolerant Spanish ruled Flanders and Hainaut, today part of Belgium.[3]
ROYER BROUCARD, inhabitant of this city, widower of ANNE BERNARD, and JEANNE l'EMOND, widow of JEAN le FEVRE bourgeois, weaver of this city, have been married in this Church the l8th Dec. 1666 by Mr. Molerus (marginal note: "By dispensation").[4]On the same day, Rogier's younger brother, Bourgon Broucard, married Jeanne's eldest daughter, Catherine Lefevre, 18 years old.[5]
Roger "Royer" Broucard, later called a "bourgeois of this city," died in Mannheim in early 1675. His younger brother, Bourgon Broucard, and Jeanne's daughter, Catherine Lefevre, left Mannheim around February 1675 (perhaps at his brother's death). They emigrated first to Amsterdam in the Netherlands, and then sailed to the former Dutch colony of New Netherland (New York), in May 1675 on the Dutch Ship,The Gilded Otter. They later settled in Raritan, New Jersey.[6]
Again, according to the Walloon Church records in Canterbury, England, on 31 July 1675,Jeanne Leman, widow of Roger Brochard,promised to marry Nicholas Lefevre, a widower from "Vemy" [Vimy - a village in Artois]. He was living in Canterbury, England, and they married there on 19 August 1675. He was likely a relative of Jeanne's 1st husband, Jean Lefevre. Nicholas Lefevre died in Canterbury on 26 February 1687, leaving Jeanne as a three-time widow.[7]
Jeanne must have returned to Mannheim after Nicholas' passing because on 1 January 1689 she was cited as Godmother to Jean Gilles Mercier, infant son of Marie-Jeanne Broucard, the only child with her 2nd husband, Roger Broucard.[8]
Sources
1?Note:"Lefevre" has been chosen as the spelling for this family's surname due to Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples (1455-1536), a notable pre-Reformation theologian from that town in Artois in northern France. See:Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples article on Wikipedia. Jean Lefevre was likely related to Jean Lefevre although the exact relationship has yet to be researched. LeFevre or Le Fevre are spelling variations. There is often an accent (è) in French: "Lefèvre".
2?See Note 1. The quotation about Jean Lefevre's social standing is from Records of the French / Walloon Congregation of Mannheim, 1651-1710. Transcribed & translated by Ruth P. Heidgerd for the Huguenot Historical Society, New Paltz, N.Y. in 1978. Cited on:Louis Brocard profile on Geni.com
3?The European Origins of Brougan Broucard and Catherine Le Fevre on Freepages.Rootswebby Perry Streeter; see pg. 15 on the Le Fevre family. Some dates are open to question but the family relationships are sound.
4?http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~streeter/genealogy/brokaw-bragaw.pdf.
5?Same Source. The brothers were sons of Louis Broucard.
6?The Updike and Wiebe Genealogy on RootsWeb: Bourgon Broucard.
7?Note: It is impossible to "prove" that the "Jeanne Leman" mentioned is the same woman as this Jeanne l'Emont from the documents available but as exact spelling was not common at the time, it is highly-probable.
8?The European Origins of Brougan Broucard and Catherine Le Fevre on Freepages.Rootswebby Perry Streeter; see pg. 15 on the Le Fevre family.] He lists these church records but does not always draw the same conclusions as represented on this profile.
•The Updike Wiebe Genealogy on RootsWeb: Jeanne l'Emond, aka Jeanne Le Mont
•The European Origins of Brougan Broucard and Catherine Le Fevre on Freepages.Rootswebby Perry Streeter. Cites many primary & secondary sources about these Huguenot emigrant families, among the founders of New Palz, New York.
Acknowledgments
•WikiTree profile L'Emond-1 was created on 14 September 2010 through the import of 124-DeCoursey.ged. Restored 12 April 2019 byChet Snow.
•WikiTree profile L'Emond-2 was created byCarolyn Lynettthrough the import of fisher family.ged on Apr 3, 2016.
•WikiTree profile L' Emond-17 was created byCarol (Crowley) Lanein January 2018. Merged byChet Snow, Leader of WikiTree's Huguenot Migration Project, 19 April 2019.

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Jeanne l'Emond

Jeanne l'Emond
± 1622-1689



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Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.

Événements historiques

  • En l'an 1689: Source: Wikipedia
    • 6 janvier » le roi Jacques II d'Angleterre (Jacques VII d'Écosse) est officiellement déposé. La couronne échoit conjointement à son gendre Guillaume III d'Orange et à sa fille Marie II.
    • 17 janvier » commencement des travaux de la promenade du Peyrou à Montpellier (Hérault).
    • 23 février » Guillaume III d'Orange et Marie II deviennent roi et reine d'Angleterre.
    • 11 avril » Guillaume III d'Angleterre est couronné conjointement avec Marie II.
    • 5 août » massacre de Lachine, où 97 Canadiens sont tués par des Iroquois (à Lachine).
    • 21 août » victoire orangiste à la bataille de Dunkeld lors des rébellions jacobites.


Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia


Sur le nom de famille L'Emond

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La publication Clymer Weir Cox Genealogy a été préparée par .contacter l'auteur
Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Donnagene, "Clymer Weir Cox Genealogy", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/clymer-weir-cox-genealogy/I222785.php : consultée 16 mai 2024), "Jeanne l'Emond (± 1622-1689)".