Family Tree Welborn » Abraham Martin dit l'Ecossais (± 1589-1664)

Données personnelles Abraham Martin dit l'Ecossais 

Les sources 1, 2, 3

Famille de Abraham Martin dit l'Ecossais

Il est marié avec Marguerite-Catherine Langlois.


Marriage
Date: 1610
Place: Champagne, Seine-et-Marne, Ile-De-France, France
Marriage
Date: 1616
Place: Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France
Marriage
Date: 24 Oct 1621
Place: Québec, Quebec, Canada

Ils se sont mariés en l'an 1613.Source 2


Enfant(s):

  1. Marie Anne Martin  ± 1635-± 1699 
  2. Eustache Martin  1621-± 1667
  3. Marguerite Martin  1624-1679
  4. Pierre Charles MARTIN  ± 1630-± 1648
  5. Adrien Martin  1638-1667
  6. Anne Martin  1645-1717
  7. Jean Martin dit l'Ecossais  ± 1616-± 1619


Notes par Abraham Martin dit l'Ecossais



Abraham Martin dit l'Écossais
French: Maitre Abraham Martin, dit l'écossais
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa November 27, 1589
Saint-Rémy, Normandie, France
Death:
September 08, 1664 (70-78)
Qu√©bec, Qu√©bec, Canada (Il immigre en 1619 a Quebec, il a eu un proc√®s pour viol en 1649 Abraham Martin aurait r√©sid√© sur la rue de l'√âcosse à Dieppe d'o√π son surnom de l'√âcossais. Un fils Jean, baptis√© à Dieppe (St-Jacques) le 23-09-1616 )
Place of Burial:
Cimetière de Notre-Dame, Québec, Québec, Canada
Immediate Family:
Husband of Marguerite Langlois

Father of Jean Martin; Eustache Martin (Martin, dit Lescossois); Marguerite Martin; Hélène Martin dite lမÉcossais; Pierre Martin; Marie Cloutier (Martin); Adrien Jean Martin (Martin, dit Lescossois); Madeleine Forget (Martin dite LaEcossoise); Barbe Martin (Martin dit Lescossois); Anne Martin L'Éscossois and Rev. Charles-Amador Martin

https://www.geni.com/people/Abraham-Martin/6000000000397138666

Abraham Martin dit l'Écossais is your 10th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Emma Corine Welborn
his mother ·Üí Charles Everett Bombard
her father ·Üí Thomas Joseph {Charles Edward} Bombard
his father ·Üí Mathilde Domithilde
his mother ·Üí Jean Charles Claude Cheney
her father ·Üí Marie-Rose Rosalie Belanger
his mother ᆒ Augustin Bélanger
her father ᆒ Jean-François Bélanger, II
his father ·Üí Marie-Rose Cloutier
his mother ᆒ Marie Martin dit L'Écossais
her mother ᆒ Abraham Martin dit l'Écossais
her father

https://www.geni.com/people/Abraham-Martin-dit-l-Écossais/6000000000397138666

*** Old ****
Abraham Martin dit l'Écossais
French: Maitre Abraham Martin, dit l'écossais
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa November 27, 1589
Saint-Rémy, Normandie, France
Death:
September 08, 1664 (70-78)
Quebec, Quebec, Canada (He immigrated in 1619 to Quebec, he had a rape trial in 1649 Abraham Martin would have resided on the rue de l'Écosse in Dieppe, hence his nickname of the Scottish. A son Jean, baptized in Dieppe (St-Jacques) on 23-09-1616)
Place of Burial:
Cimetière de Notre-Dame, Québec, Québec, Canada
Immediate Family:
Husband of Marie Anglaise Langlois, Algonquin and Marguerite Langlois

Father of Jean Martin; Eustache Martin; Marguerite Martin; Hélène Martin l'Escossois; Pierre Martin; Marie Martin dit L'Écossais; Adrien Jean Martin; Marie-Madeleine Martin; Barbe Martin; Anne Martin L'Éscossois and Rev. Charles-Amador Martin
*** Old ****

Infos:
He immigrated in 1619 in Quebec, he had a trial for rape in 1649 Abraham Martin would have resided on the rue de l'Écosse in Dieppe hence his nickname of the Scottish. A son Jean, baptized in Dieppe (St-Jacques) on 23-09-1616 (godfather and godmother: Jehan Filie, Col

One states according to this site Fichier Origine this line should end here - but its all in French - which I can not read or translate properly - also there are other peoples profile entries that are connected above this person which has been merged in and that is tampering with someone else's work and research - thus it will be up to the curator(s) who have locked /MP'd the profiles to decide on if should be disconnected - JEB

It is VERY HIGHLY un-likely he is the son of the following two men who have been linked as his father as their brith dates and his indicate that if anything they would of been brothers
Galeran Martin dit L'Écossais Birth: 1578 Montpellier, Hérault, Languedoc-Roussillon, France
Jean Martin L'Écossais Birth: circa 1563 Languedoc-Roussillon, Montpellier, Hérault, Languedoc-Roussillon-Midi-Pyrénées, France who married Isabelle Martin L'Écossais (née Coté Lacoste)
all the profiles within this branch were brought down in a gedcom SEPERATELY as different un-connected branches. and with careful study of this tangled mess this is the BEST connections of theses men.

Other trees list a Antoine Martin dit Montpellier born 28 Aug 1654 died 6 Apr 1715 married Jeanne Cadieu & Marie-Thérèse Bonet connected to all also - best connection by date of birth is as son of Cergues Martin and Jeannette Zyx

Notes
Location info: Normandie, France (birth), Québec (marriage,death)
Naissance :vers 1589 Saint-Rémy, Normandie, France (PRDH).
Pionnier de la Nouvelle-France. Arrive au Québec en 1619 ou 1620. Retourne en France en 1626 après la prise de Québec par les frères Kirke. Revient en Nouvelle-France en 1633 avec sa femme Marguerite Langlois et son fils Charles.
Cette source indique que Abraham serait revenu au Qu√©bec en 1632 à bord de ¬´La Salamandre et La Lionne¬ª accompagn√© de sa femme et de ses enfants Eustache,Marguerite, et H√©l√®ne. (à investiguer)
Il a eu un procès pour viol en 1649.
Sources: Fichier Origine
Biographie Biography
Arrived in Quebec in 1617. masterpilot some records say married 1620 in France, some say from Dieppe. Abraham Martin arrived in Quebec in the summer of 1617--probably making the voyage in the same ship as Louis HÉBERT. His family accompanied him: his wife Marguerite LANGLOIS [translator's note: Jette[1] gives their date of marriage c 1620 'in France'], her sister Francoise and Francoise's husband Pierre DESPORTES. This couple would have a daughter Helene, who would become the goddaughter of Quebec's founder. This same Helene would marry, as a second husband, Medard Chouart des Groseillers, the colorful explorer, fur trader and co-founder of the Hudson's Bay Company. Sources: "Les Plaines d'Abraham, le culte de l'idéal" de Jacques Mathieu et Eugen Kedl; le dictionnaire biographique du Canada, tome 1; Les Cahiers des Dix, no 42; la Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique français, no XVII.

Text publié dans le Soleil du dimanche le 4 mai 1997 et ecrit part Louis Guy Lemieux. Voir Internet
http://www.lesoleil.com [Note tried this link it appears to be a page full of ads]
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By Yolande St-Arneault
Échos génealogiques
Société de Généalogie des Laurentides
Volume XVII, #1, spring 2001
Translated by Lorelei Maison Rockwell, May 2002 (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)-Rockwell.com
Text Box: This insignificant historical person nevertheless gave his name to the Plains of Abraham and Abraham's Coast. He was one of the trivial actors in the history of New France. An obscure character. An antihero. Paradoxically he gave his name in perpetuity to two properties that are part of Champlain's city.

On 15 February 1649 the little colony was in shock. Abraham Martin, age 60, a companion of Champlain and the head of a large and respected family was thrown in prison. The accusation: he had forfeited the honor of a strapping young girl of 16 [translator's note: statutory rape?]. Certainly it would be said that this old pig Abraham had debauched a fine 'young thing.' Three months later his wife gave him his ninth, and last, child.

Abraham Martin arrived in Quebec in the summer of 1617--probably making the voyage in the same ship as Louis HÉBERT. His family accompanied him: his wife Marguerite LANGLOIS [translator's note: Jette[1] gives their date of marriage c 1620 'in France'], her sister Francoise and Francoise's husband Pierre DESPORTES. This couple would have a daughter Helene, who would become the goddaughter of Quebec's founder. This same Helene would marry, as a second husband, Medard Chouart des Groseillers, the colorful explorer, fur trader and co-founder of the Hudson's Bay Company.

From his arrival onwards our Abraham MARTIN was in no hurry to disappear into nameless obscurity in the tiny world of the first colony.

Years later historians found his trail in the local, popular culture where his name was inscribed--first in the topography of Quebec under the French regime and then in notarial records making reference to Abraham's Coast.

A street named Abraham appears in a 1734 Quebec City map. Then, later, we find his name preserved in reports of the celebrated historic battles of 1759 and 1760. There were accounts signed by English officers and published in London as well as in the journal of New France's Chevalier de Levi.

The name Abraham MARTIN also appears in the controversial will Champlain signed in November 1635, two months before his death. Canadian history was young then and still in the making. The original will was not discovered until 324 years later, in August 1959 to be exact, by the historian and archivist Olga Jurgens, and published in 1963. In his will, Champlain "gives to Abraham and his wife 600 livres with the charge of using it to clear land in this country of New France." The founder also gave 600 livres to Marguerite, daughter of Abraham, "to support her in marrying a man of this country--New France--and no other."

The original will stated clearly that if Champlain should leave little or nothing in goods and Quebec properties to his widow, he wanted her to have the largest part of his inheritance in France.

In 1863 the historian, J. B. A. Ferland began to follow the track of the great curate Thomas Maguire. M. Maguire 'suggested that a part of the Plains had belonged to an individual by the name of Abraham."

In consulting civil registers for the parish of Notre Dame de Quebec during the time of the French regime, Ferland found only one person with the first name Abraham: Abraham Martin, called l'Ecossais [the Scot], who was shown as a royal pilot. He was our man.

In 1635 Abraham Martin accepted, from the Company of New France, a land grant of 12 arpents in Quebec. Another parcel of 20 arpents was added 10 years later. The combined land was well-situated in the upper town, but north of the present Grand Allée, on what was at that time called St-Genevieve Hill. For this reason Abraham Martin's land should not be confused with the Plains today.

What may also be seen from this little history is that should a man take his animals down to the Charles River to drink, in taking the road of descent he would come to the Coast of Abraham.

We discover in a notarial act dated 16 October 1675 the name Charles-Amador Martin, only surviving son of Abraham. Priest and co-inheritor, Charles-Amador cedes to the religious order of Ursulines 32 arpents of land situated in a place called Claire-Fontaine in exchange for the sum of 1200 livres, a small fortune at the time.

In the decisive battles of 1759 and 1760 French and English soldiers played a prominent role in insuring that the topographical name Abraham was engraved in the historical record.

The Chevalier de Levi mentioned in his journal on 19 July 1759 that the English "have four ships passing above the town and in consequence will be able to send dispatches via the Heights of Abraham and as far as Cap Rouge."

On the same day the troops of Wolfe and Montcalm clashed, 13 September 1759, a Captain in an English regiment, John Knox, wrote in his journal, later published under the title The Siege of Quebec, that once landed at the foot of the cliff, they did not stop, "till we comes to the Plains of Abraham."

Another English officer, John Montresor, wrote a book published in London and titled The General Battle of the Heights of Abraham.

If the land of Abraham Martin was not contiguous with the present Plains, the battle of 1759, on the other hand, really and truly was fought on the Plains of Abraham and on the ancient property of Abraham Martin.

The great historic battle raged all over the upper town. The French and English troops had taken position on the cliff as far as the Sainte-Foy Road and Parliamentary Hill--today approximately up to Rue Belvedere.

Reckoning from the beginning of the English regime, local cartography considerably expanded the dimensions of the Coast of Abraham and the Plains. Abraham's hillside covered the continuation west of St. Genevieve's Hill up to Rue Suéte which leads to St-Foye at Lorette.

Regarding the Plains of Abraham, more often called the "Heights of Abraham," the topographical name usually appeared on maps designating a large part of the upper town outside the ramparts. It was not until 1879 that city maps delineated exactly as it is known today.

In 1908 the federal government created Battlefield Park. But for the people of Quebec it will always be the Plains of Abraham or simply the Plains. An affectionate name. A popular and gratuitous tribute to the earliest setters of the country.

Each time has its own history. After the Conquest, the British Empire could not abandon the location of its victory to anonymity. The place name had to be in accord with the importance of the event.

Historians Jacques Mathieu and Alain Beaulieu advance an interesting theory in their monumental history of the Plains published in 1993 by Septentrion. For them, the 1759 conqueror preserved the popular name believing that it referred to the Biblical patriarch. They write: For people of the Protestant faith, strongly imbued with Biblical tradition, the designation "Abraham" makes use of a major symbolic power. The conquerors could not fail to see themselves in the image of the great prophet. It was in this way, through a series of misunderstandings, that a colorless colonist had his name immortalized. History has kept the secret!

Sources: "Les Plaines d'Abraham, le culte de l'idéal" de Jacques Mathieu et Eugen Kedl; le dictionnaire biographique du Canada, tome 1; Les Cahiers des Dix, no 42; la Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique français, no XVII.

Text publié dans le Soleil du dimanche le 4 mai 1997 et ecrit part Louis Guy Lemieux. Voir Internet
http://www.lesoleil.com [Note tried this link it appears to be a page full of ads]

Abraham Martin is Yolande St-Arneault's ancestor through 3 of his daughters: Anne, Marie, and Marguerite [more available here].Text Box: Charles-Amador Martin was the second Canadian priest. He was born at Quebec where he was baptized 7 March 1648 by Father LeJeune. He was the 9th child of Abraham Martin and Marguerite Langlois and he had as his godfather: Charles-Amador de St-Etienne, sieur de la Tour, who was famous for his bravery and loyalty to France during the wars in Acadia. In 1672 he built the first stone chapel at Beauport to replace the old wooden one. He continued to serve this parish until 1677, when he went to Sainte-Famille. On the erection of the Chapter House at Quebec, he became canon. He was named parish priest of Chateau-Richer in 1685. On 19 September 1697 he resigned the honor of canon and on the following 18 October he was named parish priest of Notre-Dame de Foye. He remained there until his death 19 June 1711 at the age of 63. A manuscript titled "On the devotion at Sainte-Famille by Mother Superior M-Andre Regnart-Duplessis de Sainte-Helene," we find that M. Martin was an expert chanter and that he composed the chant for the mass and divine service at Ste-Famille still used today. Taken from RÉPERTOIRE GÉNÉRAL du CLERGÉ CANADIEN, Cyprien Tanguay

She says:
I report the results of some of my research to flesh out the story of Abraham Martin. [Translator's note: Abraham Martin is also my ancestor through his daughter Marguerite].
The family of Abraham MARTIN, dit L'Ecossais
His origin is unknown. He was buried 08/09/1664 in Quebec, age 75; arrived Quebec 1619, returned to France after the capture of Quebec by Kirke 24/07/1629, and returned to Quebec in 1633 or 1634, master pilot. [MSGCF (129): 162-164, T-27, DBC I 506-507, J.J.]
Married about 1620, France

The children of Zacharie Cloutier and Sainte Dupont
¬âˆ‘ .... ¬âˆ‘ Jean Baptized in Mortagne au Perche on the 13th of May in 1620 he married Marie Martin the daughter of Abraham Martin also known as the 'Scotchman" on the 21st of January 1648. Abraham Martin's wife was Marguerite Langlois. { An interesting historical note is that the battle between the English forces ( Wolfe ) and the French army (Montcalm) for control of Quebec, was fought on the former farmland of Abraham Martin and the site is now known as "The Plains of Abraham". Jean and Marguerite had 14 children ten of whom married. Like his grandfather he was a carpenter. Jean died in 1690 and Marguerite in 1699. Both are buried at Chateau Richer on the shores of the St. Lawrence river.
Abrahm Martin "L'Ecossais", the father-in-law of Jean Cloutier was a remarkable man in his own right, A contemporary of Zachary I, he was also a river boat pilot on the St. Lawrence.
In the archives of the 'Dames Ursulines" are the titles of the two farms he owned. The historical status of the Abraham farms did not take place until long after his death. It was on the 12th of September 1759 that Wolfe scaled the ramparts to the farms of Abrahm Martin and met Montcalm on the battlefield that later became known as the 'Plains of Abraham".
¬âˆ‘ ....
A Summary of The Cloutier-Clutchey Genealogy

Name: Abraham Martin
Sex: M
Birth: 1569
Death: 8 SEP 1644 in Quebec
Father: Jean Martin Mother: Isabelle Ctti
Marriage 1 Marguerite Langlois b: ABT. 1600 Married: ABT. 1620 in France
Children
Anne Martin b: 1614
Eustache Martin b: OCT 1621
Marguerite Martin b: 4 JAN 1623/24
Helene Martin b: 21 JUN 1627
Marie Martin b: 10 APR 1635
Adrien Martin b: 22 NOV 1638
Madeleine Martin b: 1640 in Quebec
Barbe Martin b: 4 JAN 1642/43
Anne Martin b: 23 MAR 1644/45 in Quebec.Quebec
Charles Amador Martin b: 7 MAR 1647/48

=================
SOURCES
Biography of Abraham Martin - Ontario Genealogical Society
MARTIN, ABRAHAM (dit လlမÉcossaisဝ or လMaître Abrahamဝ)
Abraham Martin By Yolande St-Arneault Échos génealogiques Société de Généalogie des Laurentides Volume XVII, #1, spring 2001
Abraham MARTIN s also known as Abraham MARTIN dit L'ECOSSAIS and also page ABRAHAM MARTIN dit l'Écossais
Abraham Martin dit l'Écossais
Subject: Re: [METIS-L Abraham MARTIN (was Nadeau)]
Abraham Martin

http://www.timothyjkent.com/phantomcontents.htm

per https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Martin-2179 :
Abraham Martin, the Scotsman (1589 - 1664).
In France, he would have resided on the Rue de l'Écosse in Dieppe, hence his nickname of the Scotsman. Can be the son of Isabelle Côté and Jean Martin.
Birth: Around 1589, in Normandy, France.
Marriage: Around 1615, He married Marguerite Langlois daughter of Jeanne Millet and Guillaume Langlois in an undetermined place in France, presumably in Dieppe where Jean was baptized in 1616 [1]
Arrival in New France: Abraham Martin, the Scotsman immigrated to Quebec, New France in 1619 with his wife. He declared himself master pilot of the St. Lawrence River from 1619 to 1629.
After the capture of Quebec by the Kirke brothers, they returned to France on July 24, 1629, and then returned to Quebec in 1633. From 1629 to 1632 he declared himself a pilot of the King on the St. Lawrence River in Canada; It would be the source of our Canadian navy.
Their son Eustace would be the first "Canadian" boy born in New France; It is the first baptism that is inscribed on the register of the parish of Notre-Dame de Quebec, dated October 21st, 1621. They were however to die in the same year.
In 1629, Hélène Martin, Marguerite Martin, Marguerite Langlois and Abraham Martin, the Scots resident in Quebec City.
In 1635, Abraham Martin, the Scotsman, obtained land on the northern slope of the Cape of Diamonds; The plateau that dominates it will be called Plains of Abraham as a consequence of its name and site of the future battle of the Plains of Abraham of 1760, between Montcalm and Wolfe.
Adrien Duchesne gave his land to Abraham Martin, said the Scotsman on August 15, 1646, in the presence of Jacques de Launay, Robert Giffart Lord of Beauport, Guillaume Tronquet, Jean Guitet, Sieur François Bissot of the River and Olivier Le Tardif de Honnefleur (at).
In 1649, Abraham Martin, the Scotsman, was prosecuted for rape.
On the 6th of September, 1664, he tested before Sieur Pierre Duquet de la Chenaye.
Death: On September 8, 1664, aged 75, Abraham Martin died in Quebec and was buried there on the same day at Notre-Dame parish, Canada. The act of burial indicates former inhabitant of this country. [2]
The inventory of the goods of Abraham Martin, the Scotsman is made the 7 of October of 1664.
Contrary to what has been written: Tanguay - Volume 1, p. 140, 415: FALSE - Through the Registers - p.17, 25: FALSE - The First Colonist of Lévis - p.150 FALSE. - he is not the father of Anne Martin.
List of known children of Marguerite Langlois and Abraham Martin:
Eustache Martin (1621 - 1621)
Marguerite Martin (1624 - 1679)
Hélène Martin (1627 - 1651)
Marie Martin (1635 - 1699)
Adrien Jean Martin says the Scotsman (1638 -)
Madeleine Martin (1640 - 1688)
Barbe Martin called the Scotsman (1643 - 1660)
Anne Martin (1645 - 1717)
Charles-Amador Martin says the Scotsman (1648 - 1711)

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Les sources

  1. Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2012;
  2. Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2004;
  3. GenealogieOnline

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La publication Family Tree Welborn a été préparée par .contacter l'auteur
Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I1077.php : consultée 12 mai 2024), "Abraham Martin dit l'Ecossais (± 1589-1664)".