Filion or Fillon or Philion or Phillion or Feulion or Feuillon or Feuillant
Michel Filion, Antoine Filion, Jeanne and Pierre Filion Filion
reached Quebec, New France in May and June 1665
Parents: André Filion of Le Mans, France and Gabrielle Senlet of Senber Le Mans France. Children: Michel Filion and Antoine Filion
Parents:Jeanne Filion, parents Filion Antoine and Anne Anneville by. St-Germain l'Auxerrois, v. Paris, Île-de-France. Children: Jeanne and Pierre Filion Filion
St-Germain l'Auxerrois,
Michel Filion
Michel Filion was born around 1633 in Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois, France. He married Marguerite Aubert daughter of Anne Fauconnier and François Auber 26 September 1661 in Québec, Capitale-Nationale, Quebec, Canada. Michel Filion was appointed clerk of the Seneschal in 1662.
Michel Filion's chief clerk. Michel Filion royal notary is appointed by the Sovereign Council September 28, 1663 in Quebec City. Michel Fillion was appointed chief clerk in 1664 10. Étienne-Jean and Mathurin Pezart Lelièvre are committed Michel Filion in 1666 in Quebec City.
Pezart Étienne-Jean, Mathurin Lelièvre, Elijah Voyzin, Urban Douesmont Marguerite Aubert and Michel Filion resident in Québec in 1666. Urban Douesmont is hired hand of Michel Filion of 1666 to 1667 in Quebec City and Beauport coast, Our Lady of the Angels or other places, Quebec.
Elijah Voyzin committed Michel Filion from 1666 to 1667 in Quebec City and coasts Beauport, Notre-Dame-des-Anges or other places, Québec, Quebec. He married Anne D'Anneville in 1667 5. Michel Filion royal notary in 1667 to the coast of Beauport, Notre-Dame-des-Anges or other places, Quebec.
Quebec Beauport attacked byPhipps
PeterSICAR is domestic in 1667 to Michel Fillion Quebec coast of Beauport, Notre-Dame-des-Anges or other places.
Michel Fillion has eleven cattle and fifty acres of land value in 1667. Michel Filion Crown attorney to the board of 29 February 1668 to 31 January 1669. He fell "in spirit dementia" between 1671 and 1674. He married in 1677.someone
Thomas Langloisis home of Michel Filion in 1681 to the lordship of Beauport, Quebec. Antoinette and Jean Fillion are servants of Michel Filion in 1681 to the lordship of Beauport.
Antoinette Fillion, Jean Filion, Thomas Langlois, Marguerite Aubert and Michel Fillion resident to the lordship of Beauport in 1681.
Michel Filion has a rifle, a pistol, ten horned beasts and twenty-five acres of land value in 1681. It is named Beauport Seneschal judge on May 20, 1686. He died on June 6, 1689. He was buried June 7, 1689 in Beauport.
Antoine Filion
Antoine Filion, relatives André Filion and Gabrielle Sense, by. St-Germain l'Auxerrois, v. Paris, Île-de-France; arrived with his wife and two children Peter and Jane, his sister Gabrielle and her stepmother Marguerite Roy, Daughters of the King of 1665, his brother Michel, m 1661 Quebec Marguerite Aubert, preceded in the country; 30 years rec. 67 in Quebec; 27-07-1665 Quebec City; master coppersmith; 16-11-1669 front of Québec; 1656 m to Paris with Anne Anneville; family established in Québec; 4 children. (DGFQ: 430)
JeanneFilion
JeanneFilion, parents Filion Antoine and Anne Anneville b 07-04-1665 St-Jean-du-Perrot v. La Rochelle (Charente-Maritime); arrived with his parents, his sister Jeanne, her aunt Gabrielle Anneville and his grandmother Marguerite Roy, Daughters of the King of 1665, his uncle Michel Filion preceded the country; 10 years rec. 67. (DGFQ: 420)
Pierre Filion
Pierre Fillion parents Filion Antoine and Anne Anneville, by. St-Germain l'Auxerrois, v. Paris, Île-de-France; arrived with his parents, his sister Jeanne, her aunt Gabrielle Anneville and his grandmother Marguerite Roy, Daughters of the King of 1665, his uncle Michel Fillion preceded the country; 10 years rec. 67. (DGFQ: 420)
Ships came to New France in May 1665
number 782 Old Ship Dimeon of Dunkirk France, Taking 200 tons, Master Simon Doridod, Owner: Pierre Gaigneur, La Rochelle From 19 April 1665 and arrived in Quebec on June 19 1665, returned to France August 3, 1665
Or
number 781 Vessel VesselThe Cat Holland, Taking 200 to 250 tons, Master Charles Babin, Owner: AI. Cornelis Kadt, Shipowner Sir Gaigneur little or La Rochelle Departure 27 April 1665 left for Dieppe, France, out of Dieppe May 10th 1665 and arrives June 18, 1665, returned to France August 3, 1665
Party in La Rochelle on April 27 The vessel belonging to Alexandre Petit, made a stop in Dieppe, the owner was Albert Cornelis Kadt. The "ship of Mr. Petit" anchor in Quebec City on June 18 On board there are 155 men with 67 against and committed following the general matching of the East India Company. On August 3, three ships leave together, including this one, the old Simeon, Dunkirk and Marie Thérèse. Delafosse writes that Pierre Gaigneur weapon the ship in 1665.
Les Filles du Roy
Yves Landry mentions that the first shipment of King's Daughters in 1665 arrived in Quebec before July 1. We do not know what these fifteen Girls ship of the King of 1665, listed by Landry, and those who accompanied them, embarked
GabrielleAnneville parish of Saint-Eustache, City of Paris, Île-de-France; arrived with his mother MargueriteRoy,daughter of the King of 1665, his sister Anne Anneville, his brother Antoine Filion, his nephew Pierre Filion and his niece Jeanne Filion, Quebec this marriage contract July 2, 1665 (notary Duquet ), she and her family have embarked in either the "ship of Mr. Small," or in old Simeon, from Dunkirk.
The Carignan-Salières and pacification of the Iroquois
To quell the Iroquois Louis XIV sent an elite regiment, the Carignan-Salt. These 1,200 men arrived on six ships Old Simeon, the
BRESE, the Golden Eagle, Peace, San Sebastian and Justice; seventh, the Garden of Holland carried the provisions. A viceroy, the Prouville Alexandre Marquis de Tracy, accompanies them. Delegate to the possessions of all America's mission is to drive the Dutch Guyana and restore peace in the Caribbean. In
New France in conjunction with the new governor, Daniel de Rémy de Courcelle, he first fortify Richelieu, the "River of the Iroquois." Then after three of the five Iroquois nations are coming to ask for peace Quebec Governor on an expedition in January 1666 against the other two nations. Without Algonquin guides soldiers go astray and end up near Schenectady, a Dutch institution.
A sudden thaw forces them to turn back without attacking the Iroquois villages. 14 septembre1666 Tracy and Governor left Quebec with powerful workforce. On October 16 they reach the first villages of the Mohawks whose terrified population flees into the woods. At the end of the same day the fifth village, the greater is achieved. It houses 800 to 900 families behind a high fence 20 feet.
Tracy
Tracy did everything burn, as well as huge corn supplies. According to Nicolas Perrot traveler in its report: 400 Indians died of starvation afterwards. After the viceroy has made sing a "Te Deum", he took possession of the territory. The following year (1667) the Mohawks and Quebec Onneyouts come to sign a peace that will last 17 years.
Second horse contingent
July 16, 1665 to Quebec twelve horses are unloaded from the ship Maria Theresa. The "Savages" were surprised by the "moose France, so flexible and treatable human wills." Coming from the stables of Louis XIV they go down, it is believed generally, Arabian horses crossed with native horses of Normandy and Brittany. They swell the group of horses arrived in 1663; two other horses quota will be imported in 1667 and 1669.
Daughters of the King at Quebec
Jean Talon wrote April 22, 1665 in a letter to Colbert that 100 girls are going to sail for New France, 90 from Dieppe and 10 of La
Rochelle. Yves Landry has identified six Daughters of the King 1665 from Aunis, Saintonge and Poitou. They are undoubtedly embedded in La Rochelle in Marie Therese, commanded by Captain Chicken. Then on October 2, according to the Jesuit Relations "Normandy ship" or the St. John the Baptist, as happens with 82 girls and 50 women including a charity house in Paris ... 30 item Working men ", captained by PierreFillye
Jean Talon wrote April 22, 1665 in a letter to Colbert that 100 girls are going to sail for New France, 90 from Dieppe and 10 of La
Rochelle. Yves Landry has identified six Daughters of the King 1665 from Aunis, Saintonge and Poitou. They are undoubtedly embedded in La Rochelle in Marie Therese, commanded by Captain Chicken. Then on October 2, according to the Jesuit Relations "Normandy ship" or the St. John the Baptist, as happens with 82 girls and 50 women including a charity house in Paris ... 30 item Working men ", captained by PierreFillye
FilionFamily Association
There are two ancestors F (Ph) he (l) ion in Quebec. The first, Michel Feulion born about 1630 in Saint-Pierre-le-Vieux in the diocese of Maillezais in the former province of Poitou, in the present department of Vendée. We know the names of his parents, Rene and Mathurine Micou, and that of a sister, Frances, born in 1640.
The name of this ancestor was not Filion Fillon, a name that, in the dialect that spoke Michel Poitevin , is pronounced something like "Feuillon" or "Feuillant," a spelling which is found in ancient documents concerning him. Michel Feulion came to Canada as a "voluntary": he left France voluntarily without commitment. Michel is a man of business: it is a joiner-carpenter who can be assured of a stable job in this country where everything is brand new building.
Probably shipped to the port of La Rochelle, Michel Feulion seems to happen here in the early 1660. It is reported in the Trois-Rivières region in June 1663 and is confirmed in Cap-de-la-Madeleine, Quebec 1 May 1664.
It married Oct. 19, 1668, a girl named Louise Bercier The native of the parish of Auvergne (now Avrillé), an orphan, a daughter of the king came to Canada with his uncle and aunt, Louis and Anne Bercier Cochet. The couple had five children Magdalene, Michel, Antoine and Marie-Louise Beard. Michel dies shortly after the birth of her last child in 1698.
The second ancestor Antoine Fillion is originally from the city of Paris as his parents and grandparents elsewhere. His grandfather Edmond Fillon (not Fillion) and his father Andrew, were exercising the trade of master tanner baudroyeur, craftsman specialized in leather finishing. Antoine was born around 1637 in Paris exercised the trade of master coppersmith. He married once, to 1656, to a girl whose name is not known. The couple had at least one son, who prénommera Pierre. Probably following the death of his first wife, he married again towards 1664 with a named Anne Anneville, from the parish of St-Eustache in Paris.
Anthony, his wife Anne Anneville, accompanied by her sister and Gabrielle his mother Marguerite Leroy, the King's daughters, embarked at La Rochelle April 27, 1665 aboard the Cat of Holland, a merchant ship of 250 tons. They arrived in Quebec on June 18, 1665. Anthony had two children in New France, Jean-Baptiste, called July 17, 1666 and which will not survive three months, and John, born 31 October 1667, which will cause the numerous descendants of Antoine in America. The presence of Anthony is reported to us last time in August 1668 and the confirmation of his death is lifted us in 1669. Anne Anneville remarried in November 1669 with Jean Charron said La Ferriere, a former soldier in the company of La Search and who shall thereafter the taillandier business.
Antoine had at least one brother named Michel Fillion, born around 1632, will be the first of the family to settle in New France (Beauport). He will know a great career, usher in 1658, tax attorney in Beauport in 1658, Clerk of the Quebec Sénéchaussée en1662, royal notary from September 23, 1662, clerk Sovereign Council of New France September 24, 1664. Michel married September 26, 1661 Marguerite Aubert, widow of Martin Grove. He remained childless and died June 6, 1689 in Beauport.
Http://www.genealogie.org/ancetres/fillion.htm
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