Marie Francoise Barrillot

Female 1684 - Deceased


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Marie Francoise Barrillot was born About 1684, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France (daughter of Nicholas Barillot and Martine Hébert); died Deceased; was buried , Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Marie married Alexandre Lord 1702, Pisquit, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada. Alexandre (son of Julien Lord dit Lamontagne and Anne Charlotte Girouard) was born About 1676, Port Royal,Acadie, Nouvelle - Écosse, Canada; was christened 1676, Port Royal,Acadie, Nouvelle - Écosse, Canada; died 5 Oct 1740, Port Royal, Acadie, Nouvelle - Écosse, Canada; was buried 6 Oct 1740, St Jean Baptiste, Annapolis, Port Royal, Acadie, Nouvelle - Écosse, Canada. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Jeanne Lord was born 26 Aug 1707, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was christened 21 Sep 1707, Saint Jean Baptiste Catholic Church, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 22 Feb 1763, L'île Cap de Sable, Acadie, Nouvelle - Écosse, Canada.
    2. Elisabeth Lord was born 23 Jul 1719, Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 24 Jul 1719, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 1 Jun 1796, Rauzan, Bordeaux, Gironde, France.
    3. Marie Anne Laure Lord dit Lamontagne
    4. Marie-Madeleine Lord was born 24 Dec 1703, Port-Royal, , Acadie, Nouvelle-France; was christened 24 Dec 1703, Port-Royal, , Acadie, Nouvelle-France; died Apr 1763, Restigouche, Bonaventure, Québec, Canada.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Nicholas Barillot was born 1 Jan 1646, Saint-Servan, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France; was christened 1646, Dijon, Côte-d'Or, Bourgogne, France; died 25 Jan 1725, Pisiquit, Acadia, Nova Scotia, New France; was buried , Notre Dame de l'Assomption Pisiguit, Acadie, Nouvelle - Écosse, Canada.

    Notes:

    The Unbelievable Odyssey of the Barriaults (by James Carten, 1999, from the Acadian-Cajun Archives)Edited for this site by A. Côté 3 April 2008. The name Barriault has given place, since the arrival of the ancestor, Nicolas, in 1671, to many different [ortho]graphies: Barillaud, Barrios, Barillot, Bariault, Barriaux, Barilleaux, and even Bériau. All these variants return back to one forefather, Nicolas Barillot, born in France ca.1642 and married to Martine Hébert, daughter of Étienne Hébert and Marie Gaudet. Firstly settled in Port-Royal, he becomes, a few years later, one of the pioneers of Pisiguit, today Windsor, N.S. At the 1714 census, Nicolas Barillot is said to be a farmer and a landclearer, in the new parish of l'Assomption, at Pisiguit. A year before, the Treaty of Utrecht gave the Acadian Peninsula, as well as Newfoundland and the Hudson's Bay to England.[see note] The fact that Port-Royal, renamed Annapolis-Royal, became the capital of English Acadia, and since which is found strong English insurgence, surely incited Nicolas to settle further to the east, next to Pisiguit.
    Five years later, 1719, begins the construction of the fortress Louisbourg, at Cape Breton. Already many Acadian families are leaving to settle at the Ile-St. Jean (Prince Edward Island) and at Cape Breton, where they are assured to be in the presence of French troops. Nicolas, though, prefers to remain at Pisiguit, where he became, forcebly, a subject of the new King of England, Georges I, who had just been crowned.
    At the 1714 census, Nicolas Barillot has already ten children, of which four are sons; Antoine, b. 1697, Nicolas, b. 1703, Jacques, b. 1705, and Pierre, b. 1707. He had another son, Jean, the older, b. ca. 1685, but seems to be deceased at the moment of the census. He also had five daughters; Françoise, b. 1683, Marie, b. 1684, Catherine, b. 1687, Marguerite, b. 1689, and Madeleine, b. 1696. The descendants of his sons Antoine and Nicolas will settle in the region of St. Charles-de-Bellechasse, after the deportation. Those of Pierre will be principally in the Baie des Chaleurs in New Brunswick. Born at Pisiguit in 1707, Pierre Barillot, son of the forefather Nicolas, married in 1729 Véronique Girouard, daughter of Pierre Girouard and Marie Doiron, Véronique, who was born at St. Charles-des-Mines, was 17. Pierre was 22. They had baptized eight children at the church of l'Assomption-de-Pisiguit. Then, in 1750, doubting very much the eminent attack of the English, Pierre Barillot judged it prudent to transport his family to the Ile-St. Jean, remaining under the French administration. The family set up at the Rivière-du-Moulin-à-Scie where two other children were born. In August 1755 the storm broke loose in all of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. The Acadians are arrested, imprisoned, dispossessed then deported into the ports of New England: Boston, New London, New York, Philadelphia. They arrive by flows, sick and extenuated, to Maryland, to the Carolinas, Virginia and Georgia. The Iles Royale and St. Jean remained French, but in 1758, a second wave of deportation arose. The inhabitants are loaded aboard ships bound for England, where the prisons of Liverpool, London and Southampton awaited them. For Pierre Barillot and his wife Véronique, it turned out to be a tragic voyage, one that they would not see the end [of]. Both died while crossing the Atlantic. Their son, Olivier Barillot, then 19, will be imprisoned in England. After the Treaty of Paris in 1763, he returne[d] to France. His brother, Jean-Baptiste, forefather of the Barilleaux of Louisiana, took refuge in Cherbourg, then at St. Malo, along with his sisters Agathe, Thérèse and Euphrosine. Olivier hurried to rejoin them. They settled in the parish of Pleudihan, in Brittany, where they were still yet in 1772. Their uncle, Nicolas Barillot, brother of Pierre, had just died before the 1755 Deportation, at Port-Toulouse, Ile Madame, Cap-Breton. Their uncle Antoine Barillot took refuge in Québec. He was at St. Antoine-de-Bellechasse, in 1758. Finally their uncle Jacques Barillot had less luck. He was deported to England in 1758. He was at La Rochelle, in France, in 1761/62. A few years later, we will find him in French Guyana in South America. But, getting back to Olivier Barillot, son of Pierre, refugee at Pleudihan, Brittany, with his brother, Jean-Baptiste and his sisters. It is in the Breton village that he will marry, ca. 1763, an unfortunate companion of exile, Anastasie Boudrot, daughter of Jean Boudrot and of Agathe Thibodeau. Two years later, after the birth of a daughter, Anne-Marie, in 1765, Anastasie Boudrot will pass away. Three years later, the (10th of May 1768) 10-05-1768, this time at St. Servan-de-St. Malo, Olivier Barillot marries, a second time, another exiled Acadian, Élisabeth Landry, daughter of Pierre Landry and of Anne Thériot, of the Rivière-aux-Canards. A first child, Charles-Olivier Barillot, will be born to this second union, the (22nd of March 1771) 22-03-1771. Another son, Jean-Baptiste, will see the light of day two years later. In the spring of 1774, Olivier, his wife and their three children decide to re-locate. They are among thirty Acadians who were aboard two goëlettes (schooners) of Charles Robin and his brothers from Jersey, who recruited fishermen and workers for their fishing settlements and commerce in Gaspé. Jim Carten[Source]
    NOTE
    The Treaty of Utretcht did and could not "give" any land to England, since the French never "owned" the land, nor did the Original people ever cede, convey, or sell any of it to the French. [return to paragraph]
    Premier Ancêtre Nicolas Barillot-Barriault : nait en 1646 dans le Poitou au sud de la Normandie, il est venu du Berry pour s'installer en 1671 à Port-royal, Nouvelle-Écosse (Acadie), aujourd'hui Annapolis Royal. Vers 1680 il s'installe èa Pisiguit, Nouvelle-Écosse, aujourd'hui Windsor, Nova Scotia ou ils élevèrent leur 10 enfants; 6 filles et 4 garçons. en 1686 ils apparaissent dans le recensement. Autre information sur Acestry.com; Nicolas Barillot dit Bayol - An Acadian Mystery. In some geneology sites Nicolas Barillot (dit Bayol) is said to be the son of Nicolas Bayol and Barbe Bajolet and the brother of Rose Bayol. You might get a hit for Nicolas Barillot dit Bayol. Bayol is a variation of Bajolet. For some reason tha variations are extended to include Barillot but the Barillot name was already well established in France at the time. ( Nicolas Bayol b. 1605). Marie-Barbe Bajolet (b. 1608) was the daughter of one Antoine Bajolet or Bailolet (Bayol) who worked as a muleteer for Marie de Medici. Some sites list Nicholas Bayol as being married to Barbe Bajolet but the latter was married three times and in all cases to men of some power and wealth. Her marriages were well documented and so was the birth of all of her children. The Isaac Pesseley (her first husband) family was connected to the Baiolet - Bajolet. family. Barbe Bajolet's godparents were Pesseleys. All we know of Nicholas Bayol is that he sailed to Acadia on the St-Jehan with Marie-Barbe Bajolet's first husband Isaac Pesseley, in 1636. It is more likely that Nicholas Bayol was also a Baiolet -Bajolet, possibly a brother or a relative of Marie-Barbe Bajolet but certainly not her husband. We know that Bayol returned to France to collect his 9 year old daughter Rose in 1638. (Marie-Barbe Bayol, Rose Bayon). Marie-Barbe Bajolet married Isaac Pesseley in 1629, and was pregnant with her first child with Pesseley the very year of Rose Bayon's birth. In any event Bayol returned to Acadia with Rose and we never hear from him again. It is a certainty that both Bayol and Pesseley's widow were both in Port Royal in the year prior to Nicholas Barriault's Birth in France. Pesseley was killed in 1645. In 1646, Bajolet returned to France and married Martin Lefebvre. (1647). (Lefebvre died in 1648) The only remote possibility of Bajolet and Bayol being Barriault's mother is if she had been impregated by Bayol in Acadia just prior to her return to France but that is speculation. Nicholas Barillot dit Bayol a bastard son of Nicholas Bayol and Barbe Bajolet? Then why the name Barillot? Was the unwanted child raised by a Barillot family in France? Nicolas Bayol and Isaac Pesseley knew each other having sailed together as crew on the St-Jehan. Pesseley's wife Bajolet had not sailed with them on that voyage. Bayol would have known the Pesseley Bajolet couple quite well. It is more likely, once again, that Nicholas Bayol, given the similarity in name was more likely a relative of the Bajolets. Marie Barbe Bajolet married a third time in 1654. With her third husband and the children of her two preceding marriages, Barbe Bajolet returned to Acadia. Her family settled on a fief which was conceded to them by Charles de la Tour. A few years later, widowed again, thrice-widowed Barbe asked a vessel from Boston to give passage for her and her family to Port-Royal. It would be soon after that her daughter Marie Pesseley would marry Jean Pitre. There is no mention of a connection to Rose Bayol who we know to be Nicholas Bayol's daughter. So any connection to Nicholas becomes more and more distant. DNA testing has hinted that Rose Bayol was from Afro-Asian extraction. Was Nicholas Bayol black?
    Was he, in fact, a slave or a servant who simply carried the Bayol name as many other slaves carried the names of the families they served? It would explain the lack of interest on Marie-Barbe Bajolet's part in Rose Bayol who also lived in Port Royal. Nicholas Barillot was born in 1646 and arrived at Port Royal on the Oranger in 1671. Nicholas Bayol was most likely already dead by then. His daughter Rose Bayol had been married to Pierre Comeau since 1649. Marie-Barbe Bajolet, a widow for the third time was living alone in Port Royal. Of her 8 children only 2 were in Acadia and 6 were in France. How does a man like Barillot end up on the


    Nicholas married Martine Hébert Abt 1682, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada. Martine (daughter of Étienne Hébert and Marie Ann Gaudet) was born About 1665, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; died About 1708, Pisiguit, Acadia, New France. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Martine Hébert was born About 1665, Port Royal, Acadia, New France (daughter of Étienne Hébert and Marie Ann Gaudet); died About 1708, Pisiguit, Acadia, New France.
    Children:
    1. 1. Marie Francoise Barrillot was born About 1684, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died Deceased; was buried , Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    2. Marguerite Barillot was born About 1689, Pisiguit, Acadia, New France; died After September 1752, Rocky Point, Queens, Prince Edward Island, Canada; was buried , Unknown.
    3. Marie Catherine Barillot was born About 1687, Pisiguit, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; died About 1718, Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    4. Antoine Barillot was born 1697, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; died 22 Jan 1758, Saint-Charles-de-Bellechasse, Bellechasse, Quebec, Canada; was buried 23 Jan 1758, Saint-Charles-de-Bellechasse, Bellechasse, Quebec, Canada.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Étienne Hébert was born About 1625, 1625 (son of ??? Hebert and ??? Hebert); died 1670, Port Royal, Nova Scotia, British Colonial America; was buried 1670, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    Linked with family on Find a Grave

    Etienne Hebert
    BIRTH 1623
    Touraine, Departement d'Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France
    DEATH 1670 (aged 46?47)
    Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada
    BURIAL
    Garrison Graveyard
    Annapolis Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada
    MEMORIAL ID 59836542 · View Source

    Etienne was born about 1623 in Balesmes (Touraine) France and died in Port-Royal, NS, Canada. He married Marie Gaudet in 1649 in Port-Royal, NS, Canada.

    ***********************************************

    If Antoine was his father, Etienne must have been born around 1630 as Antoine was born around 1614.

    Étienne Hebert came from France with his wife Marie Gaudet, according to nine depositions: one from his grandson Jean Hébert (Doc. inéd., Vol. III, p. 11), one from Pierre Trahan, husband of his granddaughter Madeleine Comeau (ibid., p. 8), one from Pierre and Madeleine?s son Pierre Trahan (ibid., pp. 110-111) and one from their nephews Sylvestre and Simon Trahan (ibid., p. 30), two from husbands of Étienne?s great-granddaughters (ibid., Vol. II, p. 182; Vol. III, p. 90), one from a great-great-grandson (ibid., Vol. III, pp. 93-94), and two from husbands of his great-great-granddaughters (ibid., pp. 45, 92-93). Seven of these depositions name his wife as Marie Gaudet; only those of the two Pierre Trahans, father and son, do not.White

    "The Héberts in Acadia go back to two ancestors: Antoine and Étienne Hebert, whose birthdate is unknown because he died before thr 1671 census and who married about 1650 Marie Gaudet. the dispensation for the third degree of kindred granted upon the marriage of Antoine's grandson Jean Hebert to Étienne's granddaughter Marguerite Leprince, and another for the fourth degree granted upon the marriage of Étienne's great-grandson Pierre Forest to Antoine's great-granddaughter Marguerite Hebert proved that Antoine and Étienne were brothers." (P. Gallant)

    "A worthy article that appeared in our periodical (Memoires, vol. VI, p. 393) thought it possible to establish--at least it claimed--that the Hebert brothers were the sons of Jacques Hebert and Marie Juneau of La Haye-Descartes in Touraine.

    "Here then in brief is its argument: an immigrant named Jacques Hebert, son of Jacques and Marie Juneau, from La Haye in Touraine, parish of Balesne, made a contract at Québec ... to marry Francoise Chevalier. This contract was witnessed by Louis Hebert's daughter Marie-Guillemette Hebert.

    "Now, before settling at Québec this same Louis Hebert stayed for a while at Port-Royal, where the two Acadia Hebert brothers would live thirty years later.

    "Thus the immigrant Jacques Hebert in Québec was the brother of the Acadian Héberts.

    "One must confess that the connection between these premises is tenuous. and even more tenuous than one might think.

    "The immigrant Jacques Hebert was not an Hebert at all, but an Habert, as a correct reading of his marriage contract proves. and if Guillemette Hebert, widow of Guillaume Couillard, appeared on this occasion, it was because the intended bride was her servant. the Acadian Héberts with their different family name have nothing in common with Jacques Habert." (A. Godbout)
    rjteague-2019

    Étienne married Marie Ann Gaudet 29 May 1649, Port Royal,Kings,Nova Scotia,Canada. Marie (daughter of Jean Gaudet and Marie Daussy) was born 1626, Martaize, Departement de la Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France; died 30 Jul 1710, Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 30 Jul 1710, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  2. 7.  Marie Ann Gaudet was born 1626, Martaize, Departement de la Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France (daughter of Jean Gaudet and Marie Daussy); died 30 Jul 1710, Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 30 Jul 1710, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    Children:
    1. 3. Martine Hébert was born About 1665, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; died About 1708, Pisiguit, Acadia, New France.
    2. Marie Hébert was born 1651, Port Royal, Annapolis, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened Abt 1651, St. Jean-Baptiste, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia; died 16 Jul 1678, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was buried 1678, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, CA.
    3. Françoise Hébert was born 2 Jan 1660, Port Royal, kings,nova scotia,; died 17 Feb 1713, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was buried 17 Feb 1713, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, CA.
    4. Antoine Hébert was born About 1670, Centrelea, Acadia, Canada; died 30 Jul 1753, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 31 Jul 1753, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    5. Michel Hébert was born 6 Jun 1666, Port Royal, kings,nova scotia,canada; died 19 Jan 1735, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; was buried 20 Jan 1735, St Charles de mines, Kings, Nova Scotia.
    6. Marguerite Hébert was born 1652, Port Royal, Arcadia, New France; was christened Abt 1652, Acadie, Canada; died After 30 January 1715, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    7. Catherine Hébert was born 24 Feb 1662, Port Royal,kings,nova scotia,canada; died 3 Aug 1727, Louisburg, Ile-St. Jean, Nova Scotia,Canada; was buried 1727, Louisbourg, Louisbourg, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    8. Jean Hébert was born 1658, Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 12 Jan 1744, Acadia, New France; was buried , Edmundston, Madawaska, New Brunswick, Canada.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  ??? Hebert

    ??? married ??? Hebert [Group Sheet]


  2. 13.  ??? Hebert
    Children:
    1. Antoine Hébert was born About 1621, France; died 1690, Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried , Annapolis Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    2. 6. Étienne Hébert was born About 1625, 1625; died 1670, Port Royal, Nova Scotia, British Colonial America; was buried 1670, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

  3. 14.  Jean Gaudet was born 30 Jan 1575, Martaizé, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France; was christened 31 Jan 1575, Martaizé, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France; died 29 Apr 1672, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was buried 1672, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    Jean Gaudet was born around 1575.[4] About 1622, he married a woman whose name is unknown. The couple had 3 children born in France: [4]

    Marie-Francoise, b. 1623
    Denis, b. 1625
    Marie, b. 1633
    Around 1652, Jean married a second time, to Nicole Colleson. Around 1653 they had a son Jean.[4]

    By 1671 Jean Gaudet, age 96, is the oldest inhabitant of Port-Royal. He was living with his second wife Nicole, age 64, and their son Jean. His three oldest children were married.[7] census shows cattle 6, sheep 3.

    Jean died before 1678.

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/154421500/jean-gaudet

    Jean married Marie Daussy 1598, La, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France. Marie was born 1597; died 1625. [Group Sheet]


  4. 15.  Marie Daussy was born 1597; died 1625.
    Children:
    1. Marie Francoise Gaudet was born 23 Sep 1623, Martaize, Loudun, Vienne, France Christening; was christened 24 Sep 1623, Martaizé, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France; died 25 Oct 1698, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was buried 1698, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    2. 7. Marie Ann Gaudet was born 1626, Martaize, Departement de la Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France; died 30 Jul 1710, Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 30 Jul 1710, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    3. Denis Gaudet was born 1625, Martaizé, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France; was christened , St. Charles, Mines; died 11 Oct 1709, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was buried 11 Oct 1709, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.