The Teissier de la Tour Family
by Various Sources
"In relation to his Translation, it was made by the orders of Mr. Barthelemi, First Counselor in Pondicherry. Having a great number of interpreters for him, he had them translate some Indian works with all possible accuracy: but the wars of India & the ruin of Pondicherry resulted in the loss of all that he had gathered on these objects: and only the last translation of Zozur, of which only one complete copy remains, between the hands of M. Teissier de la Tour nephew of M. leConsr. Barthelemy. It's certain the one that we made the copy that we have in the Library of His Majesty, and which no doubt had not had time to complete when M. de Modave embarked to return to Europe."
I have not been able to gather any information on Tessier -- or Teissier -- de la Tour. Louis Barthelemy is much better known; although his career in India runs parallel to that of Porcher des Oulches, of the two he is the more prominent one and holds the highest offices. His name appears repeatedly in the official documents of the French Company. He was born at Montpellier, circa 1695, came to India in 1729, and stayed there until his death at Pondicherry, on 29 July 1760. He served at Mahe, was a member of the council at Chandernagore, and was called to Pondicherry in 1742. His duties at Pondicherry were twice interrupted in later years: in 1748 he was appointed governor of Madras, and in 1753-54 he preceded Porcher as commander of Karikal. He rose to the rank of "second du Conseil Superieur," and in the short period in 1755, between the departure of Godeheu and the arrival of de Leyrit, Barthelemy's name appears first on all official documents. It should perhaps be mentioned, first, that on 22 February 1751 Barthelemy represented the father of the bride at the wedding of Jacques Law -- Dupleix was the witness for the bridegroom --, and second, that on 8 August 1758 he was godfather of Jacques Louis Law. These two entries seem to suggest that he was indeed close to the Law family, whose interpreter has been given credit for the translation of the EzV (see p. 28). It should also be pointed out that Barthelemy died more than half a year after Maudave -- and the EzV -- reached Lorient on 2 February 1760.
-- The Ezourvedam Manuscripts, Excerpt from Ezourvedam: A French Veda of the Eighteenth Century, Edited with an Introduction by Ludo Rocher
Monday, [28th July 1738, or] 16th Adi of Kalayukti. — The St. Geran was got in readiness this evening, to proceed to Karikal. On board were M. Aubin, the captain of the vessel, M. de la Tour the commander of the troops, M. Roussel the Chief Major, Lieutenant Coquelin, and a party of 100 soldiers. M. Delarche and M. St. Gille — the latter being a half caste — also embarked to perform the duties of accountants at Karikal. A party of bricklayers, carpenters, and sawyers — sixty or seventy in number — was shipped in the evening, together with a supply of bricks, lime, and building tools of various kinds, such as spades and saws. The ship got under weigh, and the sails were set, but the breeze dying away, she was again brought to an anchor.
The Diary of Ananda Ranga Pillai, translated from the Tamil by Order of the Government of Madras, edited by Sir J. Frederick Price, KCSI., Late of the Indian Civil Service, Assisted by K. Rangachari, B.A., Superintendent of Records, Government Secretariat, Fort St. George, Volume 1, 1904
That the crowning of the decorated pot symbolizes a "recapitulation" is also suggested by a smallpox healing rite witnessed in 1709 by the French missionary, Jean-Jacques Tessier de Queralay, in Pondichery. Apparently this ritual was performed to placate Mariamma, the smallpox goddess who, as we heard in chapter 7, had her head chopped off by her son and reconnected to the body of an Untouchable woman. This is what Tessier observed:
"Carrying on her head a vase filled with water and margosa leaves, and holding in her right hand some leaves of that tree and a rattan cane, a
p. 205 next
-- Religion Against the Self: An Ethnography of Tamil Rituals, by Isabelle Nabokov
The Actors
The Accused
Nayiniyappa: Chief commercial broker to the Compagnie des Indes in Pondichéry, 1708–1716
Nayiniyappa’s Family and Associates
Guruvappa: Nayiniyappa’s eldest son
The Widow Guruvappa: Guruvappa’s wife, Nayiniyappa’s daughter-in-law
Tiruvangadan: A merchant of Madras, and Nayiniyappa’s business associate and brother-in-law
Ramanada: Nayiniyappa’s business associate.
Ananda Ranga Pillai: Nayiniyappa’s nephew, Tiruvangadan’s son, and chief commercial broker to the Compagnie des Indes, 1748–1761.
French Trader-Administrators
Guillaume André Hébert: Governor of Pondichéry 1708–1713; Général de la nation, 1715–1718
Hébert fils: The governor’s son and a junior employee of the Compagnie des Indes
Pierre André Prévost de La Prévostière: Governor of Pondichéry, 1718–1721
Nicolas de La Morandière: Pondichéry councillor, author of several appeals filed by the accused Indians
The Missionaries
Guy Tachard: First superior of the Jesuit mission in Pondichéry
Jean-Venant Bouchet: Second superior of the Jesuit mission in Pondichéry
Père Esprit de Tours: Capuchin missionary and parish priest to Europeans in Pondichéry
Jean-Jacques Tessier de Queralay: Representative of the Missions étrangères de Paris.
The Interpreters
Manuel Geganis: A French-speaking Tamil Christian, son of the Jesuits’ chief catechist (religious interpreter)
Père Turpin: A Tamil-speaking Jesuit missionary
Cordier: A French man born in India to a company employee
-- A Colonial Affair: Commerce, Conversion, and Scandal in French India, by Danna Agmon
If Sylvia Murr’s claim that ‘at the beginning of the eighteenth century, all discourse on India was tributary to the ‘Relations’ supplied by the missionaries, Catholic and Protestant’,1 [‘au debut du 18e siecle, tout discours sur l’lnde etait tributaire des ‘Relations’ foumies paries missionaires, catholiques ou protestants’ Murr 1986: 303.] is somewhat overstated, it nevertheless serves to emphasise the importance of such missionary ‘relations’ prior to the arrival in India of Anquetil-Duperron, who appears to have been the first European to visit India for purely scholarly purposes. Among Protestants, Murr mentions Ziegenbalg and also Lord and Roger, although the latter were not missionaries, nor writing at the beginning of the eighteenth century.
Among Catholics, the main contributors to Indological discourse of the eighteenth century were French, in particular the Jesuits associated with the Carnatic mission, but also the Capuchins Jean-Jacques Tessier de Queralay and Thomas de Poitiers. At the end of the century another French priest, the Abbe Jean-Antoine Dubois, a secular priest of the Missions Etrangeres, was responsible for publishing as his own work one of the most significant works of the earlier generation of French missionaries.2 [Despite being ‘a respected member of the Missions Etrangeres, a body traditionally hostile to the Jesuits’, Dubois’s relations with the Jesuits were good, and he supported the return of the Jesuits to Madurai after the restoration of the Society (Ballhatchet 1998: 3).]
These writers produced a number of significant works on Indian religions, among them the Relation des erreurs qui se trouvent dans la religion des gentils malabars de la Coste Coromandelle3 [A substantial part of the text of the Relation des erreurs qui se trouvent dans la religion des gentils malabars de la Coste Coromandelle was printed in Picart’s Ceremonies et coutumes religieuses de tous les peuples du monde under the title: ‘Dissertation historique sur les Dieux des Indiens orientaux.’ (Picart 1723: 83-100). This is immediately followed by a ‘Lettre de P. Bouchet sur la Religion des Indiens Orientaux’ (Bouchet’s second letter to Huet, XIII: 95-225). A critical edition of the Relation des erreurs from three manuscripts, one of which attributes the work to Nobili was published by Caland (Caland 1923). Dharampal, who has used a fourth manuscript, discusses the origin of the work and its attribution to Bouchet (Dharampal 1982a: 233-239).] of Jean Venant Bouchet, the Traite de la Religion des Malabars4 [Extensive extracts from Tessier de Queralay’s manuscript were published in Bumouf and Jacquet 1835. The full text was published in Dharampal 1982a.] of Tessier de Queralay, Le Paganisme des Indiens nommes Tamouls of Thomas de Poitiers, the Moeurs et Coutumes des Indiens5 [Sylvia Murr identified a manuscript compiled in 1776-1777 by a French artillery officer Nicholas-Jacques Desvaulx as a version of Coeurdoux’s lost work, and has shown that Dubois’s celebrated work, Hindu Manners, Customs and Ceremonies (1816; Mceurs, Institutions et Ceremonies des Peuples de l’lnde, 1825) is based on Coeurdoux (Murr 1987). In his Prefatory note to Beauchamp’s 1906 edition, Friedrich Max Muller noticed that the author of the work ‘really belongs to a period previous to the revival of Sanskrit studies in India, as inaugurated by Wilkins, Sir William Jones and Colebrooke’, although he did not doubt that the author was Dubois.] of Gaston-Laurent Coeurdoux, and the infamous Ezourvedam.6 [Among those to whom the Ezourvedam has been attributed are, in addition to Nobili, five French Jesuits of the eighteenth century: Bouchet (1655-1732), Pierre Martin (1665- 1716), Jean Calmette (1693-1740), Antoine Mosac (1704-C.1784), and Jean de Villette (dates uncertain). Rocher reviews the long debate over the authorship of the Ezourvedam concluding that ‘the author of the [Ezourvedam] may be one of these, but he may also be one of their many more or less well known confreres. In the present state of our knowledge we cannot go any further than that.’ (Rocher 1984: 60). If nothing else, this demonstrates the sheer number of Jesuits who had significant knowledge of Indian languages and religions. The Ezourvedam was published in 1778 as L’Ezour-Vedam, ou Ancien Commentaire du Vedam contenant I’esposition des opinions religieuses & philosophiques des Indiens, but doubts about its authenticity immediately surfaced. Pierre Sonnerat showed it to ‘a learned but fanatic Brahman’ who convinced him that ‘[ i]t is definitely not one of the four Vedams, notwithstanding its name. It is a book of controversy, written by a missionary’ (Voyage aux Indes Orientates (1782) I: 215, cited in Rocher 1984: 13).] However, only the first and the last of these were published in the eighteenth century. Of more immediate impact were the letters of the French Jesuits, published in the Lettres edifiantes et curieuses, the Memoires de l'Academie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres and elsewhere.7 [The letters were widely read, both in the Lettres edifiantes and in other publications, for example in Picart’s collection in which Bouchet’s long, undated letter concerning transmigration (XIII: 95-226) was reprinted (Picart 1723: 100-106). A brief account of the origin, editions and influence of the Lettres edifiantes is given by Retif 1951.] The Jesuit letters from India had been contributing to European knowledge of Indian religions since the sixteenth century.8 [Zachariae goes so far as to say that if Europeans at the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th century ‘were tolerably acquainted with ‘Hinduism’, with the religion and mythology of India ... that knowledge was attained through the letters which the Jesuit missionaries labouring in India sent to the members of their Order in Europe.’ (Zachariae 1921: 151). For earlier Jesuit ethnographic contributions see Rubies 2000.] It will be argued, however, that for a number of reasons it was the letters of the eighteenth century which were particularly important in the establishment of the concept of a pan-Indian religion, which subsequently came to be called Hinduism. Although this analysis is based primarily on the letters published in the Lettres edifiantes et curieuses, the other letters, both published and unpublished also played a role, and reference will be made to these and to the other mentioned works on Indian religions by French writers in this period. Among the Jesuits who served in the Madurai, Carnatic and Bengal missions and contributed to the Lettres edifiantes were Jean Venant Bouchet (1655-1732, in India from 1688), Pierre Martin (1665-1716, in India from 1694), Pierre de la Lane (1669- 1746, in India from 1704), Etienne le Gac (1671-1738, in India by 1709), Gaston-Laurent Coeurdoux (1691-1779, in India from 1732), Jean Calmette (1693-1740, in India from 1725 or 1726), Jean Francois Pons (1698-C.1753, in India from 1726).
-- Hinduism in the Jesuit Lettres edifiantes et curieuses, Chapter 7 from "Mapping Hinduism 'Hinduism' and the Study of Indian Religions, 1600-1776," by Will Sweetman, 2003
The first Director General for the [French East India] Company was François de la Faye,...
La Faye was the owner of an extensive art collection, two hotels in Paris, and another in Versailles. When he acquired the ancient château de Condé in 1719, he commissioned the most fashionable artists of his time and the architect Giovanni Niccolò Servandoni for elaborate improvements....
The Marquis was a member of the French Academy, a director of the French India Company, and accordingly, was a very rich man. In his mansion in Paris, he often received such famous people as Voltaire and Crébillon...
At a later date, the castle belonged to the Count de la Tour du Pin Lachaux, through his marriage with the niece of the Marquis de la Faye...
In 1814, the Countess de Sade, the daughter-in-law of the famous Marquis de Sade, inherited Condé from her cousin, La Tour du Pin. Since this time and up to 1983, the castle remained the property of the Sade family, who restored it with much care after the two World Wars.
-- French East India Company, by Wikipedia
Marguerittes (French pronunciation: [maʁɡəʁit]; Occitan: Margarida) is a commune in the Gard department in southern France. In 1717, Antoine de Teissier (b.1667) was created the 1st Baron de Marguerittes. One of his sons was a Huguenot who took refuge in Switzerland and his grandson, Jean Antoine de Teissier, 3rd Baron of Marguerittes, was guillotined 20 May 1794. The 3rd Baron's son settled in England at Woodcote Park and was created Baron de Teissier by Louis XVIII in recognition of his father's sacrifices to France.
-- Marguerittes, by Wikipedia
Jean Joseph Marie Augustin Christophe de TEISSIER
baron de Marguerittes, seigneur de Roquecombre, de La Gainé and de Coulons
• Secrétaire du roi, maire de Salles
Parents
• Antoine de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes
o Rosalie FARANDA
Spouses, children and grandchildren
o Married to Marie de SALLES with
Jean Antoine Teissier de Marguerittes de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes 1744-1794 Married 20 April 1768 to Thérèse Gabrielle d'AMIELH with
• Esprit Eugène Louis de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes 1781- Married in 1806 to Sophronie de VILLARDI 1781-1842
Jean Antoine de TEISSIER Teissier de Marguerittes
(Jean Antoine de TEISSIER)
baron de Marguerittes, voir Guillotinés (25 May 1794)
• Born 30 June 1744 - Nîmes (30)
• Deceased 25 May 1794, aged 49 years old
• Ecrivain, premier maire de Nîmes
Parents
• Jean Joseph Marie Augustin Christophe de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes (Secrétaire du roi, maire de Salles)
o Marie de SALLES
Spouses and children
o Married 20 April 1768 to Thérèse Gabrielle d'AMIELH with
• Esprit Eugène Louis de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes 1781- Married in 1806 to Sophronie de VILLARDI 1781-1842
Jean Joseph Marie Augustin Christophe de TEISSIER
baron de Marguerittes, seigneur de Roquecombre, de La Gainé and de Coulons
• Secrétaire du roi, maire de Salles
Parents
• Antoine de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes
o Rosalie FARANDA
Spouses, children and grandchildren
o Married to Marie de SALLES with
Jean Antoine Teissier de Marguerittes de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes 1744-1794 Married 20 April 1768 to Thérèse Gabrielle d'AMIELH with
• Esprit Eugène Louis de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes 1781- Married in 1806 to Sophronie de VILLARDI 1781-1842
Esprit Eugène Louis de TEISSIER
baron de Marguerittes
• Born 25 April 1781 - Nîmes (30)
• Deceased
• Lieutenant colonel d'Etat major
Parents
• Jean Antoine Teissier de Marguerittes de TEISSIER, baron de Marguerittes 1744-1794 (Ecrivain, premier maire de Nîmes)
o Thérèse Gabrielle d'AMIELH
Spouses
• Married in 1806 to Sophronie de VILLARDI, born 14 April 1781 - Nîmes (30), deceased in 1842 aged 61 years old (Parents : Gabriel de VILLARDI de MONTLAUR, marquis de Montlaur †1817 & Marie Marguerite de LOÜET de CALVISSON †1822)
-- by Geneanet.org
Jeanne-Élisabeth Teissier de la Tour (abt. 1742 - abt. 1828)
Jeanne-Élisabeth Teissier de la Tour
Born about 1742 in Switzerland
Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife of Barthélemy (Gugi) Gugy — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
DESCENDANTS
Mother of Jean-Georges Barthélemy-Guillaume-Louis Gugy
Died about 1828 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Biography:
Jeanne-Élisabeth Teissier de la Tour is the descendant of a Huguenot emigrant.
"Wikipedia: 'Louis Gugy: ...'Colonel Barthélemy Gugy (1737-1797), and his Swiss-French Huguenot wife, Jeanne Elizabeth Teissier de la Tour (who died at an advanced age in Montreal), the granddaughter of Antoine de Teissier (b.1667), 1st Baron of Marguerittes in the Languedoc...'" [1]
Barthélemy (Gugi) Gugy (1737 - 1787)
Col. Barthélemy Gugy formerly Gugi
Born 7 Feb 1737 [location unknown]
Son of Hans George Gugi and Johanna Thérèse Reis
Brother of Conrad (Gugi) Gugy
Husband of Jeanne-Élisabeth Teissier de la Tour — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
DESCENDANTS
Father of Jean-Georges Barthélemy-Guillaume-Louis Gugy
Died 19 Apr 1787 in Yamachiche, Quebec, Canada
Biography
"Wikipedia: 'Louis Gugy: ...'Colonel Barthélemy Gugy (1737-1797), and his Swiss-French Huguenot wife, Jeanne Elizabeth Teissier de la Tour (who died at an advanced age in Montreal), the granddaughter of Antoine de Teissier (b.1667), 1st Baron of Marguerittes in the Languedoc. Though Swiss and the son of an officer in the Dutch service, Louis's father had joined the armies of the King of France. He served with distinction, was knighted, and at the breaking out of the French Revolution, was Colonel commandant of the 2nd Regiment of Swiss Guards in the French Royal Service, that corps being the personal bodyguards of King Louis XVI during the revolution...
As a young man, Louis served in France as a Lieutenant under his father during the revolution. Following the overthrow of the King Louis XVI, both father and son were offered advancement in the French revolutionary army, and most brilliant prospects were held out to them. They declined these offers, and Louis' father had the honor of marching his regiment from Paris back to Switzerland without losing a man. Considering that the elder Gugy's men were disarmed, exposed to all manner of seductions, supplied by wine and allured by women, this feat certainly indicated the respect and regard in which he was held. On reaching the Swiss Frontier, the elder Gugy found himself penniless...'" [1]
"Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online, Volume VII (1836-1850); University of Toronto/Universite Laval: '...Louis’s rapid rise to prominence began with his appointment as sheriff of Trois-Rivières on 13 Aug. 1805. He had been a justice of the peace for the district since 1803, and his commission was renewed in 1805. Three years later he was made a commissioner for the relief of the insane and foundlings for the district of Trois-Rivières. He was commissioned in 1808 to administer the oath to those seeking land grants...'"[2]
"Find A Grave: 'Col Bartholemew Conrad Augustus Gugy... Son of The Honourable Jean Georges Barthélemy Guillaume LOUIS GUGY and Julianna O'Connor, his wife...'"[3]
Barholome Gugi - Swiss Guard Record March 1748: Private in Dutch Service 1.8.1758: in French Service 1772: second lieutnant 1774: Lieutnant colonel 1777: Colonel 1780: Major 1789: "Pension" (= retirement salary) annual of 600
-- by Wikitree.com
La Tour Du Pin, Henriette De (1770–1853)
by Encyclopedia.com
Accessed: 7/31/21
French writer. Name variations: Henrietta, Marquise de La Tour du Pin. Born Henriette-Lucy Dillon in Paris, France, in 1770; died on April 2, 1853; daughter of Arthur Dillon (1750–1794) and Lucie de Rothe (1751–1782, lady-in-waiting to Marie Antoinette); married Frederic-Séraphin, comte de Gouvernet, later Marquise de La Tour du Pin (1759–1837, a soldier, prefect, and minister to the court at The Hague), in 1787; children: Humbert (1790–1816); Séraphine (1793–1795); Charlotte, known as Alix (1796–1822, who married the comte de Liedekerke Beaufort); Cécile de La Tour du Pin (1800–1817); Aylmar (1806–1867); three others died in infancy.
"Her memoirs are every bit as fascinating as those of Madame de Staël, Madame de Genlis, and Madame d'Abrantès ," wrote John Weightman in The Observer. "She has an enchanting eighteenth-century liveliness as well as an indomitable spirit. She was obviously a remarkable woman." Henriette de La Tour du Pin wrote of the Revolution and the Age of Napoleon because she had experienced both events firsthand.
She was born in 1770, during the final years of the reign of Louis XV. Two years after her marriage at age 16 to Frederic-Séraphin, comte de Gouvernet, later Marquise de La Tour du Pin, the revolution of 1789 broke out, robbing her of her post as lady-in-waiting to Queen Marie Antoinette and prompting her family to flee to Albany, in upstate New York, to wait out the revolution and avoid the guillotine. Her father Arthur Dillon, whose second wife was Comtesse de La Touche (first cousin of Empress Josephine), was executed by the Revolutionaries in 1794.
Following a return to France, Mme de La Tour du Pin was lady-in-waiting to Queen Marie Louise of Austria while her husband served Napoleon as prefect in Brussels (1801–12), then prefect in Amiens. He was also one of the Ambassadors Plenipotentiary of France at the Congress of Vienna and ambassador in Turin (1820–30).
Having fled the Revolution of 1830, she and her husband lived in Nice and Lausanne. Following the death of her husband in 1837, she settled at Pisa, in Tuscany, where she lived until her death on April 2, 1853. The mother of eight children, Mme de La Tour du Pin determined, at age 50, to document her life for her only surviving child.
suggested reading:
Memoirs of Madame de La Tour du Pin. Translated by Felice Harcourt. NY: McCall Publishing, 1971.
Henriette la Marquise de La Tour du Pin
(Henriette Lucy de La TOUR-DUPIN)
(Henriette Lucy DILLON)
voir Auteurs de mémoires (1778-1815)
• Born 25 February 1770 - Paris VII° (75)
• Deceased 2 April 1853 - Pise (Italie), aged 83 years old
• Ambassadrice de France à Turin (1827)
Parents
• Arthur, général DILLON, voir guillotinés 1750-1794 (Colonel du régiment de Dillon aux Antilles, ch.St Louis, CIN, maréchal de camp.)
• Thérèse Lucy de ROTHE 1751-1782
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
• Married 21 May 1787, Montfermeil (93), to Frédéric Séraphin le Comte de Gouvernet de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET, baron de l'Empire (1808), pair de France (1815), marquis de La Tour-du-Pin (1st, 1817), ambassadeur de France (1791), préfet de La Somme, born 6 January 1759, deceased 26 February 1837 - Lausanne, Canton de Vaud (Suisse) aged 78 years old,
Commandant du Régiment Royal-Vaisseaux (en 1789), ambassadeur à La Haye (1791).
(Parents : Jean-Frédéric de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET, député aux États généraux 1727-1794 & Cécile GUINOT de MONCONSEIL 1733-1821) with
Marie Charlotte Alix,comtesse de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET 1796-1822 Married 20 April 1813, Bruxelles (Belgique), to Charles Florent Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789-1855 with
Hadelin de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1816-1890 Married 1 February 1842, Maastricht (Pays-Bas), to Isabelle van DOPFF 1822-1903 with :
Humbert de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1845-
Aymar de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1846-1909
Cécile Claire Séraphine de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1818-1893 Married 28 December 1841 to Ferdinand Joseph de BEECKMAN 1817-1869 with :
o Ferdinand Humbert Hadelin de BEECKMAN 1842
o Fernand de BEECKMAN de VIEUSART
o Raoul de BEECKMAN de VIEUSART
• Cécile de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET 1800-1817 Engaged to Charles d'Argenteau de MERCY-ARGENTEAU, Archevêque de Tyr 1787-1879
Aymar de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET, marquis de La Tour du Pin 1806-1867 Married to Caroline de La BOURDONNAYE-BLOSSAC 1818-1867 with
Humbert de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET, Marquis de La Tour-du-Pin 1855-1943 Married 9 October 1883, Achy (60), to Gabrielle de CLERMONT-TONNERRE 1860-1931 with :
Sabine de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET 1884-
• Renée de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET 1886-1954
Anne de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET 1891-1968
Half-siblings
On the side of Arthur, général DILLON, voir guillotinés 1750-1794
• with Marie Françoise Laure GIRARDIN de MONTGÉRALD
Elisabeth Françoise Fanny DILLON †1836
Relationships
• Godmother (1827) : baptism, Charles de COSTER 1827-1879
-- by geneanet.org
Charles Florent Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT
(Charles Florent Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT)
• Born 4 September 1789 - Avesnes-le-Comte (62)
• Deceased 28 September 1855 - Roola di Papa (Italie), aged 66 years old
Parents
• Hilarion de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1762-1841 (Maréchal de la Cour du Roi des Pays-Bas)
• Julie-Caroline DESANDROUIN 1769-1836
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
• Married 20 April 1813, Bruxelles (Belgique), to Marie Charlotte Alix,comtesse de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET, born 4 November 1796 - Saint-André-de-Cubzac (33), deceased 1 September 1822 - Château de Fau-Blanc, Pully, Canton de Vaud (Suisse) aged 25 years old (Parents : Frédéric Séraphin le Comte de Gouvernet de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET, marquis de La Tour-du-Pin 1759-1837 & Henriette la Marquise de La Tour du Pin DILLON, voir Auteurs de mémoires 1770-1853) (see note) with
Hadelin de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1816-1890 Married 1 February 1842, Maastricht (Pays-Bas), to Isabelle van DOPFF 1822-1903 with
Humbert de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1845- Married to Marie de JONGHE 1851-1919 with :
Aynard de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT, Comte 1876-1951
Aymar de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1846-1909 Married 16 July 1885 to Cécile BÉRANGER 1858-1929 with :
Simone de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1886-1962
Hadelin de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1887-1974
Cécile Claire Séraphine de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1818-1893 Married 28 December 1841 to Ferdinand Joseph de BEECKMAN 1817-1869 with
o Ferdinand Humbert Hadelin de BEECKMAN 1842
o Fernand de BEECKMAN de VIEUSART
o Raoul de BEECKMAN de VIEUSART
Siblings
o Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789
Charles Florent Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789-1855
Maximilienne de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1791-1870
Hilarion de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT
• Born 7 June 1762 - Horion-Hozémont, Grâce-Hollogne (Belgique)
• Deceased 12 October 1841 - Château de Vêves, Celles (Belgique), aged 79 years old
• Maréchal de la Cour du Roi des Pays-Bas
Parents
• Jacques Ignace de LIEDEKERKE, Baron de Celles 1725-1807 (Grand Mayeur de Maestricht - Capitaine au régiment de Picardie)
• Marie Robertine Bernardine Jeanne Népomucène Josephe de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1737-1788 (Héritière de Celles)
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
• Married in 1788 to Julie-Caroline DESANDROUIN, born 6 November 1769 - Namur (Belgique), deceased in 1836 - Celles, Houyet (Belgique) aged 67 years old (Parents : Pierre Jacques Gédéon DESANDROUIN, vicomte 1733-1803 & Marie Caroline de Neny 1743) with
o Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789
Charles Florent Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789-1855 Married 20 April 1813, Bruxelles (Belgique), to Marie Charlotte Alix,comtesse de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET 1796-1822 with
Hadelin de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1816-1890 Married 1 February 1842, Maastricht (Pays-Bas), to Isabelle van DOPFF 1822-1903 with :
Humbert de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1845-
Aymar de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1846-1909
Cécile Claire Séraphine de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1818-1893 Married 28 December 1841 to Ferdinand Joseph de BEECKMAN 1817-1869 with :
o Ferdinand Humbert Hadelin de BEECKMAN 1842
o Fernand de BEECKMAN de VIEUSART
o Raoul de BEECKMAN de VIEUSART
Maximilienne de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1791-1870 Married 17 December 1821, Furnaux, Mettet (Belgique), to Alphonse de CUNCHY 1786-1846 with
Félix de CUNCHY Married to Marie-Julie DUMONT with :
• Maximilienne de CUNCHY 1872-1946
o Ferdinand de CUNCHY
Siblings
Hilarion de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1762-1841
Alexandre de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1764-1846
Henriette de LIEDEKERKE 1767-1843
Antoinette de LIEDEKERKE 1773-1841
Hyacinthe de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1774-1852
Half-siblings
On the side of Jacques Ignace de LIEDEKERKE, Baron de Celles 1725-1807
o with Anne-Marie de MÉAN, Dame de Pailhe 1723-1751
Gérard de LIEDEKERKE, Comte de Liedekerke 1750-1827
Marie Robertine Bernardine Jeanne Népomucène Josephe de BEAUFORT de CELLES
(Marie Robertine Bernardine Jeanne Népomucène Josephe de BEAUFORT)
• Born 20 October 1737
• Deceased 19 July 1788, aged 50 years old
• Héritière de Celles
Parents
• Englebert Hilarion Maximilien de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1701-1770
• Isabelle Thérèse Joséphine de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1709
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
• Married to Jacques Ignace de LIEDEKERKE, Baron de Celles, Comte de Liedekerke, born 26 December 1725, deceased 22 February 1807 - Celles, Houyet (Belgique) aged 81 years old,
Grand Mayeur de Maestricht - Capitaine au régiment de Picardie
(Parents : Ferdinand François Joseph de LIEDEKERKE, Baron de Surlet 1684-1735 & Marie Bernardine de HORION 1693-1740) with
Hilarion de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1762-1841 Married in 1788 to Julie-Caroline DESANDROUIN 1769-1836 with
o Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789
Charles Florent Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789-1855 Married 20 April 1813, Bruxelles (Belgique), to Marie Charlotte Alix,comtesse de La TOUR du PIN-GOUVERNET 1796-1822 with :
Hadelin de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1816-1890
Cécile Claire Séraphine de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1818-1893
Maximilienne de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1791-1870 Married 17 December 1821, Furnaux, Mettet (Belgique), to Alphonse de CUNCHY 1786-1846 with :
Félix de CUNCHY
o Ferdinand de CUNCHY
Alexandre de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1764-1846 Married 11 June 1808, Beaufort (Gd-Duché-du-Luxembourg), to Félicilé Gabrielle Charlotte Cécile de TORNACO, Baronne de Tornaco 1775-1846 with
Augusta de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT, Comtesse 1809-1891 Married 19 October 1830, Jambes, Namur (Belgique), to Napoléon de LANNOY-CLERVAUX, prince de Rheina-Wolbeck 1807-1874 with :
o Arthur CIément Florent Charles de LANNOY 1833
Edgard de LANNOY-CLERVAUX, prince de Rheina-Wolbeck 1835-1912
Henriette de LIEDEKERKE 1767-1843 Married to Charles de VAULX de CHAMPION, baron de Vaulx de Champion 1762-1825 with
Marie de VAULX de CHAMPION 1807-1887 Married to Henri Edmond de FABRIBECKERS 1799-1854 with :
Charles de FABRIBECKERS 1838-1905
Charlotte de FABRIBECKERS 1848-1881
Gustave de VAULX de CHAMPION 1810-1875 Married to Caroline de SAINT-HUBERT 1812-1875 with :
• Marie Caroline Hyacinthe de VAULX de CHAMPION 1836-1901
Charles de VAULX de CHAMPION 1843-1915
• Hélène de VAULX de CHAMPION 1844-1869
Antoinette de LIEDEKERKE 1773-1841 Married 23 Thermidor year VI (10 August 1798), Celles, Houyet (Belgique), to Jacques François Laurent de JACQUIER de ROSÉE, Bataille de Wagram 1773-1809 with
Laurence de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1798-1863 Married 12 April 1817, Dinant (Belgique), to Bernard Auguste de SIRE de MELIN with :
Léonide de SIRE de MELIN 1830-1909
Hyacinthe de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1774-1852 Married to Joséphine Adélaïde Ursule de MASSEN 1785-1843 with
Alphonsine de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1815-1868 Married in 1838 to Victor de VILLERS 1810-1895 with :
Lamoral de VILLERS, comte de Villers 1856-1934
Ferdinande de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT, Comtesse de Liedekerke 1817-1890 Married to Hippolyte de LOOZ-CORSWAREM 1817- with :
Georges de LOOZ-CORSWAREM 1845-1894
Émilie de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT, Comtesse de Liedekerke 1824-1890 Married 6 May 1851, Liège (Belgique), to Edmond de ROSEN, Baron de Rosen 1827-1902 with :
Marie-Louise de ROSEN, Baronne de Rosen 1862-1892
Siblings
Marie Robertine Bernardine Jeanne Népomucène Josephe de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1737-1788
Amélie Gabrielle de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1739-1787
Englebert Hilarion Maximilien de BEAUFORT de CELLES
(Engelbert Hilarion Maximilien de BEAUFORT de CELLES)
• Born 9 July 1701
• Deceased 12 October 1770, aged 69 years old
Parents
• Théodore François de BEAUFORT de CELLES †1737
• Marie Hubertine de Waha de Fronville de WAHA 1669-1710
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
• Married to Isabelle Thérèse Joséphine de JACQUIER de ROSÉE, born 13 April 1709 - Anthée, Onhaye (Belgique) (Parents : Jacques Gabriel de JACQUIER de ROSÉE, baron de Rosée 1666-1742 & Marie Isabelle de WIGNACOURT †) with
Marie Robertine Bernardine Jeanne Népomucène Josephe de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1737-1788 Married to Jacques Ignace de LIEDEKERKE, Baron de Celles 1725-1807 with
Hilarion de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1762-1841 Married in 1788 to Julie-Caroline DESANDROUIN 1769-1836 with :
o Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789
Charles Florent Auguste de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1789-1855
Maximilienne de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1791-1870
Alexandre de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1764-1846 Married 11 June 1808, Beaufort (Gd-Duché-du-Luxembourg), to Félicilé Gabrielle Charlotte Cécile de TORNACO, Baronne de Tornaco 1775-1846 with :
Augusta de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT, Comtesse 1809-1891
Henriette de LIEDEKERKE 1767-1843 Married to Charles de VAULX de CHAMPION, baron de Vaulx de Champion 1762-1825 with :
Marie de VAULX de CHAMPION 1807-1887
Gustave de VAULX de CHAMPION 1810-1875
Antoinette de LIEDEKERKE 1773-1841 Married 23 Thermidor year VI (10 August 1798), Celles, Houyet (Belgique), to Jacques François Laurent de JACQUIER de ROSÉE, Bataille de Wagram 1773-1809 with :
Laurence de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1798-1863
Hyacinthe de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1774-1852 Married to Joséphine Adélaïde Ursule de MASSEN 1785-1843 with :
Alphonsine de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1815-1868
Ferdinande de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT, Comtesse de Liedekerke 1817-1890
Émilie de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT, Comtesse de Liedekerke 1824-1890
Amélie Gabrielle de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1739-1787 Married 28 October 1766 to Antoine Laurent de JACQUIER de ROSÉE, voir Maîtres des forges 1747-1826 with
o Hilarion de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1767-1809
• Isabelle de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1769-1791 Married to Charles de MOREAU 1766-1828
o Thérèse de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1771-1863
Jacques François Laurent de JACQUIER de ROSÉE, Bataille de Wagram 1773-1809 Married 23 Thermidor year VI (10 August 1798), Celles, Houyet (Belgique), to Antoinette de LIEDEKERKE 1773-1841 with :
Laurence de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1798-1863
o Henri de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1774-1777
o Henriette de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1775-1860
Stanislas de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1782-1839 Married 29 August 1810 to Henriette de WAL de BARONVILLE 1789-1815 with :
Laurent de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1813-1858
o Léon de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1814-1855
o Adèle de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1815-
Théodore François de BEAUFORT de CELLES
• Deceased 16 January 1737 - Boisseilles-Dinant (Belgique)
Parents
• Albert de BEAUFORT de CELLES
• Catherine Thérèse (ludovicienne) de WIGNACOURT
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
• Married 18 October 1698 to Marie Hubertine de Waha de Fronville de WAHA, born in 1669, deceased 12 December 1710 - Celles (Belgique) aged 41 years old (Parents : Hubert de Waha de Fronville de WAHA †1707 & Marie Scholastique de Waha de Fronville de WAHA) with
Englebert Hilarion Maximilien de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1701-1770 Married to Isabelle Thérèse Joséphine de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1709 with
Marie Robertine Bernardine Jeanne Népomucène Josephe de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1737-1788 Married to Jacques Ignace de LIEDEKERKE, Baron de Celles 1725-1807 with :
Hilarion de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1762-1841
Alexandre de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1764-1846
Henriette de LIEDEKERKE 1767-1843
Antoinette de LIEDEKERKE 1773-1841
Hyacinthe de LIEDEKERKE-BEAUFORT 1774-1852
Amélie Gabrielle de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1739-1787 Married 28 October 1766 to Antoine Laurent de JACQUIER de ROSÉE, voir Maîtres des forges 1747-1826 with :
o Hilarion de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1767-1809
• Isabelle de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1769-1791
o Thérèse de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1771-1863
Jacques François Laurent de JACQUIER de ROSÉE, Bataille de Wagram 1773-1809
o Henri de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1774-1777
o Henriette de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1775-1860
Stanislas de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1782-1839
Siblings
Théodore François de BEAUFORT de CELLES †1737
Albertine Thérèse de BEAUFORT de CELLES, Comtesse de Beaufort
Albert de BEAUFORT de CELLES
Parents
• Robert de BEAUFORT de CELLES, sgr de Steenhault †1647
o Anne de La BOURLOTTE
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
• Married to Catherine Thérèse (ludovicienne) de WIGNACOURT (Parents : Maximilien de WIGNACOURT, sgr d'Ourton & Françoise de CUNCHY, baronne de Pernes) with
Théodore François de BEAUFORT de CELLES †1737 Married 18 October 1698 to Marie Hubertine de Waha de Fronville de WAHA 1669-1710 with
Englebert Hilarion Maximilien de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1701-1770 Married to Isabelle Thérèse Joséphine de JACQUIER de ROSÉE 1709 with :
Marie Robertine Bernardine Jeanne Népomucène Josephe de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1737-1788
Amélie Gabrielle de BEAUFORT de CELLES 1739-1787
Albertine Thérèse de BEAUFORT de CELLES, Comtesse de Beaufort Married in 1690 to Maurice d'ARGOUT, Gouverneur d'Annonay (07) 1642 with
Pierre Maurice d'ARGOUT †1761 Married in May 1718 to Antoinette-Rose d'ARGOUT with :
Gaston seigneur de Vessilière et de Moras d'ARGOUT, sgr de Moras 1720
Robert d'ARGOUT, Gouverneur de Saint-Domingue 1723/1724-1780
o Pierre Joseph d'ARGOUT
o Joseph d'ARGOUT
-- by geneanet.org
Francis BEAUFORT
voir Marins
• Born in 1774
• Deceased in 1857, aged 83 years old
• Contre-amiral
Parents
o Daniel Augustus BEAUFORT 1739-1831
o ? WALLER
Spouses
o Married in 1812 to Alicia WILSON, born in 1782, deceased in 1834 aged 52 years old
• Married in 1838 to Honora EDGEWORTH, born in 1792, deceased in 1858 aged 66 years old (Parents : Richard Lovell EDGEWORTH 1744-1817 & Elizabeth SNEYD †1797)
Siblings
Frances BEAUFORT 1769-
• Francis BEAUFORT, voir Marins 1774-1857
Daniel Augustus BEAUFORT
• Born in 1739
• Deceased in 1831, aged 92 years old
Parents: Daniel Cornelius de Beaufort (1700–1788); Esther Gougeon (m. London, 11 June 1738)
Spouses, children and grandchildren
o Married to ? WALLER with
Frances BEAUFORT 1769- Married 31 May 1798 to Richard Lovell EDGEWORTH 1744-1817 with
o Frances Maria EDGEWORTH 1799-1848
• Harriet Jessie EDGEWORTH 1801-1889 Married 14 August 1826, Edgeworthstown (Irlande), to Richard II (Rev.) BUTLER 1794-1862
o Sophia EDGEWORTH 1803-1836
o Lucy EDGEWORTH 1805-1897
o Francis Beaufort EDGEWORTH 1809-1846
• Francis BEAUFORT, voir Marins 1774-1857 Married in 1812 to Alicia WILSON 1782-1834
Francis BEAUFORT, voir Marins 1774-1857 Married in 1838 to Honora EDGEWORTH 1792-1858
-- by geneanet.org