Jean est né à Beauport et a été baptisé par le Père Nicolas Adam le 24 février 1641 à Notre-Dame de Québec Il était est le fils de Nouël L'Anglois [sic] et de Françoise Garnier . Le parrain a été Jean Bourdon ingénieur de l'(habitans...) et la marraine Louise Couïllart[1]
Il a épousé Françoise Charlotte Bélanger, fille de François Bélanger et Marie Guyon le 19 octobre 1665 à La-Visitation-de-Notre-Dame, Château-Richer, Capitale-Nationale[2][3][4]
Au recensement de 1666, il est établi avec son épouse
Il est décédé le 25 août 1687, et ses funérailles ont été célébrées le 26 août 1687 à Notre-Dame de Québec, Québec, Nouvelle-France [5][6][7]
Note
Dans le livre de « Noël Langlois et ses fils », écrit par Michel Langlois (1), on trouve à la page 61, la transcription de l'acte de sépulture du registre paroissial:
"Le vingt sixiesme jour du mois daoust de lan mil six cent quatre vingt sept a esté inhumé par moy au cimetierre de cette paroisse Jean Langlois agé de quarente cinq ans ou environ apres avoir receu les sacrements de penitence, viatique et estresme Onction décédé le vingt cinquiesme jour du mesme mois et an que dessus et ont assisté a son inhumation Jean Mosny et Jacques Deschambeault qui ont signé. Francois Dupré, curé de Québec."
Biography
Names are deliberately spelled here exactly as they are in the source documents:
Jean Langlois was born in Beauport and baptized on 24 Feb 1641 in Notre-Dame de Québec, Canada, Nouvelle-France. His parents were Nouël L'Anglois and Françoise Garnier, habitants of Beauport. Godparents at the infant's baptism were Jean Bourdon engineer of the (habitans...) and Louise Couïllart. The officiating priest was Nicolas Adam.[8]
Marriage He married Françoise Charlotte Bélanger, daughter of François Bélanger and Marie Guion, on 19 Oct 1665 in La-Visitation-de-Notre-Dame parish of Château-Richer. The celebrant priest was Thomas Morel.[9]The couples 11 known children are listed above.
1666 Recensement/Census of Beauport: Jean Langlois dit Boisverdun, 23, charpentier [carpenter] ; Françoise Charlotte Bellanger, 14, sa femme [his wife].[10]
1667 Census/Recensement/Census of Île_d'Orléans: Jean Langlois, 25; Charlotte Bellenger, sa femme [his wife], 16; Jean François Langlois, 10 mois; 4 bestiaux [cattle], 6 arpents en valeur.[11]
Death and Burial Jean Langlois passed away on 25 Aug 1687 being given the age of around 45 years on the record. His burial was the following day in Notre-Dame parish cemetery of Québec. In the presence of known witnesses Jean Mony and Jacques Deschambeaux. The officiating priest was François Dupré.[12]
Michel Langlois, "Noël Langlois et ses fils", 1984, pages 39, 40. In the book of "Noël Langlois et ses fils", written by Michel Langlois, we find on page 61, the transcription of the burial certificate from the parish register:
On the twenty-sixth day of the month of August of the year one thousand six hundred and eighty-seven was buried by me in the cemetery of this parish Jean Langlois aged forty-five years or thereabouts after having received the sacraments of penance, Holy Communion and Anointing of the Sick who died on the twentieth fifth day of the same month and year as above and attended his burial Jean Mosny and Jacques Deschambeault who signed Francois Dupré, parish priest of Quebec.
IGD: Actes d'état civil et registres d'église du Québec (Collection Drouin), 1621 à 1997 - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection: Institut Généalogique Drouin (membership) Généalogie Québec | La Référence en Généalogie Québécoise
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Jean by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
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