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Antoine Philippe de Marigny : ウィキペディア英語版 | Antoine Philippe de Marigny
Antoine Philippe de Marigny de Mandeville (17 July 1721 - 6 Nov 1779), Chevalier de St. Louis, was a French geographer and explorer. Born in Mobile in 1722, he was part of the Creole elite of French Louisiana. His family was part of the minor provincial nobility of France, tracing back to Pierre Philippe de Marigny de Mandeville, who was ennobled in 1654. Antoine's parents were François Philippe de Marigny de Mandeville, a native of Bayeux who arrived in Canada in 1709 and Louisiana by 1714, and Madeleine le Maire, who remarried to the colony's royal engineer, Ignace François Broutin, after her husband's death.〔King, Grace Elizabeth "Creole Families of New Orleans", pp. 9-13〕 In 1748, Antoine de Marigny married Françoise de Lisle, thought to be the daughter of Guillaume Delisle. They had two children: Pierre Enguerrand de Marigny, and Madeleine Philippe de Marigny.〔King, Grace Elizabeth "Creole Families of New Orleans", pp. 14-16〕〔Stanley Clisby Arthur, George Campbell Huchet De Kernion () ''Old Families of Louisiana'' Page 316 1998〕 He also seems to have had at least two children by an enslaved Native American woman.〔Sophie White ''Wild Frenchmen and Frenchified Indians: Material Culture and Race ... '' 2012 Page 275 - "For biographical and genealogical information on Marigny, see Woods and Nolan, Sacramental Records of the Roman Catholic ... Mandeville had at least two children with his Indian slave; see Spear, Race, Sex, and Social Order, 40 and n."〕 Like his (probable) father-in-law Guillaume de Lisle, Geographer to the King, Antoine was an accomplished cartographer. He made a detailed map of Louisiana in 1763.〔Marc de Villiers du Terrage ''Les dernières années de la Louisiane française'' 1904 Page 341- "Antoine-Philippe de Marigny de Mandeville, ne à la Mobile en 1722. mourut à la Nouvelle-Orléans en 1779. Habile géographe et entreprenant explorateur, il dressa une très jolie carte de la Louisiane en 1763 qui se trouve conservée au Dépôt des cartes de la marine. On lui doit l'exploration de la côte S.-O. de la Louisiane; c'était un homme aimable.."〕 During the tumultuous Kerlerec administration, Antoine took the side of Kerlerec's Commissary-Commissioner, Vincent de Rochemore; Antoine and Rochemore were both arrested and sent back to France (along with the royal colonial treasurer Jean Baptiste d'Estrehan). In France, they continued their dispute with Kerlerec and were imprisoned in the Bastille for a short time, before eventually prevailing and seeing Kerlerec sentenced to exile. Antoine returned to New Orleans, where he died in 1779 and was interred at the St. Louis Cathedral.〔Chambon, Celestin N. ()''In and Around the Old St. Louis Cathedral of New Orleans'' p. 89〕 Antoine's son, Pierre Enguerrand de Marigny (also known as Pierre ''Philippe'' de Marigny de Mandeville), married Jeanne Marie d'Estrehan, daughter of Jean Baptiste d'Estrehan. They were the parents of Bernard de Marigny, for whom the famous Faubourg Marigny neighborhood is named. ==References==
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