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・ Olivier Brunel
・ Olivier Burri
・ Olivier Busquet
・ Olivier Cadiot
・ Olivier Caillas
・ Olivier Carette
・ Olivier Carrard
・ Olivier Carreras
・ Olivier Carré
・ Olivier Cassan
・ Olivier Cauwenbergh
・ Olivier Cazal
・ Olivier Chandon de Brailles
・ Olivier Chaplain
・ Olivier Chapuis
Olivier Charbonneau
・ Olivier Charles
・ Olivier Charroin
・ Olivier Chastan
・ Olivier Chastel
・ Olivier Chavy
・ Olivier Chesneau
・ Olivier Chevallier
・ Olivier Ciappa
・ Olivier Claessens
・ Olivier Clément
・ Olivier Coipel
・ Olivier Collarini
・ Olivier Coqueux
・ Olivier Costa de Beauregard


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Olivier Charbonneau : ウィキペディア英語版
Olivier Charbonneau

Olivier Charbonneau (France, Aunis 1613 Île de Montréal 20 November 1687) was a frontiersman who lived in Old Montreal in New France.
Charbonneau started his working life as a sewer cleaner. in Marans, Charente-Maritime. Widowed twice, by Ozanne Lussaud, and Roy in Marans (m. 13 April 1646),〔 he then married Marie-Marguerite Garnier 1656.〔 It is recorded that at that time his wife Marie-Marguerite was niece to Marguerite Bourgeoys.
He was one of the first settlers of the Île Jésus (today, Laval). He is the ancestor of 35,000 living North Americans, and ancestor of the entire population of Labelle.
There are only two surviving records for the family name of Charbonneau: one for Olivier and his wife, landing in 1659, and another for an unrelated man, Jean and his wife, around 1675. Nothing in the record suggests that the two were closely related. It has been estimated that 97% of the Charbonneau families in North America are descended from Olivier Charbonneau and his wife. Descendants of Jean are fewer in number and in New France have tended to cluster in the Vaudreuil and Soulanges area of Quebec near the Ottawa river.〔 (quoted by 〕
== Migration ==

In search of a better future, with his wife and their two-year-old daughter Anne, he sailed for New France on the ship "''Saint-André''" from La Rochelle on 2 July 1659.〔 In La Rochelle, less than a month earlier (as notarised by Demontreau on 5 June 1659),〔 he was hired as "manual labourer", that is to say, to do spade work on farms, not having his own plough, for Ville-Marie, Montreal by the Society of Our Lady of Montreal; he was recruited by Jeanne Mance. This two-year contract earned Charbonneau enough money for his passage to Quebec (175 livres and 31 livres 12 sols 6 deniers) plus accommodation costs at La Rochelle and buying a travel trunk "at home in this city of the Grace of God for their expenses and for acquiring a chest to put their clothes".
Ten years later, on 10 October 1669 in Ville-Marie, the notary Bénigne Basset signed an amnesty of debtors in the hope of encouraging people to live in Ville-Marie. Their debts were enormous, each family's larger than an annual wage. The debt was wiped out by Jeanne Mance and her generous donors.
Charbonneau's family thus is one of the eight founding families of Aunis, and under that amnesty they were bound by contract to migrate to New France.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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