Cultivateur |
Cultivateur et meunier |
Meunier |
Cultivateur et meunier |
6 E 48 12 (Mariages Bourg-Lastic 1793-1810) page 22/61 |
14 brumaire an XII L'épouse est dite majeure Présents : - Joseph VIGIER, cultivateur au Fraisse / Messeix, ne signe pas - Jean BRANDELY, cultivateur au Fraisse / Messeix, ne signe pas - Pierre AUDIBERT de Messeix, ne signe pas - Jean CROUZET, meunier au moulin de Brugière, ne signe pas |
Après le 25/3/1745 |
Courriel de C. BARRET (4/1/2010) - http://fr.groups.yahoo.com/group/genealogie-aveyron/message/111440 |
De ce mariage dut naître au moins un garçon Source : Courriel de J. TROTEL (6/1/2010) - http://fr.groups.yahoo.com/group/genealogie-aveyron/message/111545 |
Marraine de Jean DOUMENGE fils de Jacques et de Marie PANROLE ? |
Marraine de Marie ou Cecile GAVALDANE fille de Joseph et de Marguerite CRISSEILLE |
De Farret, marraine de Marie DOUMENGE fille de Clément et de Françoise COSTE |
Marraine de Marie GUABALDANE fille de Dominique et de Marie BONET ! |
De Farret, marraine de Dominique DOUMENGE fils de Dominique et de Marie BOUSQUET |
Veuve de feu Dominique DOUMENGE, marraine de Louis GUABALDA fils de Jean et d'Isabeau VIGROUX |
Présent : Pierre ROLLENDES seigneur de Roquebru (signe Roquebru) |
1E_047_002_2 pages 25 et 26 |
Parrain : François GALTIE fils de Me Antoine GALTIE bourgeois de Trébas, signe "f galtie" Marraine : Fabrielle ROLENDES de Trébas, ne signe pas Présents : - Guillaume BARDY, signe "G bardy" - Jean ESQUILAT, signe "JEsquilat" |
1E_047_002_7 page 2 |
Présents : Charles et Jean ANGLÉS |
1E_047_002_2 page 17 |
Parrain : Barthélémy GALTIE, prêtre de Trébas, signe "B Galtie pte" Marraine : Gabrielle DENOUVELLIS, ne signe pas Présent : Antoine FABRE, docteur, signe "fabre" |
Chez Jean LACOMBE, notaire |
1E_047_002_2 page 5 |
Parrain : Gabriel BARDY, marchand de Trébas, signe "G bardy..." Marraine : Gabrielle NOUVEL de Gaicre, ne signe pas Présents : - Cyprien LACROUX, ne signe pas - Guillaume MOLINIER, signe "g Molinier" |
1E_047_002_7 page 4 |
Présents : - Jean LACROUX, tisserand, ne signe pas - Jean LACROUX, meunier, ne signe pas |
1E_047_002_6 page 33 |
Laboureur |
BIOGRAPHIE: A rechercher à Rouchaube (Orcival) |
Descendance : - Hélix D'HÉRAIL x Huc de PÉLEGRY Source : Jean-Louis DEGA (courriel 27/1/2010) - http://fr.groups.yahoo.com/group/genealogie-aveyron/message/112582 |
Volume 1 - Page 65 |
La Chenaye (I, 104) et Barrau (II, 583) disent que Galvan épouse, en premières noces, vers 1370, Hélène de BÉRENGUIER (armes : coticé d'or et d'azur en barres, V.Barrau, II, 578), dame en partie de Malemort, sans postérité |
La terre de Villelongue, appelée autrefois Malemort, vint en entier à Galvan par son mariage avec Hélène BERENGUIERES, dame du château de Malemort. Mais comme ils n'eurent point de postérité, elle retourna aux héritiers de l'épouse. Source : DE LA CHESNAYE-DESBOIS F.A.A. - Dictionnaire de la noblesse - Tome I - 2nde édition (1770) - Page 45 |
Sans postérité Source : Daniel de RAUGLAUDRE |
Assassiné |
Erispoë de Bretagne, fils de Nominoë, fut roi de Bretagne de 851 à 857, année de son décès. Erispoë succède à son père à la tête de la Bretagne en 851 et affronte victorieusement le roi Charles II le Chauve le 22 août 851 à Jengland-Beslé près de la Vilaine. Il rencontre Charles II le Chauve à Angers dans les jours qui suivent la bataille et un accord de paix est conclu moyennant la reconnaissance de l'indépendance et des concessions territoriales (Rennes, Nantes et Retz)[1]. Le titre de duc de son père est alors remplacé par celui de roi dans plusieurs actes (cartulaire de Redon en 854 ou diplôme pour une église en 855). On sait que cela est dû à une reconnaissance par le roi Charles II grâce à la décision inverse qui a été conservée[réf. nécessaire]. En juin 877, partant en campagne en Italie, Charles laisse des instructions mentionnées dans le capitulaire de Quierzy : « Pour ce qui est du titre de royaume accordé aux Bretons par nÀ 2 CONC )cessité, et confirmé par serment, nos fidèles sont dispensés de le reconnaître parce qu'il n'y a plus de descendants de ceux auxquels il fut concédé ;. En 853, comme en 843, la ville de Nantes est de nouveau pillée par les Normands ; Erispoë leur fait la guerre, laquelle se termine par le départ des Normands vers 855. Erispoë traite d'égal à égal avec son « très aimé compère Charles, roi de France ». En 856, il est question de marier Louis le bègue fils de Charles avec une fille d'Erispoë[2]. Au traité de Louviers, « Erispoë donn[e] le duchédu Mans à Louis, fils du roi, et il établit ce prince pour régner sur cette contrée ». Le mariage ne se fait pas et cette maladresse est peut-être une des raisons du mécontentement et du complot qui entraîne sa mort. Son règne s'achève en novembre 857 par son assassinat sur l'autel d'une église, donc un lieu d'asile, par son successeur et cousin Salaün aidé d'Alcmar[3]. Erispoë était marié à Marmohec et avait au moins deux enfants, un fils nommé Conan et une fille. Erispoë was Duke of Brittany (851 - November 857). In some official documents, he is referred to as king rather than duke, but it is difficult to be sure if this was accepted by the King, Charles the Bald. His father was Nominoë. He successfully faced Charles the Bald on the 22 August 851 at Jengland near the river Vilaine. Erispoë met Charles in Angers in the days following the battle and concluded a peace treaty in return for the recognition of Breton independence,as well as territorial concessions. In 853 (as in 843), the town of Nantes was plundered by the Normans. Erispoë launched a war against them but it came to an end when the Normans left c.855. He was assassinated at the altar of a church, which was then considered a place of asylum, by his cousin and successor Salomon, aided by Alcmar, the Bishop of Nantes. Erispoë married Marmohec and had at least two children, including a boy named Conan, and a girl. Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erispoe%2C_Duke_of_Brittany Erispoe (French: Erispoë, Latin: Herispoius, Herispogius, or Respogius; died 2 or 12 November 857) was the Duke of Brittany from 851 until his death. He was the eldest son and successor of Nominoe. He was called rex Brittonum by Regino of Prüm, but this indicates only that he received a gift of regalia and not that he was ever king by imperial grant or even in his own charters. Immediately after his father's death, his power was challenged by his nominal suzerain, Charles the Bald, who crossed the river Vilaine with an army and was soundly defeated by Erispoe on 22 August 851 at the Battle of Jengland. Erispoe met Charles in Angers (possibly in secret) in the days following the battle and concluded a peace treaty in return for being invested with the counties of Rennes and Nantes. South of the Loire, the Pays de Retz was detached from the County of Poitou and granted to him as well. Charles and Erispoe also created a baptismal alliance, whereby Charles stood as godfather at the baptism of Erispoe's infant son Conan, but whether in 851 or 856 is unknown. Finally, in 851 Charles gave Erispoe royal regalia (robes at least) and Erispoe in turn pledged himself to Charles with the giving of hands and an oath of fidelity. Erispoe consequently overate at the banquet given in his honour. According to the Annales Bertiniani, at Louviers in February 856 Erispoe's daughter (unnamed in the sources) was betrothed to Charles's young son, Louis the Stammerer, who was granted the ducatus Cenomannicus as subking of Neustria with Le Mans as his capital. With the consent of the Frankish magnates, Louis received the regnum Neustriae from Erispoe: Karlus rex cum Respogio Brittone paciscens, filiam eius filio suo Ludoico despondet, dato illi ducatu Cenomannico usque ad viam quae a Lotitia Parisiorum Cesaredunum Turonum ducit. King Carles making peace with Erispoe of Brittany, the daughter of whom was betrothed to his son Louis, gave the duchy of Maine as far as the road from Paris to Tours as duke. Erispoe was at peace with Charles for the whole of his reign after Jengland and he governed as a typical Carolingian regional official might, with the added dignity of a consors regni (royal consort). Erispoe's use of a royal seal has led to the false belief that he was a king (rex), but in fact he probably received the right to use such as seal from Charles, who himself used a imperial seal. Erispoe was a benefactor of the abbey of Redon, as his father had been; his power base lay in the Vannetais and southeast Brittany (even more easterly than his father). In 853 the town of Nantes was plundered by the Vikings. Erispoe launched a war against them but it came to an end when they departed a few years later. He was assassinated at the altar of a church, which was then considered a place of asylum, by his cousin and successor Salomon, aided by an obscure Almarchus (Almarus). He was buried at Redon. By his wife Marmohec (who predeceased him) he hadat least two children, the aforementioned Conan and the girl, who eventually married Gurvand of Rennes. Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erispoe |
Nominoë (vers 800 - 7 mars 851 près de Vendôme) fut souverain de Bretagne de 845 à 851. Il fut à l'origine de la naissance d'une Bretagne unifiée et indépendante, d'où le qualificatif de père de la Patrie : "Tad ar Vro" Né aux alentours de l'an 800, ses origines sont incertaines. Il fut comte de Vannes à partir de juillet 819, Nominoë fut nommé missus imperatoris de Louis le Pieux et ducatus ipsius gentis des Bretons à partir de 831. À la mort de ce dernier, en 840, il soutient dans un premier temps Charles le Chauve puis entre en rébellion ouverte contre l'administration franque. Dans sa volonté d'assurer l'autonomie de la Bretagne face au royaume franc, il s'allie avec Lambert II de Nantes, fils du précédent comte de Nantes mais non-confirmé dans cette charge par Charles le Chauve. Le roi Charles doit reconnaître l'autorité de Nominoë en 846[1] à la suite des batailles de Messac (843) et de Ballon (845). Battu trois fois par les Vikings, Nominoë doit traiter avec eux pour qu'ils s'éloignent de Bretagne[2]. Deux ans après, il s'empare d'Angers et des pays voisins[3]. A cause de la défection de Lambert II de Nantes, il envahit ensuite Nantes et Rennes en 850, lance des raids sur le Bessin et le Comté du Maine. Nominoë meurt subitement au cours d'une lutte en profondeur dans le comté de Chartres, le 7 mars 851[4] près de Vendôme, après avoir conquis le Maine et l'Anjou. Il est inhumé dans l'abbaye Saint-Sauveur de Redon.[5] Contrairement à la croyance générale, Nominoë n'a jamais porté le titre de roi (bien que le chroniqueur médiéval Réginon de Prüm lui donne ce titre). Dans le cartulaire de Redon, il est tour à tour qualifié de duc des Bretons, de duc en Bretagne, de duc de toute la Bretagne, de prince de Bretagne et de prince de toute la Bretagne. C'est son fils et successeur Erispoë qui a le premier usé de ce titre attribué par Charles le Chauve après la bataille de Jengland. Avecla reprise en main de la Bretagne par Alain Barbe-Torte après la destruction du royaume breton par les Normands, le titre de roi sera abandonné et les souverains de Bretagne prendront le titre de Dux Brittonum. Son nom en breton est Nevenoe. Dans son Histoire de la Bretagne, Arthur de La Borderie lui a décerné le qualificatif de Tad ar Vro, c'est-à-dire « père de la patrie ». En français, la graphie Nominoé est aussi utilisée. Certains le qualifient de prince des Vénètes, mais c'est peut-être seulement en raison de sa fonction de comte de Vannes. D'autres pensent que s'il possédait beaucoup de biens familiaux dans la cité des Vénètes, il y ferait davantage de cadeaux à ses amis vénètes. Son nom, rare, a été rapproché du nom breton Nevenou, mais les noms sont parfois trompeurs, surtout à cette époque. On trouvait de nombreux Bernaardt en Basse-Bretagne mais ils n'étaient pas francs, c'est-à-dire qu'ils n'avaient rien de germanique à part leur prénom. Les Geoffroy qui allaient bientôt devenir très nombreux en Europe, ne partageaient pas forcément non plus les origines germaniques de leur prénom. Plus tard, sur la base de généalogies imaginaires, on trouva à Nominoë des origines dans le Poher. D'autres ont situé ses origines à Dinan ou dans ses environs, sans doute en raison des bienfaits qu'il prodigua aux moines de Léhon, près de Dinan. Chez les Francs, Réginon de Prüm indique que Nominoë était fils d'un paysan enrichi par la découverte d'un trésor, indications reprises par les Francs d'Anjou de la famille Foulques (Plantagenêt). Après la mort de Nominoë et l'assassinat de son fils Erispoë, leurs descendants réussissent brillamment à Rennes, toujours grâce à l'efficacité de leur cavalerie. Comme l'a révélé le conflit entre Gurvant et Pascweten en 875, les Vénètes n'avaient pas de cavalerie digne de ce nom. Autre indice, Renac, le domicile préféré de Nominoë se situait certes sur le territoire de la cité des Vénètes comme il convenait à un comte de Vannes, mais dans ses confins limitrophes de la cité des Redones, juste à côté du lieudit Roton ou Conwoïon faisait construire une abbaye grâce au soutien actif de Nominoë. On sait combien Lambert tenait à Nantes, mais Nominoë ne tenait-il pas tout autant à Rennes? En 850, c'est d'abord de Rennes qu'ils sont venus s'emparer, juste avant de récidiver dans la foulée à Nantes. Leurs demeures respectives de Craon et de Renac n'étant pas très éloignées avec un bon cheval, on peut penser que ces deux cavaliers confirmés se rendaient visite à domicile pourparler politique. Renac faisait sûrement très campagne à côté de Craon, la ville antique avec son abbaye Saint-Clément et son prieuré, toutefois Conwoïon avait déjà bien compensé en faisant construire l'abbaye Saint-Sauveur sur le chantier du lieudit « Roton ». Nominoë (died March 7, 851), was count of Vannes and the first king of Brittany, from 846 to his death. His name in Breton is Nevenoe. To Breton nationalists he is known as Tad ar Vro, or "father of the country". He was nominated by king Louis I of France and Holy Roman Emperor to rule Brittany as his vassal. Nominoe honoured the agreement and remained a faithful servant until 841, when Louis died and was succeeded by Charles the Bald. Apparently the relations between the Duke and Charles were not as amicable, because Nominoe refused to swear allegiance to the new king and rebelled, declaring Brittany an independent state. Charles of France hurried to crush the rebellion but, after some minor skirmishes, was utterly defeated in the battle of Ballon. In 846, Charles was forced to recognise the independence of Brittany and Nominoe as its king. Nominoe died undefeated in Vendôme in 851, after conquering the counties of Maine and Anjou. After duke Alan II, the title of king was abandoned and the rulers took the title of dukes of Brittany. Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominoe%2C_Duke_of_Brittany Nominoe or Nomenoe (French: Nominoë, Breton: Nevenoe; died 7 March 851) was the first Duke of Brittany from 846 to his death. He is a sort of Breton pater patriae and to Breton nationalists he is known as Tad ar Vro ("father of the country"). After a general rebellion which had enveloped the entire Carolingian Empire was put down, a general assembly was held at Ingelheim in May 831. It was probably there that the emperor Louis the Pious appointed Nominoe, a Breton, to rule the Bretons (which corresponded to "almost all" of Brittany). Regino of Prüm in his famous Chronicon writes, inaccurately for the year 837, that: Murmanus rex Brittonum moritur et Numenoio apud Ingelheim ab imperator ducatus ipsius gentis traditur. Morman, king of the Bretons, died and Numenoi [Nominoe] was created duke of that same people by the emperor at Ingelheim. Nominoe was a staunch ally of Louis the Pious until the emperor's death in 840. He supported Louis in the several civil wars of the 830s and he supported the monastery of Redon, even ordering the monks to pray for Louis in light of the emperor's "strife". Nominoe's power base was in the Vannetais and two charters refer to him as Count of Vannes, though it is unknown when that title was held, be it as early as 819 or as late as 834. Nominoe may not have possessed any land outside Vannes and his ability to gather revenue in Breton-speaking territories was probably no greater than any other aristocrat of those regions. His chief source of income after he broke with his overlord was plunder from raids into Frankish territory and from the despoliation of churches. He did have the political authority to exact payment (wergild) in the form of land from a man who had murdered his follower Catworet. The title Duke of Brittany is primarily a chronicler's invention of the tenth century. Nominoe never held a title from the emperor, who refers to him in charters as merely fidelis, "faithful one", or as missus imperatoris, "imperial emissary", which was probably the title he was granted at Ingelheim.[6] In Breton charters, Nominoe was known inconsistently by several titles from February 833 until his death: - Nominoe magistro in Britanniam - Nominoe possidente Brittanniam - gubernante Nominoe totam Brittanniam - Nominoe principe in Brittannia - regnante Nominoe in Brittannia - Nominoe duce in Britannia - Nomenoius dux - Nominoius princeps - Nomenogius Britto The relations between Nominoe and Charles the Bald, Louis's successor after 840, were initially amicable. In the midst of a revolt of his men in Neustria, Charles sent from Le Mans to see if Nominoe would submit to him in the spring of 841 and Nominoe agreed to do so. It is clear from the wording of the account of this event in Nithard that Nominoe was two powerful to be compelled to submit; later in 841 he rebuffed the overtures of the new emperor, Lothair I, who claimed Neustria. Nominoe remained loyal to Charles throughout the next year, even making a donation "in alms for the king" to the abbey of Redon on 25 January 842. Breton soldiers, as well as Gascons, certainly took part in the military show of the Oaths of Strasbourg. In the summer of 843, Lothair or perhaps his supporter Lambert II of Nantes succeeded in persuading Nominoe to abandon Charles and go over to the emperor. Nominoe was thereafter a constant enemy of Charles and his authority in Neustria, oftenacting in concert with Lothair, Lambert, and Pepin II of Aquitaine. Breton troops fought under Lambert in Neustria and when, in June 844, Charles was besieging Toulouse, Nominoe raided into Maine and plundered the territory. In November 843,Charles had marched as far as Rennes to compel Breton submission, but to no effect. At the synod of Yütz in October 844, presided over by Charles' uncle Drogo of Metz, the bishops sent orders to Nominoe, Lambert, and Pepin commanding them to renew their fealty to Charles or be prepared to accept military consequences. Lambert and Pepin complied, but Nominoe ignored the Frankish bishops. However, some Bretons had connived against him with Charles and the king tried to enter Brittany in support of the defectors, but without success: he was defeated at the Battle of Ballon just north of Redon across the Vilaine on 22 November 845. It is probable that in the Vannetais Nominoe's authority had been weakened after his split with Charles in 843 and Lupus of Ferrières reports "unrest" in Brittany during this period. In 844 and 847 according to the Annales Bertiniani, Nominoe made war on the Vikings. In Summer 846, Charles marched on Brittany and again took no military action, instead coming to peace with Nominoe and exchanging oaths. The details of the peace arrangements are unknown, but Prudentius of Troyes uses the title "duke" (dux) for the first time in this context and this may indicate that Nominoe was created Duke of the Bretons in return for recognising Charles' lordship. As another part of the agreement, Nominoe had Charles remove Lambert from Nantes and put him in power in Sens further away. By Christmastime, Nominoe's Bretons were raiding Neustria, this time near Bayeux, again. This was probably instigated by Lothair, for he, Charles, and their brother Louis the German met at Meerssen in February 847 and agreed to send orders toNominoe and Pepin II to desist from making war on Charles. Nominoe, probably being paid by Lothair, did not in fact desist; neither did Pepin. In two campaigns in the spring and then fall of 849, Charles was in Aquitaine and Nominoe took theopportunity to raid Neustria. Charles reestablshed Lambert in Nantes after Nominoe invaded Anjou. In 850, Lambert (and his brother Warnar) had renewed their friendship with Nominoe and together were raiding Maine "with unspeakable fury" according to the Chronicon Fontanellense. In August, Charles marched on Rennes, again avoided fighting,and installed garrisons their and at Nantes. Immediately after he left, Lambert and Nominoe defeated the garrisons and captured the new Count of Nantes, Amalric. On 7 March 851, Nominoe died near Vendôme while ravaging the Nantais and Anjou; he was buried at Redon. By his wife Argentaela, Nominoe left a son named Erispoe, who succeeded him. Nominoe was thus the founder of a political tradition in Brittany which had not thitherto existed; though his charters did not mimic Carolingian ones, his successors would imitate the legitimising Carolingian language in theirs. In 849 at a place called Coitlouh, Nominoe held a synod whereat he deposed the five Breton bishops of Alet, Saint-Pol, Vannes, Quimper, and Dol. The charges he levelled against them are unknown. Pope Leo IV sent a letter to Nominoe and the bishops (whether before or after the deposition is unknown) informing him that the depositions could only be enacted by a panel of twelve bishops with seventy-two witnesses. The later popes Benedict II and Nicholas I believed that Nominoe had forced the bishops to admit to crimes they had not committed and that there depositions were thus invalid. A Frankish synod of 850 held at either Angers or Tours accused Nominoe of simony by unlawfully removing bishops and replacing them with mercenarii (mercenaries of his own). These mercenarii were excommunicated, as indicated by an epistle of the synod of Savonnières in 859 sent to what remained of the Breton church in communion with the Archdiocese of Tours. Nominoe sacked Rennes and Nantes, replacing the new Frankish bishop of the latter with his own nominee. Susannus was deposed in Vannes and replaced by Courantgen. Salocon was deposed in Dol, but his replacement is unknown. At Quimper, Felix was replaced by Anaweten and at Saint-Pol, Clutwoion replaced Garnobrius. The two bishops of Alet, first Rethwalatr and then Mahen are very obscure figures. The bishop of Nantes which Nominoe succeeded in removing for a bout a year was the famous Actard. His replacement was the obscure Gislard. In the end the synof of Coitlouh and the bringing of the bishoprics of Rennes and Nantes into the Breton fold meant that the church of Brittany was an actively independent ecclesiastic polity from its nominal metropolitan, the see of Tours. Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominoe |
Abbaye Saint-Sauveur |
Marié en 1536 avec Guilhemine ROLLAND, fille de Jacques ROLLAND (Décédé en 1524) et de Bernarde de MONTCLAR (Née en 1478) Source : DE RAUGLAUDRE Denis |
Marié avec Marie de BERTON-CRILLON. Source : DE RAUGLAUDRE Denis |
Cf blasons : http://gw.geneanet.org/index.php3?b=jmg2003&lang=fr&m=A&p=guillaume&n=de+brezons&oc=2&v=3&t=G&siblings=on¬es=on&bd=0&color=&after=&before= Les BRÉZONS était une famille d'Auvergne sur laquelle on peut consulter : - le dictionnaire de Remacle sur les familles d'Auvergne - les seigneurs de Brezons, par Alfred Loussert - les inventaires des Archives du Cantal Source : Jean-Louis DEGA |
Château de Valuéjols |
Mariée avec Guillaume MASSEBEAU Source : Denis de RAUGLAUDRE |
Marié le 8 janvier 1570 avec Gilberte de CORDEBOEUF-BEAUVERGER-MONTGON (c.m.), fille de Bénigne de CORDEBOEUF et de Louise de LÉOTOING Source : Denis de RAUGLAUDRE |
Mariée en 1580 avec Jean du PUY Mariée en 1590 avec François de TRAVERSE (Ecuyer. Seigneur d'Anterroches, de Combrelles et de Bressanges), fils de François de TRACERSE (Seigneur d'Anterroches) et de Jeanne de LIMOGES Source : Denis de RAUGLAUDRE |
Jean-Louis DEGA - 8/5/2007 - http://fr.groups.yahoo.com/group/genealogie_albigeois/message/3407 |
Il assiste au contrat de mariage de sa belle-soeur Jeanne de JOYEUSE qui épousa Antoine de BOUILLÉ du Chariol. |
Jean-Louis DEGA - 8/5/2007 - http://fr.groups.yahoo.com/group/genealogie_albigeois/message/3407 |
Assistaient au contrat : - Louis de JOYEUSE, évêque de Saint-Flour (qui arrangea sans doute le mariage vu la distance entre les résidences des 2 familles) - Guilaume de JOYEUSE, évêque d'Alet - Jacques de JOYEUSE, protonotaire du Saint-Siège |
Le 1er juin 1524 selon Jean-Paul SUPPLY |
Marié le 28 novembre 1582 avec Jeanne DANTIL de LIGONNÈS, fille de Jacques DANTIL de LIGONNÈS et de Françoise de CLAVIERS Source : Denis de RAUGLAUDRE |
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