According to the unreliable Ancestry.com "Family Data Collection," she was born in Albany, New Netherland, in May 1660 and died in Albany in June 1703, due to childbirth.[1]
She was married to Marten Jansen van Alstyne. Information added to this profile by a WikiTree contributor stated that they married on 21 October 1685 at the First Dutch Reformed Church of Albany, Albany, New York, but the only marriage recorded in that church on 21 October 1685 is that of "Mathys Jansz, y.m., and Cornelia Mattheusz, y.d., both l. in the neighborhood [landschap] of N.A."[2] An alternate marriage date of 1678 (before the start of the Albany record books) was found in Geocities and was reported from the Ancestry.com "Family Data Collection" entry. [1][3]
Church Records
1685 Feb 01 Marretje - of Marten Jansz. Witnesses: Jacob Ten Eyk. By Ariaantje. [4]
1687 Oct 02 Geertje - of Maren jansz. Witnesses: Symon Van Esch. By Dirkje Lucasz. [5]
1690 Feb 05 Lidia - of Marte Jansz. Witnesses: father, Jacob Vosburg. By Marietje Vosburg. [6]
1692 Dec 04 Jacob - of Marten Jansz and Jannetje Cornelisz. Witnesses: Phlip Foreest, Tryntje Foreest. [7]
1695 Jan 20 Abigael - of Marte Jansz and Jannetje Cornelis. Witnesses: Abraham Jansz, Doretje Jansz. [8]
1698 Jul 17 Abram - of Marten Jansz and Jannetje Cornelisz. Witnesses: Abram Verplank, Maritje Verplank. [9]
1703 Jun 20 Isaac - of Marten Van Aalstein and Jannetje Cornelisse. Witnesses: Cornelis and Maria Bogaart. [10]
Research notes
LNAB
Cornelisz, Jannetje's patronymic, is the "surname" that first appears in church records for her, at the baptism of her son Jacob. Quackenbush-118 16:18, 6 October 2017 (EDT)
Origin and meaning of the surname Bogaert
Source of the following information is not indicated:
Bogaert, also spelt Boogart, Boogard, Bogart, Boogaert, Boogaerd, is a shortened form of Van den Boogaard and Van den Boogaerd, though this surname seems also to have stood on its own without Van de before it. The name Van den Boogaard means From the orchard. Boogaard itself (and its variant spellings) is composed of two Dutch words: Boom (Tree) and Gaard (Garden, Yard, Outdoor enclosed area). Together the two words mean Tree garden, hence Orchard.
↑ 1.01.1 Ancestry.com "Family Data Collection" entry at Ancestry Record genepool #3788993: Birth date: 1660. Birth place: Fort Orange, Albany, NY. Death date: 1703. Death place: New York, Childbirth. Marriage date: 1678. Marriage place: of Albany, Albany, NY.
↑ Records of the Reformed Dutch Church of Albany, New York, 1683–1809, Excerpted from Year Books of the Holland Society of New York. Part 1, page 21.
↑ Geocities [on-line] http://web.archive.org/web/20091025085455/http://geocities.com/heartland/ridge/7026/main/d2 (dead URL; archived version also is dead) : Text: "Martin Janse Van Alstyne was baptised on 18 Jul 1655 in New Amsterdam. He died in 1765. Lived in Albany and Canajohorie. Parents: Jan Martense Van Alstyne and Dirckje Harmense Boertgen. He was married to Jannetje Cornelise Bogart in 1678."
Thank you to Laurie Scheeler for creating WikiTree profile Bogart-322 through the import of Laurie Scheeler family tree.ged on May 7, 2013.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Jannetje Cornelisse by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Jannetje Cornelisse:
Bogart-322 and Bogaert-161 appear to represent the same person because: Same name, same dates, same parents (but different profiles)/ Different husbands at the moment, but the husband currently connected to Bogart-322 seems to have died in childhood, while the husband connected to Bogaert-161 (Marten Janse van Alstyne) is commonly identified as her husband. Need to determine LNAB before completing merge.
The marriage recorded on Oct. 21 1685 is Mathys Jansz, y.m., and Cornelia Mattheusz, y.d., both l. in the neighborhood [landschap] of N.A.