He was born about 1692 and his parents were Marie Agnes (Grondin) and Pierre Emond.
Pierre Emond or Hedmond married on 05 Feb 1714 at Notre-Dame-de-Liesse of Rivière-Ouelle to Marie Madeleine Mignau, daughter of Marie Sainte (Boucher) and Jean Mignau. [1]
He passed away on 17 Nov 1749 and was buried on 18 Nov 1749 at Notre-Dame de Québec in Quebec City. [2]
Sources
↑Collection Drouin (IGD - membership); m: 05 Feb 1714 Rivière-Ouelle; GROOM: Pierre Hedmond @21yrs (parents: Pierre Hedmond & Marie Agnes Grondin); & BRIDE: Marie Madeleine Mignau @23yrs (parents: Jean Mignau & Marie Sainte Boucher)
MyHeritage Family tree #116520232-5 by Braden Bouchard; for Pierre Aymond or Émond
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Pierre by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known yDNA test-takers in his direct paternal line.
Mitochondrial DNA test-takers in the direct maternal line:
please note that women keep their own names in this culture, so putting their last name in brackets is totally incorrect. See https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:Quebecois Québécois project page for guidelines on names and location names, which also apply later
This is false and a misconception by English speaking people.
I have first hand knowledge through my French Canadian ancestry, and
my mother and grandmother were NEVER called by their maiden surnames.
Many of my relatives still live in Quebec and I can assure
you that they are all known by their married surnames.
You can also confirm this by looking at notable females from Quebec province.
Maiden surnames are only used on LEGAL documents for clarification,
but married women always go by their married surnames in society.
Do you know the difference between Madame and Mademoiselle ?
Mademoiselle is for an unmarried woman.
But married women are always called by
Madame followed by their married surname.
sorry, but this is incorrect for this time period. The practice of naming women with their husband's last name started AFTER the English conquest, many years after in fact, and got legally reverted to original practice in 1980s, so any document names the woman by her LNAB. She may or may not go by her husband's name socially, that is an individual choice. I know some who do, and others who don't. But back then, it simply wasn't the case.
And I live here, so have personal knowledge on this question.
What I know is from my life experience, especially in my younger years. But, you are right, that I do not know the Quebec laws about names in recent years since the 1980s. So I will take your advice and stop repeating my old info. Thanks
I have first hand knowledge through my French Canadian ancestry, and my mother and grandmother were NEVER called by their maiden surnames. Many of my relatives still live in Quebec and I can assure you that they are all known by their married surnames. You can also confirm this by looking at notable females from Quebec province.
Maiden surnames are only used on LEGAL documents for clarification, but married women always go by their married surnames in society. Do you know the difference between Madame and Mademoiselle ? Mademoiselle is for an unmarried woman. But married women are always called by Madame followed by their married surname.
And I live here, so have personal knowledge on this question.
Clear duplicate