Nielsen Hayden genealogy
Marie Anne Langlois
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Name Marie Anne Langlois Birth Between 1650 and 1651 Paris, France
[1] Gender Female Death 6 Dec 1724 [1, 2] Burial 7 Dec 1724 St-Jean-de-l'Île-d'Orleans, L'Île-d'Orléans, Québec
[1, 2] Person ID I46226 Ancestry of PNH, TNH, and others | Ancestor of GR Last Modified 4 Jun 2026
Father Philippe Langlois Mother Marie Binet, b. Between 1621 and 1627, Paris, France
d. 16 Dec 1703 (Age 82 years)Marriage Bef 1650 Paris, France
[1] Family ID F26880 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 
René Couchon dit Laverdière, b. Bef 4 Sep 1640 d. 12 Dec 1714 (Age > 74 years) Marriage 10 Nov 1670 Ste-Famille, L'Île d'Orléans, Québec
[1, 2] Children + 1. Louis Couchon dit Laverdière, b. 10 Sep 1671 d. Bef 23 Mar 1748 (Age < 76 years) Family ID F26876 Group Sheet | Family Chart Last Modified 4 Jun 2026
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Notes - She was a fille du rois, a "daughter of the king." By 1660 or so it had become apparent that the fledgling North American colony of New France was badly short of marriageable women. To ameliorate this, between 1663 and 1673 the French government recruited respectable young women of limited prospects and, after vetting them for suitability, provided each of them with a small dowry, a chest of clothes, and one-way passage to Quebec. The approximately 800 women who made this journey became known as the "filles du roi", the "daughters of the King." Millions of modern French-Canadians can trace their descent from them, quite often from several.
She arrived 31 Jul 1670 on the Nouvelle France.
- She was a fille du rois, a "daughter of the king." By 1660 or so it had become apparent that the fledgling North American colony of New France was badly short of marriageable women. To ameliorate this, between 1663 and 1673 the French government recruited respectable young women of limited prospects and, after vetting them for suitability, provided each of them with a small dowry, a chest of clothes, and one-way passage to Quebec. The approximately 800 women who made this journey became known as the "filles du roi", the "daughters of the King." Millions of modern French-Canadians can trace their descent from them, quite often from several.
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Sources - [S38] Genealogy of the French in North America, by Denis Beauregard. Complete version, 2025.
- [S8920] Le Programme de recherche en démographie historique (The Research Program in Historical Demography) (PRDH) database.
- [S38] Genealogy of the French in North America, by Denis Beauregard. Complete version, 2025.