Didace-Jacques
AMIOT
(b.
26 September 1761
,
Saint-Joseph-de-Beauce, Canada
d.
21 February 1851
,
Sainte-Martine, Canada East
)
Am I Your Ancestor?
AMIOT Family Tree – Connecting the Past to the Present!
Didace-Jacques AMIOT was born 26 September 1761 in Saint-Joseph-de-Beauce, Canada
Didace-Jacques AMIOT was the child of Charles-Louis AMYOT (AMIOT) and Marie-Josepthe CLICHE and the grandchild of: (paternal) Charles AMYOT (AMIOT) and Marie-Angélique MÉTIVIER (maternal) Claude CLICHE and Marie-Josephte DUBOISSpouse(s)/Partner(s) and Child(ren):
Didace-Jacques married Marie-Josephte PRIMEAU 28 January 1793 in Châteauguay, Lower Canada . The couple had (at least) 1 child.
Marie-Josephte PRIMEAU was born 20 August 1772 in Sault-St-Louis, Québec, Canada (Kahnawake). Marie-Josephte died 10 January 1818 in Châteauguay, Québec, Canada (Saint-Joachim-de-Chateauguay) . Marie-Josephte was the child of Pierre PRIMEAU and Josephte PARÉ.
Didace-Jacques AMIOT died 21 February 1851 in Sainte-Martine, Canada East.
m. Primeau Marie-Josephte
Details of the family tree of Didace-Jacques appear below.
Occupation
Didace-Jacques AMIOT was a Cultivateur.
The farmer, cultivateur, or cultivator, was a person who cultivated and exploited the land in order to get a crop.
He may have been the proprietor of his own parcel(s) of land. He could, depending on the land size, have employed other agricultural workers. If he didn't own the land, he was called a tenant farmer.
Source: tfcq.ca

Source: Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts
Life as a Cultivateur in 18th Century New France: Tilling the Soil of History
Didace-Jacques AMIOT was a Cultivateur.
The farmer, cultivateur, or cultivator, was a person who cultivated and exploited the land in order to get a crop.
He may have been the proprietor of his own parcel(s) of land. He could, depending on the land size, have employed other agricultural workers. If he didn't own the land, he was called a tenant farmer.
Source: tfcq.ca

Source: Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts
Life as a Cultivateur in 18th Century New France: Tilling the Soil of History
From its inception in the early 1600s until 1760, it was called Canada, New France.
1760 to 1763, it was simply Canada
1763 to 1791 - Province of Québec
1791 to 1867 - Lower Canada
1867 to present - Québec, Canada.
Thanks to Micheline Gadbois MacDonald for providing this information.
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