Null ESSONNE. Seigneury of VILLIERS-LE-BÂCLE. 1547. Copy of a Parlement ruling c…
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ESSONNE. Seigneury of VILLIERS-LE-BÂCLE. 1547. Copy of a Parlement ruling concerning an exchange contract between the Religieux de Sainte-Croix de la Bretonnerie and the Seigneurs de Villiers-le-Bascle. Parchment (59.5 x 52 cm).

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ESSONNE. Seigneury of VILLIERS-LE-BÂCLE. 1547. Copy of a Parlement ruling concerning an exchange contract between the Religieux de Sainte-Croix de la Bretonnerie and the Seigneurs de Villiers-le-Bascle. Parchment (59.5 x 52 cm).

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[Macon] [manuscript] LAPLATTE (Abbé François) : Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire sacrée et profane de Macon - Turpe est Atheniensem preregrinum esse - 1766. One volume. 19 by 25.5 cm. (12)-564 pages, followed by a hundred blank leaves. Contemporary boards bound in marbled paper. Handwritten text on bluish paper, very legible, with a few erasures, and additional notes in the margins. In perfect condition. Attached is a handwritten letter addressed to Abbé LAPLATTE, containing a clarification of a scholarly note on the land of Leyne in 1363. Letter addressed to Monsieur La Platte, former curé de l'hesne, near Saint-Pierre church in Mâcon. A manuscript of the same work is in the Bibliothèque municipale de MACON, and was transcribed in the Hors-série N°2 of Etudes Mâconnaises in September 2017. But the manuscript we present is not an identical copy of the transcribed one. We can assume that it is a first version of the text, later taken up and expanded. As a clue, the manuscript held by the town of MACON is dated 1768, ours 1766. Our manuscript stops at around 1702, with a line at the bottom of the page closing it off, for the elements recounted there, whereas the transcribed manuscript goes right up to the beginning of the Revolution. In the preface, our copy cites Gregory of Tours and the Livre enchainé from the archives of Saint-Vincent. These two sources are ignored by the Macon manuscript, which adds Guillaume Paradin. Our copy is often less detailed than the transcribed text, and this seems to confirm the hypothesis of a first version of the text. Here's an example: "One of the parish priests of the diocese who best fulfilled the pious views of Mr. Leveque was Mr. de Boisfranc parish priest of Bussières: see brochure." says our copy (page 456) "One of the parish priests who best fulfilled the holy views of the bishop was Monsieur de Boisfranc, parish priest of Bussières, who, having been a Calvinist himself, knew better the errors of the party. He blessed God for enlightening his eyes, generously abjured his errors and, like another Paul, sought to defend the truths he had so shamefully opposed. He entered the clergy. His talents were known, and Bussières having been entrusted to him, he brought a large number of Calvinists back into the fold of the church" is the version in the 1768 manuscript (page 196 of his transcription). The text then continues with a paragraph, identical in both manuscripts. Attached is Hors-Série N°2 of Etudes Mâconnaises, in which Abbé LAPLATTE's 1768 copy has been transcribed. A unique and exceptional document.

SOMME (80) / Family archives of Albert DAUPHIN (Amiens 1827 - Argoeuves 1898, lawyer and President of the Amiens Bar, First President of the Amiens Court of Appeal, Mayor of Amiens from 1868 to 1873, Prefect of the Somme in 1871, then General Councillor of Amiens, President of the Somme General Council, briefly Deputy of the Somme but Senator for 12 years, also Minister of Finance for 6 months in 1887, a street in Amiens bears his name): these papers concern the Caumartin and Maressal families on his mother's side, and de Sachy on his father's / Some 18th-century documents (8) refer to Jean Sachy, Seigneur d'Omécourt (his father was the first Alderman of Amiens), whose confirmation of nobility is recorded on parchment in Amiens in 1698 (extract from the registers), as well as the Bultel and Lepaige families (inventory dated October 3, 1758, following the death of Antoine Lepaige, bourgeois of Amiens, former police commissioner, who had died a few days earlier, on Sept. 28, in Amiens at the Maison des Pères de l'Observatoire, where he had retired, and from which we have his daughter's renunciation of the estate - Most of these archives belong to the 1823 estate of Jean François Philibert Maressal (Albert Dauphin's maternal great-grandfather), a large landowner in the Amiens region, including his will (period copy), various deeds of succession (copies), important farm accounts (10 large notebooks), 3 large account books from 1820 for his house (with receipts and letters pinned to the wall) and for miscellaneous holdings (logging), followed by numerous deeds of division between the heirs - a large file concerning the Maressal estate concerns Grévin Aîné, an important figure in Amiens (author of the Amiens town plan and street numbering), with over 20 autograph letters signed, relating to the Domaine de Bertaucourt (a former abbey that was purchased as a native property), which Grévin had to survey and appraise - it also deals with the estate of Jean-Henri Dauphin, Albert's father - a fine and coherent set of documents.