This is a very famous family that features heavily in most Protestant
Bibliography. I am 'Quasiment' sure that this family features in Haag's opus.
Peter (de loriol)
RE HOTMAN
Moderator: MOD_nyhetsgrupper
-
Gjest
Re: RE HOTMAN
Peter wrote: "This is a very famous family that features heavily in most Protestant Bibliography. I am 'Quasiment' sure that this family features in Haag's opus. Peter (de loriol)"
----------------------
The genealogy of Suzanne Hotman and her father Francois and others, with some sources is here:
http://members.aol.com/davidbaud/hotman.htm
The most useful biography of Francois, which I alluded to in my last post, was in 1973 as:
Donald R. Kelley, "Francois Hotman: A Revolutionary's Ordeal". 1973.
I have already extracted the genealogical information from that biography and it was useful to an extent, but of course we always want more don't we. There is another recent book on his son Jean and his connection to such people as Sir Amias Paulet, Robert Dudley Earl Leicester, possibly Sir Francis Bacon, and Penelope Devereux Lady Rich. I haven't yet gotten that book, it's out-of-print, but when I do I'll forward anything useful about the family genealogy to David Baud.
The connection of the Hotman family to descendents in Canada was published in Rene Jette "Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec" 1983. University of Montreal Press. There are errors, but it's still the most highly prized genealogy work on early Canadian families in my opinion (1612-1730). And it lists copious sources for anyone wanting to collect the primary documents.
At any rate, there are still some descendents of the HOTMAN who claim aristocratic titles as you can see on David Baud's website. Evidently Francis himself lost his chance to get a landed title due to his Protestanism. Or something along those lines at any rate.
Will Johnson
----------------------
The genealogy of Suzanne Hotman and her father Francois and others, with some sources is here:
http://members.aol.com/davidbaud/hotman.htm
The most useful biography of Francois, which I alluded to in my last post, was in 1973 as:
Donald R. Kelley, "Francois Hotman: A Revolutionary's Ordeal". 1973.
I have already extracted the genealogical information from that biography and it was useful to an extent, but of course we always want more don't we. There is another recent book on his son Jean and his connection to such people as Sir Amias Paulet, Robert Dudley Earl Leicester, possibly Sir Francis Bacon, and Penelope Devereux Lady Rich. I haven't yet gotten that book, it's out-of-print, but when I do I'll forward anything useful about the family genealogy to David Baud.
The connection of the Hotman family to descendents in Canada was published in Rene Jette "Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec" 1983. University of Montreal Press. There are errors, but it's still the most highly prized genealogy work on early Canadian families in my opinion (1612-1730). And it lists copious sources for anyone wanting to collect the primary documents.
At any rate, there are still some descendents of the HOTMAN who claim aristocratic titles as you can see on David Baud's website. Evidently Francis himself lost his chance to get a landed title due to his Protestanism. Or something along those lines at any rate.
Will Johnson
-
Leo van de Pas
Re: RE HOTMAN
See below
----- Original Message -----
From: <WJhonson@aol.com>
To: <GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@rootsweb.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 15, 2005 8:53 AM
Subject: Re: RE HOTMAN
Haag's opus. Peter (de loriol)"
There is another recent book on his son Jean and his connection to such
people as Sir Amias Paulet, Robert Dudley Earl Leicester, possibly Sir
Francis Bacon, and Penelope Devereux Lady Rich. I haven't yet gotten that
book, it's out-of-print, but when I do I'll forward anything useful about
the family genealogy to David Baud.
University of Montreal Press. There are errors, but it's still the most
highly prized genealogy work on early Canadian families in my opinion
(1612-1730). And it lists copious sources for anyone wanting to collect the
primary documents.
Francis himself lost his chance to get a landed title due to his
Protestanism. Or something along those lines at any rate.
have in my system has MANY titled descendants (via female links). I have a
file of some 747 pages with descendants (still very incomplete) anyone
interested? If anyone can add more to what I have, I would be grateful
Best wishes
Leo van de Pas
Canberra, Australia
----- Original Message -----
From: <WJhonson@aol.com>
To: <GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@rootsweb.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 15, 2005 8:53 AM
Subject: Re: RE HOTMAN
Peter wrote: "This is a very famous family that features heavily in most
Protestant Bibliography. I am 'Quasiment' sure that this family features in
Haag's opus. Peter (de loriol)"
----------------------
The genealogy of Suzanne Hotman and her father Francois and others, with
some sources is here:
http://members.aol.com/davidbaud/hotman.htm
The most useful biography of Francois, which I alluded to in my last post,
was in 1973 as:
Donald R. Kelley, "Francois Hotman: A Revolutionary's Ordeal". 1973.
I have already extracted the genealogical information from that biography
and it was useful to an extent, but of course we always want more don't we.
There is another recent book on his son Jean and his connection to such
people as Sir Amias Paulet, Robert Dudley Earl Leicester, possibly Sir
Francis Bacon, and Penelope Devereux Lady Rich. I haven't yet gotten that
book, it's out-of-print, but when I do I'll forward anything useful about
the family genealogy to David Baud.
The connection of the Hotman family to descendents in Canada was published
in Rene Jette "Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec" 1983.
University of Montreal Press. There are errors, but it's still the most
highly prized genealogy work on early Canadian families in my opinion
(1612-1730). And it lists copious sources for anyone wanting to collect the
primary documents.
At any rate, there are still some descendents of the HOTMAN who claim
aristocratic titles as you can see on David Baud's website. Evidently
Francis himself lost his chance to get a landed title due to his
Protestanism. Or something along those lines at any rate.
Will Johnson
I know I am taking Wills remark the wrong way, but the Francois Hotman I
have in my system has MANY titled descendants (via female links). I have a
file of some 747 pages with descendants (still very incomplete) anyone
interested? If anyone can add more to what I have, I would be grateful
Best wishes
Leo van de Pas
Canberra, Australia
-
Denis Beauregard
Re: RE HOTMAN
On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 22:13:51 +0000 (UTC), leovdpas@netspeed.com.au
("Leo van de Pas") wrote in soc.genealogy.medieval:
The Hotman have been explored many times. They have many crowned
descendants, but no titled ancestor, which is closer to the aim
of most descendants (looking for more ancestors and not for
cousins).
Denis
--
0 Denis Beauregard
/\/ http://www.francogene.com
|\ >>Adresse modifiée souvent/email changed frequently<<
/ | Société généalogique canadienne-française
oo oo http://www.sgcf.com
("Leo van de Pas") wrote in soc.genealogy.medieval:
I know I am taking Wills remark the wrong way, but the Francois Hotman I
have in my system has MANY titled descendants (via female links). I have a
file of some 747 pages with descendants (still very incomplete) anyone
interested? If anyone can add more to what I have, I would be grateful
The Hotman have been explored many times. They have many crowned
descendants, but no titled ancestor, which is closer to the aim
of most descendants (looking for more ancestors and not for
cousins).
Denis
--
0 Denis Beauregard
/\/ http://www.francogene.com
|\ >>Adresse modifiée souvent/email changed frequently<<
/ | Société généalogique canadienne-française
oo oo http://www.sgcf.com