Ariaentje Cuvilje

AMERICA THE GREAT MELTING POT

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Direct descendant is highlighted in red

Adrienne Cuvelier Immigrant Ancestor  see FAMILY TREE
Born: Abt. 1590 in Valenciennes, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France

Married: Abt. 1610 to Guleyn Vigne

Married: Abt. 7 May 1738 to Jan Janszen Vigne
   
     
Died: 1655 New Netherlands

FATHER

Jean Cuvelier
   

HUSBAND

Guleyn Vigne

Jan Damen

CHILDREN

1. Maria Vigne
    b. Abt. 1612
    m. Abt. 1631 Jan Ross
    m. Abt. 1632 Abraham Isaacszen Ver Planck

2. Christina Vigne
    b. Abt. 1614
    m. Abt. 1630 Dirck Volkertszen

3. Gudyen Vigne
    b. Abt. 1616

4. Rachel Vigne
    bap. 2 Sep 1618 Leiden
   
5. Abraham Vigne
    bap 26 Sep 1619 Leiden

6. Sara Vigne
    bap. 26 Sep 1619 Leiden

7.Abraham Vigne
    bap. 26 Dec 1621 Leiden

8. Rachel Vigne
    bap. 19 Mar 1623
    m. 1639 Cornelius Van Tienhoven

9. Johannes  (Jan) Vignes
    b. Abt. 1624
    m. Emmerentje Gosens
    m. Weiske Huytes
    d. 1689

Adrienne Cuvelier
by Susan Brooke
Mar 2021

Adrienne Cuvelier was born about 1690 in Valenciennes, France to Jean Cuvelier. We know this from the will of her second husband, Jan Damen, in which mention his "brother" Cornelis Janszen Cupers. (7).  She married Guleyn Vigne about 1610 and them moved to Leiden, Holland by 1618.  Five of their children were baptized in Leiden. (1) They are believed to have sailed from Holland in April of 1624 on the "Nieuw Nederlandt" or on the "Eendracht." (2) At that time they had three daughters, Maria, Christina and one year old Rachel who had just been baptized in Leiden in 1623.  Their son Jan was born shortly after their arrival making him the first male born of Europeans in New Amsterdam. (3) She gave birth to nine children, but only four lived to adulthood: Maria, Christina, Rachel and Jan. Her husband, Guleyn Vigne, died in the mid 1630's and she remarried to Jan Damen, a wealthy citizen and neighbor.  Before the marriage she had a prenuptial agreement drawn up giving 200 guilders to her two married daughters and three hundred gilders to her two youngest children, with the promise and security that she and her new husband would "bring up the above named two children until they attain their majority, and be bound to clothe and rear the aforesaid children, to keep them at school and to give them a good trade, as parents ought to do."  This agreement was recorded 7 May 1638 so we know she married Jan Damen around that time. (4) After the marriage she and her four children, their spouses and her grandchildren, moved to the home of Jan Damen on the other side of  The Wall. (5)  The household consisted of six adults and eight children. Their step-father, Jan Damen, wanted the married daughters out of his household.  In 1638 Damen instituted proceeding against his (step) sons-in-law, Dirck Volckertszen (married to Christina) and Abraham Isaac Ver Planck (married to Maria) "to have them ordered to quit his house and to leave him the master thereof".  Dirck Volckertszen countered with a suit for assault in which witnesses testified to an attempt made by Damen to throw Volckertszen's wife "out of doors". It appears his wife, Christina Vigne, had been injured. (6) And the turmoil continued.  On 5 Aug 1638 Cornelis Dirckszen was plaintiff against Adriaene Cuvelzeers, with judgment for the plaintiff. (7)
So, the two married daughters moved out.  Rachel was 15, but, possibly because of all the turmoil, she married the next year at the age of 16 to Cornelius Van Tienhoven.  Jan Damen, by 1639, once again had his house to himself.  Adrienne's son Jan Vigne was still living there and Jan and Adrienne had adopted Jan's nephew, Jan Corneliszen Buys. (7) However, between the wars with the Indians and their domestic disputes, there was never a dull moment within this family. Rachel's husband, Cornelis Van Tienhoven,  had worked his way up to Secretary under Director Kieft. In 1641 Tienhoven led a party of soldiers to attack Indians accused of steeling pigs. It was actually Dutch men who had taken the pigs but Tienhoven's soldiers slaughtered several in the Raritan tribe, "mangling their dead bodies in their glee." (8)  Two years later, on Shrove Tuesday, 1643, Jan Damen hosted a dinner for his in-laws that included Director Kieft. The party plotted a massacre of the Weckquasgeek Indians, who were ostensibly under Dutch protection.  In this attack, "Infants were torn from their mothers' breasts and hack to pieces." -- When Indian parents endeavored to save their children, the soldiers---made both parents and children drown." (9) When Van Tienhoven returned from the massacre in February 1643, it has been said that Adrienne Cuvellier "amused herself in kicking about the heads of the dead men which had been brought in as bloody trophies of the midnight slaughter." (7)
Adrienne's husband, Jan Damen, also like to drink. He would often go off to his neighbor's cellar where there was an abundance of wine. And it was not unusual for Jan Damen to become unsteady on his legs and his neighbor would have to walk him home. On one occasion Jan got into a knife fight with his servant, injuring him severely.  (10)  However, their son-in-law Cornelis Van Tienhoven was the worst. In 1649 he took a trip to Holland where he seduced a basket maker's daughter.  Even though he was already married to Rachel Vigne, he and Lysbeth set up house together and he proposed marriage to her.  With the Dutch sheriff after him, he and Lysbeth escaped aboard a ship and headed back to New Amsterdam.  Rachel supposedly met him at the dock. He pretended he was really a good family man and that Lysbeth was lying, and he got back in the good graces of Governor Kieft. (8) Cornelis Van Tienhoven was not only a war-monging terrorizer of the Indians and a womanizer.  He was also an embezzler. He eventually got caught and dismissed from office. His hat and cane were found near the East River in 1656 and Director Stuyvesant ruled that he had drowned.  However, there were suspicions that he had taken his embezzled funds to the Barbados. (8)
Adrienne Cuvelier died in 1655. Most of her property was divided among the Vigne children and their families. On March 8, 1658, Dirck and his sister-in-law Maria Ver Planck were sued by Claes Van Elstandt, elder of the Dutch Reformed Church, for not paying for her grave. They said they had given the money to Van Tienhoven, who had disappeared 16 months earlier. All of the remaining heirs were then ordered to pay for the grave. (10)  Adrienne Cuvelier must have been fairly close to her son-in-law Cornelis Van Tienhoven.  She was a witness for the first two children born in New York to her daughter Rachel Vigne and Cornelis Van Tienhoven. She was also a witness for the baptism of her great granddaughter, Fyte Dircks in 1651, granddaughter of Christina Vigne. (11)
Adrienne Cuvelier had led a colorful life.  She was about sixty-five when she died and had outlived her second husband by about four years. Jan Damen had died in 1651 and not having any children of his own, he left his considerable estate to her. She in turn passed it on to her children. A dispute arose as to the partition of the estate among the heirs, which was settled 23 January, 1660." (7) She and her two husbands had owned considerable land in lower Manhattan. (12)
.

Sources 

(1) Baptisms of children in Leiden

1618 Sep 2; Rachel, daughter of Ghilain Vignier and his wife.  Witnesses: Antoine Hardewin and his wife, Ghilain Hardewin and Gertrude Quinze

1619 Sep 26 Abraham and Sara, children of Gileyn Vinoist and Adrienne Cuvelier  (image 78)

1621 Dec 26 Abraham, son of Guillain Vivier and Adrienne Cuvelier, Witnesses: Charie Bailieu and Jean Collas and the wife of Jean Adam (image 103)

1623 Mar 19 Rachel, daughter of Guillain Vigne.  Witnesses: Henri Lambert, Pierre de Fache and Marguerite Vigne (image 113)

Other Baptisms in Leiden

1617 Oct 3 Jenne Prevost, daughter of Abraham Prevost and Marie Cuvelier; Witnesses: Jenne Cuvelier, Margueritte Allard, Sidrach Crauwein, Pierre Tauris (image 67)
This Marie Cuvelier married Abraham Provoost 12 Jul 1616 in Leydon.  The record says she bas born in Leydon.

1622 Apr 24 Elisabeth, daughter of Jean du Vivier and Marguerite le Prest, Witnesses: Gerasrdt Bourgeois, Elisabeth Roban, Marguerite Carlier, Abraham du Vivier (image 106)

1624 Nov 17 Joachim Cuvelier, son of George Cuvelier and Anthoinette; Witnesses: Marguerite Rousse,  Jean Fournie, Anthoine Herbij, Thoinette Lamoij (image 127)

(2) Sailed 1624
Ghislain and Adrienne (Cuvellier) Vigne and their children Marie, Christine, and Rachel were on either Niew Nederland or De Eendracht, as their son Jan would be the first male child born in the new colony.

(3) Wikitree
Jan's honor to be the first-born male was well-known and is recorded in The Journal of Jasper Danckaers, (ed. by Bartlett Burleigh James and J. Franklin Jameson, New York, 1913).  Excerpt from entry of 23 Sep 1679, translation from Dutch: "We Conversed with the first male born of Europeans in New Netherland, named Jean Vigne.  His parents were from Valenciennes and he was now about sixty-five years of age."  Danckaerts overestimated or miscopied Jan Vigne's age - he would have been about 55, and not 65, in 1679 - but the presence of Jan's wife, more than 70 years old, could have thrown them off if they were guessing. His true age is roughly substantiated by the fact that Jan was still in school in 1635, according to a prenuptial agreement in which his future step-father promised to feed and clothe him and ensure he attended school. At one time there was also a bronze plaque in the Town Hall, naming him as the first-born. The first European child born in New York was Sara Rapalje, daughter of Joris Janszen Rapalje and Catalina Trico, in June 1625.

(4) Word Document found on Ancestry.com

 "Dirck Volgersen Noorman and Ariaentje Cevelyn, his wife's mother, came before us in order to enter into an agreement with her children whom she has borne by her lawful husband Willem Vienje, settling on Maria Vienje and Christina Vienje, both married persons, on each the sum of two hundred guilders ... and on Resel Vienje and Jan Vienje, both minor children, also as their portion of their father's estate, on each the sum of three hundred guilders; with this provision that she and her future lawful husband, Jan Jansen Damen, shall be bound to bring up the above named two children until they attain their majority, and be bound to clothe and rear the aforesaid children, to keep them at school and to give them a good trade, as parents ought to do." This agreement was dated "the last of April 1632," but was not recorded until 7 May 1638. [New York Historical Manuscripts: Dutch, Volume 1, ed. and trans. by Arnold J. F. Van Laer. Baltimore, 1974, The editor, Van Laer, was of the opinion that the year 1632, given as the date of the document, is probably wrong and should be 1635 or later. The document was certified by William Wyman, blacksmith, and Jan Thomaisen Groen, and witnessed by Jacob Albertsen Planck who arrived in New Amsterdam in 1634 on the "Eendracht."]

(5) New Netherland Ancestors of Aeltye Van Laer by David M Riker, 2000
Guleyn Vigne had a bowery on the lower part of Manhattan Island near the present Wall and Pearl Streets.  Shortly after Vigne's death which occurred circa 1634 and prior to her second marriage to Jan Jansen Damen, Ariaentje Cuvilje made a settlement with her children by Vigne.  The settlement refers to Maria and Christina as married persons and Rachel and Jan as minors.  This prenuptial settlement was entered in the register of the Provincial Secreary Cornelis Van Tienhoven on May 7, 1638.  Van Tienhoven's copy date the settlement  as the last day of April, 1632; however, it is a known fact that Jacob Albertse Planck, who wrote and witnessed the document, was not in New Netherland until August 1634. The date of the settlement, therefore, would have to be 1634 or later.  After the marriage, Ariaentje moved her family to Damen's bowery, which was just north of what became Wall Street and adjoined the Vigne property.  She survived her second husband who died in 1651, inheriting most of Damen's estate since he had no descendants of his own.  In turn she passed this estate on to her four children when she died four years later.

(6) Early Settlers of Bushwick, Long Island, New York and Their Descendants, Vol 1 by Andrew J. Provost, Jr. 1949
Dirck and his wife were living in the Damen home in 1638 when Damen instituted proceeding against his (step) sons-in-law, Dirck Volckertszen and Abraham Isaac Ver Planck, "to have them ordered to quit his house and to leave him the master thereof".  Volckertszen countered with a suit for assault in which witnesses testified to an attempt made by Damen to throw Volckertszen's wife "out of doors".  Thereafter, intervals of family friendliness, and of quarrels over property interests, appear to have existed from time to time until the estate was settled in 1660.

(7) Colonial Families of Long Island, New York and Connecticut; being the ancestry & kindred of Herbert Furman Seversith, 1939   Vol 2

pg 851 The root of the word is the Latin cuba, cube, box, whence cuvier in Franch, a maker of tubs or casks, (cooper), the diminutive of which is curvelier, a maker of small tubs or casks. The Dutch in New Amsterdam recognized that to have ben her name, for on one occasion she was called Adriaentis Kuypers.  --- It is further confirmed in the will of her second husband Jan Janszen Damen, who is 1646 mentions his brother Cornelis Janszen Cuypers (or Cornelius, son of Jean Cuvellier), also, an Ariaentje Jans appears as a sponsor in early New Amsterdam Reformed Dutch church records.

pg 849 It has been said of Adrienne Cuvellier that when one of her sons-in-law returned from the massacre of the Pavonia Indians in February. 1643, with thirty prisoners and also heads of several of the defunct enemy, she,  "forgetful of those finer feeling that do honor to her sex, amused herself in kicking about the heads of the dead men which had been brought in as bloody trophies of the midnight slaughter."


pg 849 On 5 August. 1638 Cornelis Dirckszen was plaintiff against Adriaene Cuvelzeers, as the entry was given in the records; judgment was given for the plaintiff.  This variant of the surname, so given in the printed record, was undoubtedly actually written as Cuveljeers; although, as the original record has been destroyed, we cannot prove it.  Nevertheless, this affords definite indication of the actual maiden name of this ancestress.  Under the name of Ariaentje Jans she was sponsor in the Reformed Dutch church in Manhattan, 6 September, 1643 to the baptism of Jacob Wolfertszen; on 10 June, 1646, her name misprinted as Adriaene Nuviella together with the governor, Willem Kieft and Jannetje Adrians, she was sponsor at the baptism of Jannetje, daughter of Cornelis van Tienhoven; as Adriaentie Kuypers, together with her husband Jan Janszen Damen and Adriaen van Tienhoven, she was sponsor, 17 January, 1649 to the baptism of Lucas, son of Cornelis van Tienhoven; as Ariaentje Damens, with Dirck Volkertszen and Rachel van Tienhovan, she was sponsor at the baptism, 23 April 1651, of Fytje, daughter of Jan Hermanszen Schut; and this seems to have been the last time she was a sponsor.

pg 849-50 On 12 December, 1649 Jan Janszen Damen made his will. He mentions his wife, but not by name, the son of his deceased sister Henrickje Jans, now living with the testator and called Jan Corneliszen Buys, alias Jan Damen; brothers (that is, of the testator), Cornelis Janszen Cuyper, Cornelis Janszen Damen and William Janszen Damen; sister Neltje Jans Damen; mentions the poor of Bunnick in the diocess of Utrecht; real estate and personal property.  On 21 June, 1651, is recorded the appointment by Areantje Cuvilje, widow of Jan Janszen Damen, of curators of her estate.  Subsequently on 13 September 1651 of the same year, Jan Vinje bought a lot of the estate on the east side of Broadway.

We read no more of Adrienne Cuvellier except that she died in 1655. On 25 November, 1658, Anthony Moore, burgher of New Amsterdam, acknowledged to owe Jan Vigne, son of the deceased Adriane Cuvilie; Abraham ver Planck, who married Maria Vigne; and Augustyn Haermans, attorney for Dirck Volkertszen who married Christina Vigne and also Rachel Vigne, wife of Cornelis van Tienhoven, joint heirs of the said Adriana Cuvilie, their deceased mother, the amount of 1,031 gulders and 5 stuyvers; for the purchase of a certain brewery and lot, situated on Maiden Lane.  A dispute arose as to the partition of the estate among the heirs, which was settled 23 January, 1660.

There were no children by her second husband; however they adopted Jan Janszen Damen's nephew Jan Corneliszen Buys, who is also recorded as Jan Damon.

(8)    New York's First Embezzler

Who better to siphon off funds than the bookkeeper? That's the position Cornelis van Tienhoven occupied when he arrived in New Amsterdam about 1633. But he had a long career and much notoriety ahead before he resorted to the theft that ranks him as New York's first embezzler.

A ruddy man of corpulent body, Van Tienhoven soon worked his way up to Secretary, a powerful post at the center of the colony's administration. He first earned the enmity of the people in the reign of Director Kieft, playing a key role in the Indian wars that nearly destroyed the colony.

In 1641, he led a party of soldiers to attack Indians accused of stealing pigs on Staten Island. The Indians denied responsibility. While Van Tienhoven claimed to believe them, his soldier's slaughtered several of the Raritan tribe, mangling dead bodies in their glee. The Pig War was under way, no matter Dutchmen taking on wood and water actually stole the swine.

Two years later, Van Tienhoven helped Director Kieft launch the Shrovetide massacre of the Weckquaesgeeks, the start of two bloody years that led to the recall of Kieft and the arrival of Peter Stuyvesant. In the aftermath, Van Tienhoven's mother-in-law reputedly kicked severed Indian heads like a soccer ball.

Though married, Van Tienhoven was an incorrigible womanizer. While he slaughtered Indian men, he chased after their women wearing nothing but a patch over his privates. So addictive was his lust for their flesh that no punishment from the Director could still his passions.

During a trip to Holland, Van Tienhoven seduced a basketmaker's daughter. He and his sweetheart Lysbeth set up house together, enjoying carnal conversation as the Dutch described the marital act. With the sheriff on his trail, Van Tienhoven proposed marriage and the couple escaped aboard a ship bound for New Amsterdam. Unfortunately for Lysbeth, Van Tienhoven's wife Rachel was waiting on the dock.

Upon his return, Van Tienhoven wormed his way back into Director Stuyvesant's administration, so sweetening the mouths of Stuyvesant and his Councillors that they could taste no bitterness toward him. As one observer noted, the sweetness was about to cause a heavy and severe purgation from those same mouths.

Van Tienhoven evidently dipped his hand in the till. Dismissed from his post, he wandered too close to the East River and drowned, or so Director Stuyvesant, eager to put the episode behind him, ruled when Van Tienhoven's hat and cane were found bobbing along the shore. In the people's view, the man had in fact absconded to Barbados with the embezzled funds.

"Lecherously Van Tienhoven smiled because he was the biggest womanizer in town, no matter how married or how ugly he was. The next time a woman resisted his charms, he'd spout his devil strategy to ease her mind over prying eyes. Don't worry, honey, he'd say, if anybody gossips it'll be a devil lying out their mouth."
-- Jackie Lambert in
The Mevrouw Who Saved Manhattan.

(9)  MAIDEN LANE

 

According to one legend, Maiden Lane takes its name from three sisters whose father owned a farm where the lane meets the East River. Christine, Marie and Rachel Vigne came with their parents on the first ship of settlers in 1624. Originally the families split into three groups up the Hudson River, down on the Delaware and east on the Connecticut. Within two years, the settlements had consolidated on Manhattan and the girls' parents Guillam Vigne and Adrienne Cuvelier had planted the farm.

Christine was eldest, about fourteen when she sailed to America, and she bore eight children. Maria was second, about eleven, and was the grandmother of Franklin Roosevelt by her first husband. Rachel was but a year old when she arrived on the Hudson.

The family arguably chose poorly when it came to marriage. The widowed mother Adrienne married Jan Damen, who took over her first husband's farm. Widowed Marie took Abraham Verplanck as her second husband. Rachel wed the philandering scoundrel Cornelis van Tienhoven, Secretary of the colony under two Directors. The three husbands were involved in one of the most notorious acts during the forty years of Dutch rule, an act that got underway during a dinner on Maiden Lane.

On Shrove Tuesday in February, 1643, Damen hosted the dinner for his in-laws, Director Kieft and another man indebted to him, Maryn Adriaensen. The party plotted a massacre of the Weckquasgeek Indians, who were encamped along the East River and on the western shore of the Hudson, ostensibly under the protection of the Dutch.

The town had been trying to restrain Kieft's fury at the Indians over the killing of a tavernkeeper several months before. But Kieft was determined. At the dinner, he had Damen, Verplanck and Adriaensen sign a petition from "the whole of the freemen" begging authority to attack the Indians. Kieft commissioned Adriaensen to lead the attack.

A few nights later, the attack began. David de Vries, a ship's captain and patroon, described the carnage: "Infants were torn from their mothers' breasts and hacked to pieces ... other sucklings, being bound to small boards, were cut, stuck and pierced, and ... thrown into the river ... When the fathers and mothers endeavored to save them, the soldiers ... made both parents and children drown."

The ensuing war lasted over two years.

"Crafty, subtle, intelligent, sharp-witted ... he is adept at dissimulation, and even when laughing intends to bite."
-- Description of Cornelis van Tienhoven in 1649.

(10) Wikitree

 In 1644, part of a shipment of wine, the whereabouts of which became a subject of investigation by the authorities, was shown to have found its way to Philip Geraerdy's cellar; and here too men of more consideration than the general run of his customers occasionally resorted such, for instance, as Jan Damen the thrifty farmer just out of town, whose well managed farm lay in part between the present Maiden Lane and Wall Street. Philip duly appreciated such clients, and when Jan Damen became unsteady upon his legs, would obligingly see him home when the road was dark. He did this upon one occasion to his great inconvenience as he tells. It was a very dark night in the spring of 1643 when they reached Jan Damen's farmhouse not far from the present Pine Street. That individual seems to have been in a rather quarrelsome mood for Geraerdy had taken the precaution to draw his guest's sword from its scabbard and to carry it himself. At the house they found Jan Damen's serving man in a very unamiable temper at being waked between twelve and one o clock and he threatened to shoot his employer. “Finally,” says Philip, “the above Damen and his servant Dirck began to fight, the man having a knife, and Jan Damen a scabbard over which Jan Damen fell backwards, the opponent having his drawn sword in his hand for the purpose of separating them. Jan Damen stood up and jumped into the house he returned immediately with a knife and as it was very dark. Jan Damen struck the opponent under the shoulder blade - the surgeon declared it to be a pretty dangerous wound. 

Adrienne Cuvelier died in 1655. Most of her property was divided among the Vigne children and their families. On March 8, 1658, Dirck and his sister-in-law Maria Ver Planck were sued by Claes Van Elstandt, elder of the Dutch Reformed Church, for not paying for her grave. They said they had given the money to Van Tienhoven, who had disappeared 16 months earlier. All of the remaining heirs were then ordered to pay for the grave.

(11) Witness at baptisms in New Netherland:

1643 Sep 06; Jacob Wolfertszen; Lysbeth; Govert Loockermans, Jan Van Brug, Jannetie Sert., Ariaentje Jans

1646 Jun 10; Cornelis Van Tienhoven; Jannetje; Willem Kieft, Adriane Nuvielle, Jannetje Adriaens

1649 Jan 17; Cornelis Van Tienhoven; Lucas; Jan Janszen Damen, Adriaen Van Tienhoven, Adriaentie Kuypers

1651 Apr 23; Jan Hermanszen Schut; Fytie; Dirck Volckertszen, Ariaentje Damens, Rachel Van Tienhoven 

Children baptized to Abraham Ver Planck and  Maria Vigne

1641 Jun 16; Abraham Isaacsz. Plancken; Isaacz; Hans Kierstede, Cornelis Van Tienhoven, Maurice Janszen, Rachel Vigne

1642 May 25; Abraham Isaacsz Planck; Susanna; Jan Janszen dam, Hans Kierstede, Christina Vynen

1644 Jul 06; Abraham Isaac Planck; Jacomyntie; Philip Gerritszen, Anneken Bogardus

1646 Dec 02; Abraham Isaac Planck; Ariaentje; Pieter Hartem, Tryntie Roelofs

1648 Nov 01; Abraham Isaacszen Planck; Hillegond; Jan Vinge, Olof Stephenszen Van Courtland, Judith Stuyvesants

1651 Feb 26; Abraham Planck, Maria Vinge; Isaac; Jan Vinge, Marten Cregier, Emmetie Gosens

Children baptized to Dirck Volkertszen and Christina Vigne

1641 Sep 08; Dirck Volckertszen; Rachel; Abraham Isacszen Planck, Laurens Pieterszen, Adriana Van Tienhoven

1643 Nov 15; Dirck Volkertszen; Volckert; Cornelis Tienhoven-secretaris, Jans Janszen dam, Philip Graer, Marie Philips


1650 Aug 21; Dirck Volkertszen; Ariaentje; Jan Vinge, Claes Corszen, Lysbeth Cregiers, Aefje Van Tienhoven

1653 Dec 07; Dirck Volckertszen; Janneken; Abraham Planck, Pieter Janszen - Noorman, Marritie Abrahams

Baptisms of the children of Cornelis Van Tienhoven and Rachel Vigne

1646 Jun 10; Cornelis Van Tienhoven; Jannetje; Willem Kieft, Adriane Nuvielle, Jannetje Adriaens

1649 Jan 17; Cornelis Van Tienhoven; Lucas; Jan Janszen Damen, Adriaen Van Tienhoven, Adriaentie Kuypers

1653 Jan 12; Cornelis Van Tienhoven; Cornelis; Cornelis Van Werckhoven, Brion Nuton, Sara Roelofs

1655 Jan 01; Cornelis Van Tienhoven; Johannes; Jan Vinge, Maria Vinge

1657 May 20; Cornelis Van Tienhoven, Rachel Vinge; Jannetie; Olof Stephenszen Van Courtland, Pieter Stoutenburg, Tryntie Rodenburg, Marritie Varrevanger

Baptisms of children of Jan Vigne

Doopinschrijving Gosen Venijen, 01-01-1649
Doopplaats: Utrecht
Vader: Joannes Venijen
Moeder: Emmichjen Gosens
Gezindte: Nederduits-gereformeerd (later Nederlands-hervormd)

Johannes Vigne 10 May 1646 Utrecht, Netherlands

Doopinschrijving Joannes Vinie, 29-09-1647 Doopplaats: Utrecht
Vader: Joannes Vinie Moeder: Emmichjen Goosens
Gezindte: Nederduits-gereformeerd (later Nederlands-hervormd)

(12) Map of New Amsterdam 1660

Map of Long Island

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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