Victor-Thérèse Charpentier
Victor-Therese Charpentier | |
---|---|
Reign | 17??-1776 |
Count of Ennery | |
Spouse | Rose d'Alesso Olive Puybaudet |
Issue | Pauline François de Paule Charpentier, Duchess of Levis Geneviève Pauline Aimée Charpentier |
House | House of Charpentier |
Father | Thomas-Jacques Charpentier |
Mother | Madeleine-Angelique Rioult de Douilly |
Victor-Therese Charpentier d'Ennery (March 24, 1732 – December 13, 1776) was the marquis of Ennery and was also a governor general of Saint-Domingue in the mid-to-late 18th century.
Family
Charpentier was born in Paris, France to Thomas-Jacques Charpentier d'Ennery and Madeleine Angélique Rioult de Curzay. Charpentier d'Ennery is the grandson of Jacques Charpentier d'Ennery, the Lord of D'Ennery and Espier. He had a sister, Cécile Pauline Charpentier d'Ennery, who married Gilbert de Chauvigny de Blot, a governor of Chantelle. On January 11, 1768 in Paris, he married Benedicte d'Alesso, a descendant of Philip I of France, and had one child:
~Pauline François de Paule Charpentier (died 1819) married Pierre-Marc-Gaston de Lévis, son of Francois de Gaston, Chevalier de Levis.
Charpentier also had another child with Olive Puybaudet:
~Geneviève Pauline Aimée Charpentier (1776–1850), who married Louis de Tibi (died 1802) and then married Joseph Castel.
Accomplisments
Charpentier was Count and later the Marquis of d'Ennery and also the governor-general of Saint-Domingue. He was also the Governor of Martinique from 1765-1768 and also the governor general of the Windward Islands from 1768–1771, 4 years before his death.
Descendants
1) Pauline d'Ennery
Adele-Charlotte, Duchess of Levis Raymond de Nicolay Aymar de Nicolay
Gaston Francois, Duke of Levis
2) ???
3) Aimée CASTEL née D'ENNERY (many descendants, including):
Elisabeth Henriette DÉJOIE FRANGEUL née CASTEL Charles FRANGEUL Julia PRÉZEAU née FRANGEUL Yvonne LIAUTAUD née PRÉZEAU Colette SANSARICQ née LIAUTAUD
Noble Titles
Because of his inability to produce a male heir, the title Count d'Ennery was not succeeded and died out after his death.
Death
Victor-Therese Charpentier died on December 31, 1776 in Port-au-Prince, during the Uprisings. He now rests in Louvre Museum.