Cyprien Tanguay
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Cyprien Tanguay | |
|---|---|
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| Born | 15 September 1819 |
| Died | 28 April 1902 (aged 82) |
| Occupation(s) | Roman Catholic priest, author, statistician |
| Known for | Genealogical works authored, especially his multi-volume Dictionnaire[1] |
Cyprien Tanguay (15 September 1819 – 28 April 1902) was a French Canadian priest and historian.
He was born at Quebec in 1819 and died in 1902. After a course of classics and theology at Quebec Seminary, he was ordained in 1843. The first twenty-two years of his priesthood were devoted to parochial work, especially at Rimouski, where he greatly contributed to the foundation of the future diocesan seminary. His early taste for genealogical studies fully manifested itself after his official appointment to the Agriculture, Immigration, and Statistics Ministry,(1865). His whole time was henceforth spent in genealogical research compilation based largely on in-situ consultation of catholic parish registers throughout Quebec, the Maritime provinces, Ontario, and the old French settlements in the United States. He also twice visited Europe for the same purpose. As the result of his labours he published (1871–90) his Dictionnaire généalogique des familles canadiennes françaises depuis les origines de la colonie jusqu'à nos jours, comprising seven large double column volumes of over six hundred pages: a colossal undertaking, fit for a numerous body of collaborators, which he achieved alone. Although he was unable to realize the latter part of his program entirely and many inaccuracies have crept into his work, yet on the whole it is highly reliable and almost unique. Every French Canadian by completing from contemporary registers the information supplied by this dictionary can proudly trace back his genealogy to his ancestors from old France. It has proved valuable for the discovery of canonical impediments to marriage through relationship, and has given birth to a copious genealogical literature of less comprehensiveness. In recognition of his labours the author received a prelature from Leo XIII (1887). He also published Répertoire du clergé canadien-français (1868) and A travers les registres (1886).
Tanguay's Works
- Tanguay, Cyprien (1868), Répertoire Général du Clergé Canadien par ordre chronologique depuis la fondation de la colonie jusqu’à nos jours, Québec, C. Darveau, Imprimeur-éditeur, 321 pp.
- Tanguay, Cyprien (1871-1890). Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Canadiennes (DGFC) depuis la fondation de la colonie jusqu’à nos jours Montréal (Canada), Eusèbe Senécal et fils, Imprimeurs-éditeurs :
- Volume I (1871), 1608-1700, 623 pp. [ABEL to ZAPAGLIA].
- Volume II (1886), 1700-1760, 622 pp, [ABEL to CHAPUY].
- Volume III (1887), 1700-1760, 607 pp. [CHARBONNEAU to EZIÉRO].
- Volume IV (1887), 1700-1760, 608 pp. [FABAS to JININE].
- Volume V (1888) 1700-1760, 608 pp. [JOACHIM to MERCIER].
- Volume VI (1889) 1700-1760, 608 pp. [MERCIN to ROBIDOUX].
- Volume VII (1890) 1700-1760, 688 pp. [ROBILLARD to ZISEUSE].
- Tanguay, Cyprien (1885), Monseigneur De Lauberivière, cinquième évêque de Québec 1739-1740, Documents annotés, Montréal, Eusèbe Senécal et fils, 159 p.
- Tanguay, Cyprien (1886), À travers les registres, Montréal, Librairie Saint-Joseph, 276 pp.
- Tanguay, Cyprien (1893), Répertoire Général du Clergé Canadien par ordre chronologique depuis la fondation de la colonie jusqu’à nos jours, Montréal, Eusèbe Senécal et fils, Imprimeur, 526 pp.
L'abbé Cyprien Tanguay, Roman Catholic priest and genealogist, is the author of the DGFC Dictionnaire of French-Canadian families. A plaque marks the site of the house in which he lived in the Lower Town area of Ottawa not far from the National Art Gallery and the Byward Market.
Tanguay's original research and extensive publications placed French-Canadian genealogy on a solid footing, which has proven a great benefit not only to French Canadians but to the millions of Canadians and Americans and others who have one or more French-Canadian ancestors.
His DGFC Dictionnaire contains many errors and some unsupported speculation about incomplete marriages.
The DGFC Dictionnaire is a fundamental reference work for French-Canadian genealogy. Its seven volumes, containing more than 4,350 pages, have been published in a facsimile edition by Élysées Éditions in 1975, with a bonus volume by Abbé Tanguay's À travers les registres, also available on CD-ROM format. The CD contains Tanguay's DGFC Dictionnaire and the following other important works : Joseph-Arthur Leboeuf's 600-page Complément a Tanguay, Tanguay's 276-page A travers les registres and Tanguay's 526-page Repertoire général du clergé canadien.[2] Tanguay's work has been supplemented by the research and publications of others, including by Leboeuf, as above, and Abbé Archange Godbout's Origine des familles canadiennes-françaises, but was not supplanted until a century later. It contains over 2,000,000 births, deaths and marriages with other notes covering the period from the founding of New France to the early 19th century.
