Philippe Gaultier de Comporté
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Philippe Gaultier de Comporté | |
|---|---|
| Occupations | soldier and lord |
Philippe Gaultier de Comporté (1641-1687) performed the roles of French soldier in France and in the French colony in New France in the Carignan-Salières Regiment, of attendant (appointed in 1970 by the intendant of Boutroue) to the receipts of the right raised on the goods arriving at the country, of personal prosecutor of the intendant Jean Talon, of lord (lordship Comporté and La Malbaie), commissioner of the king's stores (1672-1678), commissioner of the navy (in 1685 provisionally) and provost of the Maréchaussée (1677).[1]
Born into a noble family, Philippe Gaultier (son of Philippe Gaultier, sieur of Rinault, and Gillette de Vernon) was born in 1641 in Comporté, near Poitiers, in France. He died in Quebec in 1687 and was buried on November 22.[2]
On May 10, 1665, a court of justice of Poitou condemned Philippe Gaultier capital punishment by contumance; this judicial case concerns the death of two people who died as a result of a brawl in which he had taken part. The fight was aimed at avenging an insult to his regiment. Nevertheless, this conviction was discovered only in 1680 by the authorities of the French colony in America. Gaultier was then delegated in France to request the protection of the court; Following the intercession of the civil and religious authorities, he obtained from the king in June 1680 letters of remission on account of his honorable life. Then, Gaultier returned to Canada.[1]