Jacques BERTAULT
Birth:
Abt 1626
La Roche-sur-Yon, Vendée, Pays de la Loire, France
Death:
9 Jun 1672
Trois-Rivières, Saint-Maurice, Québec, Canada
Marriage:
27 Jul 1653
Trois-Rivières, Saint-Maurice, Québec, Canada
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
User Submitted
Gilette BANNE
Birth:
Abt 1636
Caen, Normandie (Région), France
Burial:
9 Jun 1672
Québec, Québec, Canada
Father:
Mother:
Notes:
Was Hanged for the murder of her son in law.She and her Husband conspired with their daughter to murder her husband by poisoning him.Gilettewas hanged on a cross set up on a scaffolding.But first she was brought to watch the death of her husband in like manner after which he was placed on the wheel and all his bones broken.Data Tanguay as translated by Demers.Book Titled Searching through the old records of New France. [Schlarb1.FBK] The criminal was usually clad in a long shirt which the executioner raised at the sleeves and at the hem up to the thighs, to secure the prisoner at each joint onto the cross. His head was lain on a stone and turned toward the heavens. The first phase of the punishment was a beating to break the extremities. The executioner armed himself with a metal pipe, one and a half inch in diameter, with a ball on one end which served as a handle. With this weapon, he would strike an arm and a leg two times each. Then striding the body, he would break the two remaining extremities with two blows each. Lastly, he would give three more blows on the chest. The condemned was thus struck a total of eleven times with the bar. It was impossible to break the spinal column, as it was protected by the back of the cross. The second phase of the punishment was the exposure on the wheel. The criminal's body was carried to a small carriage wheel which had been prepared by removing the hub or nave. It was then placed horizontally on a pivot. The executioner, after having bent the criminal's thighs underneath, in such a fashion that his heels would touch the back of his head, tied him to the rim of the wheel. The condemned remained exposed in this fashion for a specified amount of time. The punishment of the wheel was never applied to women "because of the decency due to their sex". It was often indicated by a clause of provision that the condemned was secretly strangled as soon as he was placed on the wheel. To this end, a winch was affixed at the top of the scaffold from which a rope ran down, circled around the victim's neck, and ran up again to the winch. With the help of levers operated by two men, the rope rolled around the winch, tightened and strangled the victim. Jacques Bertault was fortunate that he had faced a group of men on the Sovereign Council who were merciful. He was sentenced to be hanged first, therefore the torture was purely symbolic. The criminal was usu ally clad in a long shirt which the executioner raised at the sleeves and at the hem up to the thighs, to secure the prisoner at each joint onto the cross. His head was lain on a stone and turned toward the heavens. The first phase of the punishment was a beating to break the extremities. The executioner armed himself with a metal pipe, one and a half inch in diameter, with a ball on one end which served as a handle. With this weapon, he would strike an arm and a leg two times each. Then striding the body, he would break the two remaining extremities with two blows each. Lastly, he would give three more blows on the chest. The condemned was thus struck a total of eleven times with the bar. It was impossible to break the spinal column, as it was protected by the back of the cross. The second phase of the punishment was the exposure on the wheel. The criminal's body was carried to a small carriage wheel which had been prepared by removing the hub or nave. It was then placed horizontally on a pivot. The executioner, after having bent the criminal's thighs underneath, in such a fashion that his heels would touch the back of his head, tied him to the rim of the wheel. The condemned remained exposed in this fashion for a specified amount of time. The punishment of the wheel was never applied to women "because of the decency due to their sex". It was often indicated by a clause of provision that the condemned was secretly strangled as soon as he was placed on the wheel. To this end, a winch was affixed at the top of the scaffold from which a rope ran down, circled around the victim's neck, and ran up again to the winch. With the help of levers operated by two men, the rope rolled around the winch, tightened and strangled the victim. Jacques Bertault was fortunate that he had faced a group of men on the Sovereign Council who were merciful. He was sentenced to be hanged first, therefore the torture was purely symbolic. READ ABOUT ISABELLE IN HER NOTES no information on additional spouse Gillette Banne & spouse #1 Marin Chauvin had 1 child Gillette Banne & spouse #2 Jacques Bertault had 6 children
Children
Marriage
1
Chr:
18 Dec 1657
Trois-Rivières, Saint-Maurice, Québec, Canada
Death:
2 May 1739
Varennes, Verchères, Québec, Canada
FamilyCentral Network
Jacques Bertault - Gilette Banne
Jacques Bertault
was born at La Roche-sur-Yon, Vendée, Pays de la Loire, France Abt 1626.
He married Gilette Banne 27 Jul 1653 at Trois-Rivières, Saint-Maurice, Québec, Canada . Gilette Banne was born at Caen, Normandie (Région), France Abt 1636 daughter of Marin Banne and Isabelle Boire .
They were the parents of 1
child:
Suzanne Bertault
christened 18 Dec 1657.
Jacques Bertault died 9 Jun 1672 at Trois-Rivières, Saint-Maurice, Québec, Canada .