Matching family tree profiles for Maria Mouton, b7 SM
Immediate Family
-
ex-partner
-
husband
-
son
-
mother
-
father
-
sister
-
sister
-
father's ex-wife
-
half brother
-
half brother
-
half sister
About Maria Mouton, b7 SM
Age in 1714 as 24 years old -- estimated d.o.b 1690
Judi Marais-Meyer register
Geslagregister van vroeë Kaapse families C C de Villiers
b7 Maria
x Frans Joosten, v. Lippstad
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Possibly the first woman executed at the Cape (murdered her husband)
- http://thecasualobserver.co.za/maria-mouton-defying-laws-customs-so...
- http://www.executedtoday.com/2010/09/01/1714-maria-mouton-and-her-s...
http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/SOUTH-AFRICA/1997-09/...
http://www.executedtoday.com/2010/09/01/1714-maria-mouton-and-her-s...
Executed by strangulations, and body scorched by fire
Jacques Mouton of Steenkerken [Steenwerck?], Belgium. was divorced from Catherine l'Hermite who was remarried in Europe to Pierre le Roy. He [Mouton] had three children with his first wife, that is Jacques, Antoine and Marie-Jeanne. They remained in Europe with their mother.
He also had three children with Marie de Villiers, of La Rochelle or Guines, France † ca 1699. She is possibly the Marie de Villiers born on 9.11.1673, and baptised on 12.11.1673 at Guines, France as the daughter of Jean de Villiers and Francoise Joing; x Belgium (Flanders) Jacques Mouton of Steenkerken ,Belgium. The children were Madeleine and Marie (who was born in Middelburg, The Netherlands)' and Marguerite who was born on board ship. They arrived at the Cape on 20.7.1699 on board the Donkervliet. His wife (Marie de Villiers) died either on board ship or soon after their arrival, because he is described in [official ?] documents as a widower.
He married a third time on 8.10.1700, to Francina Bevernagie. He is the progenitor of the South African Mouton family and was among the early residents of the "Land van Waveren" (Ceres , Wolseley, Vier en Twintig Rivieren, Tulbagh and Tulbagh road ). Juna Malherbe and Alet Malan, compiler, Genealogy of the DeVilliers Family in South Africa (Franschoek, South Africa: Board of Trustees, De Villiers Publications Fund, 1999), Page 877 http://www.e-family.co.za/ffy/g5/p5194.htm
in Boucher
North-west of Armentieres is Steenwerck, birthplace of the settler Jacques Mouton. Married first to Catherine l’Hermite, he was divorced from her, since she later married Pierre le Roy in Europe. Mouton’s children by this marriage, Jacques, Antoine and Marie- Jeanne, remained with their mother. Mouton subsequently married Marie de Villiers. Two children were evidently born to them in Middel burg, Madeleine and Marie, while a third daughter Marguerite was born either on shipboard or soon after the family reached the Cape. They sailed in 1699 on the Zeeland East Indiaman, the Donkervliet, commanded by Steven Scheydcruyt. Mouton was married for a third time on October 8, 1700 to Francina Bevernagie, whose family will be mentioned later in this chapter.112 The daughter Marie Mouton at the Cape was born in the Zeeland capital about the year 1690. She became the wife of Franz Jooste of Lippstadt, but on January 31,1714 murdered her husband with the help of her lover, the slave Titus of Bengal, and an accomplice Fortuin. All three suffered a painful death for their crime.111 Jacques Mouton’s second wife Marie de Villiers was perhaps from north-eastern France, although a refugee so named from Nantes is known to have abjured at Arnhem in 1687. * Boucher.M (1981). French speakers at the Cape: The European Background. Pretoria, UNISA. CHAPTER NINE Cape settlers V: from Flanders to Alsace on the turbulent frontier P263
On 20 July 1699, Jacques Mouton and Marie de Villiers arrived at the Cape from Middelburg, Zeeland, on board the Donkervliet, accompanied by Madeleine Mouton, Marie Mouton and Margareta Mouton.
Lovers: Circa 1713 Marie Mouton and Titus van Bengale were lovers Cape Colony.5
She killed Franz Joosten on 3 January 1714 Vier-en-twintigriviere, de Caep de Goede Hoop, along with her lover, Titus van Bengale and the slave Fortuin of Angola. His body was stuffed down a warthog burrow, but his murder was exposed when the body was later dug up by animals.
Death: She was executed by strangulation circa 1 September 1714 de Caep de Goede Hoop, and her body scorched by fire. Also executed for this crime were the slaves Titus van Bengale and Fortuin van Angola.
Nigel Penn. The wife, the farmer and the farmer's slaves: Adultery and murder on a frontier farm in the early eighteenth century Cape. '
https://journals.co.za/doi/pdf/10.10520/AJA02590190_691
Maria Mouton, b7 SM's Timeline
1690 |
1690
|
Middelburg, Zeeland, Netherlands
|
|
1703 |
October 7, 1703
Age 13
|
Paarl, Cape, South Africa
|
|
1710 |
March 16, 1710
|
Caep de Goede Hoop, South Africa
|
|
1712 |
November 2, 1712
|
Kaapstad, Kaap de Goede Hoop, Suid Afrika
|
|
1714 |
August 30, 1714
Age 24
|
Kaapstad, Caap de Goede Hoop, Suid Afrika
|