Mijn oma was een kleindochter van François Tobias Tobias Deux, waar ik een photo (van zijn schilderij) van heb.
Ik zoek naae mannelijke afstammelingen die in een onafgebroken mannelijke lijn van zonen van François Tobias Deux afstammen voor kern DNA ondersoek om te weten of we echt van Napoleon afstammen. In mijn geval is dat al moeilijk omdat ik afstam van een kleindochter van François Tobias Deux.
Onderstaand is leuk om te weten: François Tobias Tobias Deux
LECLERC Aimée (19/06 1782-1868)
Born during France most turbulent era, Aimée Leclerc was truly a product of her time. Immersed from birth in the many emerging new ideologies, she became an ardent admirer of Pauline Léon and Claire Lacombe, who would often visit her parent’s estate in Pointoise with her cousin Jean Théophile Victor Leclerc, founder of the Enragés.
Aimée was only just 11 when Pauline Léon and Claire Lacombe co-founded the Société des Républicaines Révolutionnaires (Society of Revolutionary Republicans) in February 1793.
Looking older then her age, she would often visit them with Jean Théophile Victor Leclerc at the club’s headquarters in Paris. Always eager to please, she enjoyed helping with collecting and entering the club’s fees in their books. She was so good at it that she was nicknamed Henriette (meaning keeper of the house).
The Société des Républicaines Révolutionnaires (with 200 exclusively female members) was generally regarded as a sort of "feminist” section of Jean Théophile Victor Leclerc Enragés.
The Club was outlawed the following year by Robespierre.
Pauline Léon, Claire Lacombe and most members of the Société, including Henriette (Aimée) Leclerq, who happened to be at the club were arrested in April 1794 and imprisoned in Luxembourg prison where they remained until August 19, 1794.
Her parents decided to sent Aimée, who has grown into s striking beauty to the renowned institution of Madame Campan in Saint-Germain, where she became acquainted with Hortense de Beaharnais and Caroline Bonaparte, Napoleon’s sister.
Napoleon marries Rose de Beauharnais (the future Empress Joséphine) on 03 October 1796 apparently unaware that Aimée who he had lovingly named his Madam Deux, had returned to her parents home in Pointoise. Aimée was only 14 when she gave birth to a son, rumored to be fathered by Napoleon. She named her son François Tobias Deux and remained in Pointoise with her parents, who brought François Tobias up as their own child.
A frequent visitor to Pointoise was Laetitia Bonaparte, Madame Mère, who took a special interest in the welfare of Aimé and the baby.
Madame Mère decided to find a suitable husband for Aimée. She soon set her eyes on DAVOUT, Louis Nicholas, duc d'Auerstadt and prince d'Eckmühl, the descendant of a noble family which could trace its origins back into the 13th century. He was educated first at the military school at Auxerre, and then at the Ecole Militaire in Paris.
Davout was already divorced in January 1794 from his first wife, Marie-Nicolle Adelaide (née de Seguenot).
Aimée and Davout were married November 1801. They seem to be a happy couple.
They had 9 children:
1. Paul 1802 -1803
2. Josephine 1804 -1805
3. Antoinette Josephine 1805 - 19 August 1821
4. Adèle Napoléonie June 1807 - 21 January 1885
5. Napoléon, March 1809 - 1810)
6. Jules, 1809 (died in infancy)
7. Napoléon Louis, 6 January 1811 - 13 August 1853
8. Jules 1812 – 1813
9. Louise Adélaïde, 8 July 1815 - 6 October 1892).
As can be seen, few children survived infancy
François Tobias Deux however remained a threat in the eyes of Josephine, who feared that the boy would one day succeed Napoleon as emperor instead of the son of Hortense, her daugther.
Josephine began plotting and scheming so successfully that it was Madam Mère herself, who convinced Napoleon to send François Tobias away to be groomed as a King of the East Indies, which had in the meantime become part of the French empire when Napoleon conqeored Holland with all its territories.
François Tobias was only 8 years old when he made the long journey to Batavia, where he was placed in the care of the Dusantiers, a high ranking French family, who immediately began the important task of grooming him for his future role. The Dusantiers introduced him to all the Sultans, who were immediately taken by the handsome little boy. It was the Susuhunan (sultan) of Solo however, who was so taken in by Tobias that he opened up his home for him, where he was treated as a member of the family. home
In 1811 Java fell to a British East India Company force under Lord Minto, governor-general of India, who, after the surrender, appointed Thomas Stamford Raffles as lieutenant governor.
Many French people left. Java but François Tobias and the Dusantiers (Dezentjé’s as they were called) remained under the special protection of the Susuhunan (Sultan) of Solo.
In 1816 François Tobias married Leonara Caroline Dusantier, the little girl who was so kind to him when he arrived in Batavia. She sadly died in 1819 when giving birth to their second child. She was only 18.
Heartbroken, François Tobias took his 2 infant children to the security of Solo, where he felt at home. The 2 little girls, Johanna Louise and Carolina Magdalena Deux were looked after by one of the princesses, who devoted herself entirely to their care.
François Tobias married the princess, Raden Adjeng Hadiningrat in 1829, 10 years after the death of his first wife. They had 7 children, who’s off spring are now spread all over the world.
Irene van Kuyk/Hanssens/Deux