de Perier | |
---|---|
French noble family | |
Country | France |
Place of origin | Normandy |
Titles | Count of Salvert |
Properties | Château de La Madeleine in
Pressagny-l'Orgueilleux Moros Manor in Concarneau |
The de Perier family is a French noble family coming from Le Havre in France. From the 17th century onwards, there were two branches, of which only the elder remains.
Notable members are Étienne de Perier (1686-1766), colonial governor of French Louisiana, grand-croix of Saint-Louis and lieutenant-general of the naval armies; Antoine Alexis de Perier de Salvert (1691-1757) chef d'escadre, commander of Saint-Louis, director of the Dépôt des cartes et plans de la Marine ; Pierre-Étienne de Perier (1893-1968), divisional general and Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour.
The Perier surname is common in France (ranked 1244th on the Filae website), and between 1891 and 1990 it was found mainly, in descending order, in Seine-Maritime, Manche, Île-de-France, Gironde and Isère. [1] According to linguist Henri Moisy, the name Perier, with a single r, is the Norman form of the Low Latin "perarius", meaning a pear tree. [2] The Perier surname preceded by a particle has been borne by several families, but only one remains.
Le Havre in Normandy was founded in 1517 by Francis I as a military base, fishing port and shipyard. In the years that followed, there were several inhabitants called Perier. [3] In The French nobility, Arnaud Clement wrote that the family's lineage goes back to David Perier and his wife Marie Beaufils, who died in Le Havre in 1644 and 1640 respectively. David was commander of hoys. The proven lineage thus begins in 1596, the birth date of their son Jean Perier (1596-1647), a ship's captain who had several sons, including: Jean (1620-1660), founder of the elder branch, and Étienne (1644-1726), founder of the younger branch. The two branches produced eight members of the Order of Saint-Louis [4] and the same number of members of the Legion of Honour. [5]
Second lieutenant in the Touraine regiment in 1734, Jean Perier du Petit Bois took part in the siege of Philippsburg. Having obtained the ranks of ensign (1736) and captain (1738), he was made a knight of Saint-Louis. In 1747, at the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom, he took part in the assault at the head of a company. His unit was wiped out and he was himself seriously wounded twice. Promoted to lieutenant colonel, he was awarded a sword of honour and died of his wounds in Le Havre in 1748. His brother, Pierre Étienne Perier du Petit Bois (1720-1780), captain of the coastguard militia, bought the position of treasurer general of the Navy and the Colonies in the Port and Department of Le Havre. [6] [7]
Antoine de Perier (1751-1844), son of the former, was an aspirant in the Royal Artillery Corps from 1768 to 1770, but was unable to enter for lack of a place. He then prepared for the entrance examinations for the Engineers and became a aspirant in this corps from 1770 to 1772. Unable to secure a place there either, he joined the provincial troops, in the Régiment de Blois (1773) and then the Régiement de Bresse (1776). In 1785, he served in Holland in the Maillebois Legion, but it was disbanded in 1786. [8] Once again serving in the provincial troops, he temporarily withdrew from service during the French Revolution. First a lieutenant, then a captain in the Régiment de Turenne, he was arrested in 1793 because of the Law of Suspects during the Terror. Released after the fall of Robespierre in 1794, he was appointed colonel in 1797 and took command of the Rouen National Guard, with the support of an emissary from the Count of Provence, who was trying to rally his units to his cause. He lost his command during the coup of 18 Brumaire. During the Restoration, he offered to serve in the Swiss Guards, but his age led to his application being rejected. He died in 1844 at the home of his son René, in the Château de la Madeleine. [9]
His son René (1800-1880) was briefly a bodyguard to Louis XVIII from 1818 to 1819 in the d'Havré company. [10] He was mayor of Pressagny-l'Orgueilleux where he owned the château de la Madeleine from 1839 to 1864. [11] His son, Léonor (1842-1908), enlisted as a rifleman at the age of 18 and became a colonel in the Foreign Legion and an officer of the Legion of Honour. [12] His son, Pierre-Étienne (1893-1968), attained the rank of divisional general and the dignity of Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour. [13]
Madeleine de Perier (1914-2009), wife of Pierre Grador, was a member of the Lyon-Carter network, which helped Allied airmen escape. [14] [15] Incarcerated in Fresnes prison, she was sentenced to death by the Nazis on 22 June 1944. The last convoy to the extermination camps, which she was to have been part of, was cancelled on 17 August thanks to the intervention of the Swedish consul, Nordling. The insurrection led to the liberation of Paris on 25 August, with the arrival of the Leclerc division and the Allies. The French Republic recognised her as a soldier without uniform in the Forces Françaises Combattantes who had taken part in the fight to liberate the homeland. Her conduct also earned her the congratulations of Dwight D. Eisenhower, who awarded her a certificate of gratitude and the Medal of Freedom. [16] [17] [18]
The younger branch continually produced naval officers from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. In the seventeenth century, Étienne Perier, founder of this branch, distinguished himself in the fight against piracy. Taking part in all the wars of his time, he fought at Solebay, Texel, Cayenne and Tobago. He took control of many ships when they were boarded. In 1689, Perier was wounded when he blew up a 40-gun English coastguard. He ended his career as ship and port captain at Le Havre. In 1726, at the age of 82, he and his descendants were ennobled by letters patent from Louis XV. These refer to his "long and important service" and his long career of "more than fifty years as a volunteer, frigate lieutenant, naval officer and naval captain". [19] [20] He had several sons, two of whom distinguished themselves in the armed forces. [21]
His eldest son, Étienne de Perier (1686-1766) began his long career at the age of eight. Brian E. Coutts wrote that he embarked as a volunteer in 1695, and fought throughout the War of the Spanish Succession. He boarded several ships and was shot twice. Captured in 1711, he was released on condition that he would no longer serve at sea. A naval gunner at Valenciennes, he took part in the defence of Le Quesnoy, which was besieged by the Imperials in 1712. Wounded during the bombardment, he was captured again. Returning to sea service in 1714, he joined the French East India Company in 1720. During a campaign in Chile, his squadron suffered a famine. He was sent ashore with 50 men to find the necessary supplies. Fighting successfully against the 800 Spanish soldiers, he supported "several vigorous actions" which enabled him to ensure the "salvation of the Company's merchant vessels". Having taken the fortress of Arguin in 1721, he was sent to India in 1724 to protect the Mahé trading post, which was under siege from the Prince of Malabar. As colonial governor of French Louisiana from 1727 to 1733, he carried out numerous projects to improve the colony. When the Natchez Revolt broke out in 1729, he mounted a punitive expedition with his brother's reinforcements. Having returned to sea service, he embarked on the Mars and distinguished himself in action of 8 May 1744 by capturing the HMS Northumberland, after a very violent 9-hour battle. Perier retired from the service in 1757, after a final campaign in the West Indies in 1756, where he lost a son and a son-in-law. Raised to the rank of lieutenant général des Armées navales in 1757, he was awarded the Grand Cross of Saint-Louis in 1765. He died at the Château de Tréoudal in Saint-Martin-des-Champs in 1766. Perier the Elder had several sons, including Étienne Louis de Perier (1720-1756), lieutenant and knight of Saint-Louis, and Antoine Louis de Perier de Monplaisir (1728-1759), [22] who drowned the day after the Battle of Quiberon Bay in the sinking of the Juste. [23]
His youngest son, Antoine Alexis de Perier de Salvert (1691-1757), also distinguished himself in the navy. Raymond de Bertrand wrote that he enlisted in 1701. Perier de Salvert took part in numerous battles against pirates and boarded several ships. He distinguished himself in 1721 and 1724 by twice taking the fortress of Arguin from the Dutch in Mauritania. Second in command of the expedition against the Natchez in Louisiana in 1731, he led two expeditions in 1745 and 1755 to protect Louisbourg in New France against English forces. As squadron leader, commander of Saint-Louis and director of the Dépôt des cartes et plans de la Marine, he died in Versailles in 1757. He had several sons, two of whom distinguished themselves. [24]
The first one, Louis Alexis de Perier de Salvert (1730-1803), count of Salvert, took part in the Duc d'Anville expedition (1746), the Battle of Minorca (1756), the Battle of Lagos (1759) and the Battle of 23 October 1762, the final maritime confrontation of the Seven Years' War. During the American Revolutionary War, Perier de Salvert was second in command of the Languedoc (1778), the flagship of d'Estaing's squadron. Under his command, he took part in all the battles against the English: the Battle of Rhode Island, the Battle of Saint Lucia, the Battle of Grenada and the Siege of Savannah. [25] As chef d'escadre and knight of Saint-Louis, Louis XVI appointed him a member of the Society of the Cincinnati, created by Washington to reward soldiers who had distinguished themselves during the conflict. [26] Louis Alexis's son François de Perier de Salvert (1764-1834), count of Salvert, was a ship's captain and harbourmaster at Pointe-à-Pitre in Guadeloupe. He was held as a prisoner on parole at Leek, Staffordshire, from 1803 to 1814. [27] François had a son, Charles de Perier de Salvert, a judge of peace who died in Basse-Terre in 1904. [28] Their descendants went extinct when Mathilde de Perier de Salvert died in Guadeloupe in 2018.
The second one, Éléonor Jacques Perier de Salvert (1748-1783), a lieutenant and knight of Saint-Louis, founded several Masonic lodges, including The Triple Hope in Port Louis. A deputy member of the Académie de Marine, he left several poems and plays in verse, including Le Passage de la Ligne. He was killed by an English cannonball at the Battle of Cuddalore in 1783. [29]
Simplified filiation of the de Perier family: [30] [31] [32] [33]
The Perier owned the following properties:
This family left a number of memorabilia for posterity:
The main alliances of the de Perier family are: Duval (1615), Le Dentu (1632), Boissaye du Bocage (1661), de Launay (1684), Le Chibelier (1719), de Piotard (1729), de Laduz (1739), Morin d'Oudalle (1748), du Plessis de Tréoudal (1755), de Perreau (1756), de Gervais (1758), Bigot de Morogues (1773), de Blanchetti (1773), Le Tellier de Brothonne (1797), Le Hayer de Bimorel (1818), du Lièpvre du Bois de Pacé (1834 and 1842), Bassompierre Sewrin (1839), Barré de Saint-Venant (1897), de Place (1921), Berthe de Pommery (1928), etc. [41]
●Perier (de) and †Perier de Salvert (de) (1944-2018) (Normandy (Le Havre)): David Perier, commander of hoys in Le Havre, and his wife Marie Beaufils (died in Le Havre, respectively in 1644 and 1640) are the common strain of this family. They had several children, including Jehan (1596-1647) who married at first (1615) Anne Duval, hence Jehan, founder of the elder surviving branch, represented in particular by Pierre-Étienne de Perier (1893-1968), Divisional General and Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour. In 1632, Jehan Perier married Anne Le Dentu who gave birth to several children, the last of whom was Étienne de Perier (1644-1726), founder of the younger branch. The latter was ennobled with his descendants (and confirmed noble on 21 June 1726) by letters patent of October 1726 "in consideration of services rendered during more than 50 years years on the King's ships, as lieutenant, captain, commander captain, commander and others and those currently by Sieurs Estienne and Antoine Alexis de Perier de Salvert, his children, the first in the capacity of guard of the Marine since 1704 and now in the position of Governor General of Louisiana and the other in the capacity of Guard of the Navy since the said year 1704 and since 1721 as an ensign", registered in Rouen on 16 November 1726. [SS, V07, DC 2018] Étienne de Perier (1644-1726) had two sons: his elder son, Étienne de Perier (1686-1766), lieutenant général des Armées navales and Grand Cross of Saint-Louis, had one generation of male descendants (who bore the name "de Perier"), but all of them were killed in action. His youngest son Antoine Alexis de Perier de Salvert (1691-1757), chef d'escadre and commander of Saint-Louis, gave rise to descendants that bears his name to this day. (Perier de Salvert) Extinct in the male line at the end of the 20th century perhaps with Telesphore-Marie-Edouard (1899-1965), married in 1927 (Telesphore was born to Marie-Thérèse-Augustin on14 January 1899 in Basse Terre (no change of name on his birth certificate, only an acknowledgement indicated on his military record by his father in 1918 (with the name Augustin crossed out on the file and replaced by de Perier de Salvert)). Last of the name (younger branch ennobled in 1726): Victor-Alfred (1864-1944) from whom Hélène-Mathilde (1938-2018). Motto of the elder branch: Dextera Domini fecit Virtutem. (Letters of ennoblement) A shield Argent, on a vert fess between four cinquefoils of the same one in each canton of the shield. This shield is stamped with a helmet in profile mantled argent and vert. Argent, on a fess Vert between four cinquefoils vert, one in each canton of the shield.
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)
de Perier | |
---|---|
French noble family | |
Country | France |
Place of origin | Normandy |
Titles | Count of Salvert |
Properties | Château de La Madeleine in
Pressagny-l'Orgueilleux Moros Manor in Concarneau |
The de Perier family is a French noble family coming from Le Havre in France. From the 17th century onwards, there were two branches, of which only the elder remains.
Notable members are Étienne de Perier (1686-1766), colonial governor of French Louisiana, grand-croix of Saint-Louis and lieutenant-general of the naval armies; Antoine Alexis de Perier de Salvert (1691-1757) chef d'escadre, commander of Saint-Louis, director of the Dépôt des cartes et plans de la Marine ; Pierre-Étienne de Perier (1893-1968), divisional general and Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour.
The Perier surname is common in France (ranked 1244th on the Filae website), and between 1891 and 1990 it was found mainly, in descending order, in Seine-Maritime, Manche, Île-de-France, Gironde and Isère. [1] According to linguist Henri Moisy, the name Perier, with a single r, is the Norman form of the Low Latin "perarius", meaning a pear tree. [2] The Perier surname preceded by a particle has been borne by several families, but only one remains.
Le Havre in Normandy was founded in 1517 by Francis I as a military base, fishing port and shipyard. In the years that followed, there were several inhabitants called Perier. [3] In The French nobility, Arnaud Clement wrote that the family's lineage goes back to David Perier and his wife Marie Beaufils, who died in Le Havre in 1644 and 1640 respectively. David was commander of hoys. The proven lineage thus begins in 1596, the birth date of their son Jean Perier (1596-1647), a ship's captain who had several sons, including: Jean (1620-1660), founder of the elder branch, and Étienne (1644-1726), founder of the younger branch. The two branches produced eight members of the Order of Saint-Louis [4] and the same number of members of the Legion of Honour. [5]
Second lieutenant in the Touraine regiment in 1734, Jean Perier du Petit Bois took part in the siege of Philippsburg. Having obtained the ranks of ensign (1736) and captain (1738), he was made a knight of Saint-Louis. In 1747, at the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom, he took part in the assault at the head of a company. His unit was wiped out and he was himself seriously wounded twice. Promoted to lieutenant colonel, he was awarded a sword of honour and died of his wounds in Le Havre in 1748. His brother, Pierre Étienne Perier du Petit Bois (1720-1780), captain of the coastguard militia, bought the position of treasurer general of the Navy and the Colonies in the Port and Department of Le Havre. [6] [7]
Antoine de Perier (1751-1844), son of the former, was an aspirant in the Royal Artillery Corps from 1768 to 1770, but was unable to enter for lack of a place. He then prepared for the entrance examinations for the Engineers and became a aspirant in this corps from 1770 to 1772. Unable to secure a place there either, he joined the provincial troops, in the Régiment de Blois (1773) and then the Régiement de Bresse (1776). In 1785, he served in Holland in the Maillebois Legion, but it was disbanded in 1786. [8] Once again serving in the provincial troops, he temporarily withdrew from service during the French Revolution. First a lieutenant, then a captain in the Régiment de Turenne, he was arrested in 1793 because of the Law of Suspects during the Terror. Released after the fall of Robespierre in 1794, he was appointed colonel in 1797 and took command of the Rouen National Guard, with the support of an emissary from the Count of Provence, who was trying to rally his units to his cause. He lost his command during the coup of 18 Brumaire. During the Restoration, he offered to serve in the Swiss Guards, but his age led to his application being rejected. He died in 1844 at the home of his son René, in the Château de la Madeleine. [9]
His son René (1800-1880) was briefly a bodyguard to Louis XVIII from 1818 to 1819 in the d'Havré company. [10] He was mayor of Pressagny-l'Orgueilleux where he owned the château de la Madeleine from 1839 to 1864. [11] His son, Léonor (1842-1908), enlisted as a rifleman at the age of 18 and became a colonel in the Foreign Legion and an officer of the Legion of Honour. [12] His son, Pierre-Étienne (1893-1968), attained the rank of divisional general and the dignity of Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour. [13]
Madeleine de Perier (1914-2009), wife of Pierre Grador, was a member of the Lyon-Carter network, which helped Allied airmen escape. [14] [15] Incarcerated in Fresnes prison, she was sentenced to death by the Nazis on 22 June 1944. The last convoy to the extermination camps, which she was to have been part of, was cancelled on 17 August thanks to the intervention of the Swedish consul, Nordling. The insurrection led to the liberation of Paris on 25 August, with the arrival of the Leclerc division and the Allies. The French Republic recognised her as a soldier without uniform in the Forces Françaises Combattantes who had taken part in the fight to liberate the homeland. Her conduct also earned her the congratulations of Dwight D. Eisenhower, who awarded her a certificate of gratitude and the Medal of Freedom. [16] [17] [18]
The younger branch continually produced naval officers from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. In the seventeenth century, Étienne Perier, founder of this branch, distinguished himself in the fight against piracy. Taking part in all the wars of his time, he fought at Solebay, Texel, Cayenne and Tobago. He took control of many ships when they were boarded. In 1689, Perier was wounded when he blew up a 40-gun English coastguard. He ended his career as ship and port captain at Le Havre. In 1726, at the age of 82, he and his descendants were ennobled by letters patent from Louis XV. These refer to his "long and important service" and his long career of "more than fifty years as a volunteer, frigate lieutenant, naval officer and naval captain". [19] [20] He had several sons, two of whom distinguished themselves in the armed forces. [21]
His eldest son, Étienne de Perier (1686-1766) began his long career at the age of eight. Brian E. Coutts wrote that he embarked as a volunteer in 1695, and fought throughout the War of the Spanish Succession. He boarded several ships and was shot twice. Captured in 1711, he was released on condition that he would no longer serve at sea. A naval gunner at Valenciennes, he took part in the defence of Le Quesnoy, which was besieged by the Imperials in 1712. Wounded during the bombardment, he was captured again. Returning to sea service in 1714, he joined the French East India Company in 1720. During a campaign in Chile, his squadron suffered a famine. He was sent ashore with 50 men to find the necessary supplies. Fighting successfully against the 800 Spanish soldiers, he supported "several vigorous actions" which enabled him to ensure the "salvation of the Company's merchant vessels". Having taken the fortress of Arguin in 1721, he was sent to India in 1724 to protect the Mahé trading post, which was under siege from the Prince of Malabar. As colonial governor of French Louisiana from 1727 to 1733, he carried out numerous projects to improve the colony. When the Natchez Revolt broke out in 1729, he mounted a punitive expedition with his brother's reinforcements. Having returned to sea service, he embarked on the Mars and distinguished himself in action of 8 May 1744 by capturing the HMS Northumberland, after a very violent 9-hour battle. Perier retired from the service in 1757, after a final campaign in the West Indies in 1756, where he lost a son and a son-in-law. Raised to the rank of lieutenant général des Armées navales in 1757, he was awarded the Grand Cross of Saint-Louis in 1765. He died at the Château de Tréoudal in Saint-Martin-des-Champs in 1766. Perier the Elder had several sons, including Étienne Louis de Perier (1720-1756), lieutenant and knight of Saint-Louis, and Antoine Louis de Perier de Monplaisir (1728-1759), [22] who drowned the day after the Battle of Quiberon Bay in the sinking of the Juste. [23]
His youngest son, Antoine Alexis de Perier de Salvert (1691-1757), also distinguished himself in the navy. Raymond de Bertrand wrote that he enlisted in 1701. Perier de Salvert took part in numerous battles against pirates and boarded several ships. He distinguished himself in 1721 and 1724 by twice taking the fortress of Arguin from the Dutch in Mauritania. Second in command of the expedition against the Natchez in Louisiana in 1731, he led two expeditions in 1745 and 1755 to protect Louisbourg in New France against English forces. As squadron leader, commander of Saint-Louis and director of the Dépôt des cartes et plans de la Marine, he died in Versailles in 1757. He had several sons, two of whom distinguished themselves. [24]
The first one, Louis Alexis de Perier de Salvert (1730-1803), count of Salvert, took part in the Duc d'Anville expedition (1746), the Battle of Minorca (1756), the Battle of Lagos (1759) and the Battle of 23 October 1762, the final maritime confrontation of the Seven Years' War. During the American Revolutionary War, Perier de Salvert was second in command of the Languedoc (1778), the flagship of d'Estaing's squadron. Under his command, he took part in all the battles against the English: the Battle of Rhode Island, the Battle of Saint Lucia, the Battle of Grenada and the Siege of Savannah. [25] As chef d'escadre and knight of Saint-Louis, Louis XVI appointed him a member of the Society of the Cincinnati, created by Washington to reward soldiers who had distinguished themselves during the conflict. [26] Louis Alexis's son François de Perier de Salvert (1764-1834), count of Salvert, was a ship's captain and harbourmaster at Pointe-à-Pitre in Guadeloupe. He was held as a prisoner on parole at Leek, Staffordshire, from 1803 to 1814. [27] François had a son, Charles de Perier de Salvert, a judge of peace who died in Basse-Terre in 1904. [28] Their descendants went extinct when Mathilde de Perier de Salvert died in Guadeloupe in 2018.
The second one, Éléonor Jacques Perier de Salvert (1748-1783), a lieutenant and knight of Saint-Louis, founded several Masonic lodges, including The Triple Hope in Port Louis. A deputy member of the Académie de Marine, he left several poems and plays in verse, including Le Passage de la Ligne. He was killed by an English cannonball at the Battle of Cuddalore in 1783. [29]
Simplified filiation of the de Perier family: [30] [31] [32] [33]
The Perier owned the following properties:
This family left a number of memorabilia for posterity:
The main alliances of the de Perier family are: Duval (1615), Le Dentu (1632), Boissaye du Bocage (1661), de Launay (1684), Le Chibelier (1719), de Piotard (1729), de Laduz (1739), Morin d'Oudalle (1748), du Plessis de Tréoudal (1755), de Perreau (1756), de Gervais (1758), Bigot de Morogues (1773), de Blanchetti (1773), Le Tellier de Brothonne (1797), Le Hayer de Bimorel (1818), du Lièpvre du Bois de Pacé (1834 and 1842), Bassompierre Sewrin (1839), Barré de Saint-Venant (1897), de Place (1921), Berthe de Pommery (1928), etc. [41]
●Perier (de) and †Perier de Salvert (de) (1944-2018) (Normandy (Le Havre)): David Perier, commander of hoys in Le Havre, and his wife Marie Beaufils (died in Le Havre, respectively in 1644 and 1640) are the common strain of this family. They had several children, including Jehan (1596-1647) who married at first (1615) Anne Duval, hence Jehan, founder of the elder surviving branch, represented in particular by Pierre-Étienne de Perier (1893-1968), Divisional General and Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour. In 1632, Jehan Perier married Anne Le Dentu who gave birth to several children, the last of whom was Étienne de Perier (1644-1726), founder of the younger branch. The latter was ennobled with his descendants (and confirmed noble on 21 June 1726) by letters patent of October 1726 "in consideration of services rendered during more than 50 years years on the King's ships, as lieutenant, captain, commander captain, commander and others and those currently by Sieurs Estienne and Antoine Alexis de Perier de Salvert, his children, the first in the capacity of guard of the Marine since 1704 and now in the position of Governor General of Louisiana and the other in the capacity of Guard of the Navy since the said year 1704 and since 1721 as an ensign", registered in Rouen on 16 November 1726. [SS, V07, DC 2018] Étienne de Perier (1644-1726) had two sons: his elder son, Étienne de Perier (1686-1766), lieutenant général des Armées navales and Grand Cross of Saint-Louis, had one generation of male descendants (who bore the name "de Perier"), but all of them were killed in action. His youngest son Antoine Alexis de Perier de Salvert (1691-1757), chef d'escadre and commander of Saint-Louis, gave rise to descendants that bears his name to this day. (Perier de Salvert) Extinct in the male line at the end of the 20th century perhaps with Telesphore-Marie-Edouard (1899-1965), married in 1927 (Telesphore was born to Marie-Thérèse-Augustin on14 January 1899 in Basse Terre (no change of name on his birth certificate, only an acknowledgement indicated on his military record by his father in 1918 (with the name Augustin crossed out on the file and replaced by de Perier de Salvert)). Last of the name (younger branch ennobled in 1726): Victor-Alfred (1864-1944) from whom Hélène-Mathilde (1938-2018). Motto of the elder branch: Dextera Domini fecit Virtutem. (Letters of ennoblement) A shield Argent, on a vert fess between four cinquefoils of the same one in each canton of the shield. This shield is stamped with a helmet in profile mantled argent and vert. Argent, on a fess Vert between four cinquefoils vert, one in each canton of the shield.
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)