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Captain Christian Theodor von Pincier, later known as Theodore Pincier, Esquire, or as Theodore de Pencier [1] (1750 – 1824), was a Brunswick Army Officer who served on the British side during the American Revolution. Following the peace treaty, he became a settler and well-known surveyor in colonial British Quebec. [2]
- April 18th 1824, Sorel, Quebec, Canada
- July 8th 1750, Brunswick
- Claire Desmarets
- Charles I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
El capitán Christian Theodor von Pincier, más tarde conocido como Theodore Pincier, Esquire, o como Theodore de Pencier [1] (1750, Brunswick - 1824, Canadá), fue un oficial auxiliar de Hesse que sirvió en el lado británico durante la Revolución Americana .
Christian-Thodor von Pincier was the illegitimate son of Duke Charles of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and Marie Claire Desmarets. His mother at a later date married later the noble Swedish Pincier von Konigstein. Theodore was never recognized by his father and was adopted by the baron Pincier of Sweden.
- July 8, 1750
- April 19, 1824
Captain Christian Theodor von Pincier, later known as Theodore Pincier, Esquire, or as Theodore de Pencier (1750, Brunswick - 1824, Canada), was a Hessian auxiliary officer who served on the British side during the American Revolution. Following the peace treaty, he became a settler and well-known surveyor in colonial British Quebec.
Research genealogy for Christian Theodor von Pincier of Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Preußen (Germany, as well as other members of the Pincier family, on Ancestry®.
Adam de Pencier. Adam Urias de Pencier OBE [1] (1866-1949) was the third Bishop of New Westminster and second Archbishop and Metropolitan of British Columbia. [2] Born in 1866, he was the great-great grandson of Charles I, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel through his ancestor Christian Theodor von Pincier. [3]
Captain Christian Theodor von Pincier, later known as Theodore Pincier, Esquire, or as Theodore de Pencier (1750, Brunswick - 1824, Canada), was a Hessian auxiliary officer who served on the British side during the American Revolution. Following the peace treaty, he became a settler and well-known surveyor in colonial British Quebec.