Barrau family

The Barrau family is a French noble family from Aveyron. Its proven filiation dates back to Firmin Barrau, a public notary who made his will in 1557.

Origins
Barrau is a nickname coming from the word "barrel". This name is mentioned in some documents before the 16th century.

In the 17th century some members of the Barrau family claimed that they were noble, but in 1666 Guion de Barrau (1613–1703) was sentenced for "nobility usurpation". In 1699 he was admit as noble with the support of a forged genealogy that linked him to another noble family of the same name.

The genealogist Gustave Chaix d'Est-Ange wrote about this family : ''The nobility of the first members of this family is dubious : they didn't have any lordship and they didn't wear the title of squire. In 1666, Guyon de Barrau, from the village of Carcenac, was sentenced for "nobility usurpation"''.

notable members

 * Hippolyte de Barrau (1794-1863), co founder and first president in 1836 of the "Society of the Letters, Sciences and Arts of Aveyron".
 * Eugène de Barrau (1801-1887), historian and vice-president of the Society of "the Letters, Sciences and Arts of Aveyron", founder of the legitimist newspaper Echo of Aveyron and member of the Legitimist movement in Aveyron.
 * Adolphe de Barrau (1803-1884), graduated from the school of medicine at the University of Montpellier, surgeon in the Royal Navy, member of the Society of Natural History of Montpellier, member of the Botanical Society of France and member of the "Society of the Letters, Sciences and Arts of Aveyron". In 1839 and 1840, as a naturalist and botanist, he was a member of a scientific commission of exploration of Algeria.
 * Fernand de Barrau (1851-1938), lawyer, historian, agronomist, and a writer of the Journal of Aveyron newspaper. Catholic and royalist, member of the "Society of the Letters, Sciences and Arts of Aveyron" and member of the "Central Company of Agriculture of Aveyron".