Claude Chevallon

[2] In 1520, he married female printer Charlotte Guillard, two years after the death of her first husband Berthold Rembolt,[3] and they worked together to develop the printer-publisher business.

[4] Claude Chevallon's printer's mark had been two horses, and he added the sun to this when their shops merged.

[5] When he died in 1537,[1] his widow took over the business, continuing for 20 years until her own death in 1557.

[6] Claude Chevallon had a daughter named Gillette.

[7] An illustration in S. Bernardus, Opera omnia, Paris, 1526–27 shows the family group of Chevallon with his wife and daughter; their clothing indicates that they were middle class and quite prosperous.