She was the daughter of Abraham de la Queillerie (1589–1630) from
Tournai,
Belgium and Maria du Bois (born 1594 died unknown) from
France. Her grandfather Chrétien de la Queillerie (1543-), a
nobleman from the
Boulogne-sur-Mer region, had also been a pastor in
Armentières, then a military chaplain in the army of
Guillaume d'Orange, then a pastor in the Pays- Bas, notably in
Ghent,
Leiden,
Utrecht and
Bergen-op-Zoom. They spoke French and Dutch in her family. She spent her childhood in Leiden. She married Van Riebeeck on 28 March 1649 in
Schiedam. The couple had eight children, of whom most died young. The couple arrived to the later
Cape Town in
South Africa in 1652. The first period, they lived in a tent. Maria acted as the hostess to guests, is said to have entertained with a
clavichord, and was described as diplomatically gifted in the company of foreigners. She was from 1658 active as a money lender to the colonists, and used a slave girl as an interpreter to communicate with the native population. Little is known about the personality of Maria de la Queillerie, but in 1660–1661, the French priest Nicolas Étienne stayed ten months in Cape Town after a shipwreck; in a letter, he describes her as very pious (in Protestant faith of course), diplomatic and very intelligent. She died in
Dutch Malacca on 2 November 1664, aged 35, from
smallpox. ==Legacy==