Perhaps someone can guide me in the right direction......my brick wall is
"Zacatecas, Zac." where my ancestor, Juan Antonio Liendo and his wife
Catalina de la Rosa gave birth to their son also named Juan Antonio Liendo.
In the will of Juan Antonio Liendo (the son) he states (in 1771) that he was
"originario de Zacatecas, Zac" but he does not give the name of a Rancho or
any other town. I am assuming he (the son) was born around 1700. My focus
on the SLC trip is to find records on the son and on his parents as well.
Can anyone tell me what towns or ranchos may have existed in or around the
city of Zacatecas in the late 1600s or very early 1700s?
Thanks!
Josie
Antonio Liendo
One more lead Josie from the Spanish archives:
Archivo Archivo General de Indias
Código de referencia ES.41091.AGI/16419//PASAJEROS,L.13,E.2594
Título DON ANTONIO DE LIENDO
Alcance y Contenido DON ANTONIO DE LIENDO, natural de Bilbao, soltero, hijo de D. Juan de Liendo y de Doña Antonia de Fano, a Guatemala como criado de D. Jacinto de Barrios Leal
Nivel de Descripción Unidad Documental Simple
Fecha(s) [c] 1687-08-30
Signatura(s) PASAJEROS,L.13,E.2594
Volumen
Productor(es) Información de Contexto
Unidades Relacionadas
Por Procedencia CONTRATACION,5540A,L.3,F.142v
Índice(s) Barrios Leal, Jacinto de
Liendo, Antonio de
Liendo, Juan de
Guatemala
Bilbao
Fano, Antonia de
Criado
Antonio Liendo
Hi Arturo,
I have found that there are a lot of "Liendo" surnames in south America,
mainly Peru, Argentina, Brazil, etc. and this looks like it could be a lead;
however, the Will dated 1771 clearly states his mother as Catalina de la
Rosa. I guess I should start looking at the marriage records for the area
to see if the parents married in Zacatecas. I did find an "ultramarino" who
came from Spain named Luis Liendo but his parents were not the ones I am
looking for. This makes me even more determined to find him! Thanks for
the help......if you think of any other ideas to help me, please let me
know.
Josie
-----Original Message-----
From: research-bounces@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
[mailto:research-bounces@lists.nuestrosranchos.org] On Behalf Of arturoramos
Sent: Monday, April 10, 2006 10:52 AM
To: research@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Antonio Liendo
One more lead Josie from the Spanish archives:
Archivo Archivo General de Indias
Código de referencia ES.41091.AGI/16419//PASAJEROS,L.13,E.2594
Título DON ANTONIO DE LIENDO
Alcance y Contenido DON ANTONIO DE LIENDO, natural de Bilbao, soltero, hijo
de D. Juan de Liendo y de Doña Antonia de Fano, a Guatemala como criado de
D. Jacinto de Barrios Leal Nivel de Descripción Unidad Documental Simple
Fecha(s) [c] 1687-08-30
Signatura(s) PASAJEROS,L.13,E.2594
Volumen
Productor(es) Información de Contexto
Unidades Relacionadas
Por Procedencia CONTRATACION,5540A,L.3,F.142v
Índice(s) Barrios Leal, Jacinto de
Liendo, Antonio de
Liendo, Juan de
Guatemala
Bilbao
Fano, Antonia de
Criado
Historical Zacatecas Map
Josie:
I have uploaded the detail of an 1858 map of Zacatecas showing the surrounding towns and more importantly the mines. It is is the Historical Mexican Maps Album..
http://www.nuestrosranchos.org/filemanager/active?fid=538
As you will note there were several mines around Zacatecas including Panuco and Veta Grande that are now seperate municipalities. There were also the ranchos of Calera and Guadalupe that are now seperate municipalities as well.
These mines were most active right around the time that you are researching. I think there was a mercury shortage in the early 1700s that caused many of the mines to be closed down since they could not process the ore.
Historical Zacatecas Map
Arturo, thanks for the lead. I will study the map and see what I can come
up with. Josie
-----Original Message-----
From: research-bounces@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
[mailto:research-bounces@lists.nuestrosranchos.org] On Behalf Of arturoramos
Sent: Monday, April 10, 2006 6:30 AM
To: research@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Historical Zacatecas Map
Josie:
I have uploaded the detail of an 1858 map of Zacatecas showing the
surrounding towns and more importantly the mines. It is is the Historical
Mexican Maps Album..
http://www.nuestrosranchos.org/filemanager/active?fid=538
As you will note there were several mines around Zacatecas including Panuco
and Veta Grande that are now seperate municipalities. There were also the
ranchos of Calera and Guadalupe that are now seperate municipalities as
well.
These mines were most active right around the time that you are researching.
I think there was a mercury shortage in the early 1700s that caused many of
the mines to be closed down since they could not process the ore.