Ancestors of Julian & Beatrice Torres

Thirteenth Generation


4118. Pedro Sanchez de Monroy was born in 1548 in Mexico City, New Spain. [Parents]

[Child]


4120. Juan Lopez Olguin was born in 1560 in Estremadura, Spain. He married Catalina de Villanueva. [Parents]

4121. Catalina de Villanueva was born in 1560. [Parents]

[Child]


4124. Juan Fresco was born in 1570 in Flanders, Belgium.

[Child]


4128. Hernan Martyn was born in 1500.

[Child]


4132. Juan Rodriguez de Salazar was born in 1527.

[Child]


4168. Juan Valencia was born in 1550.

[Child]


4176. Martin de Vasquezy Gil de Lara (Zermeno) was born in 1575 in Mexico City, New Spain. He died in May 1620 in Jalostotilan, Jalisco, New Spain. He married Ana Garcia de Lara Miranda. [Parents]

4177. Ana Garcia de Lara Miranda was born in 1581 in Santa Maria de los Lagos, Nueva Galicia, New Spain. She died on Feb 6 1660 in Jalostotilan, Jalisco, New Spain.

[Child]


4180. Juan de Alcala y Zamora was born in 1570. He married Lenor de Orozco. [Parents]

4181. Lenor de Orozco was born in 1574. [Parents]

[Child]


4182. Juan de la Mora y Mendoza died unk. He married Francisca Ochoa Garibay on Nov 27 1613.

4183. Francisca Ochoa Garibay died unknown.

[Child]


4184. Alonzo Baca was born in 1589 in New Mexico. [Parents]

soldier reenfor: 24 DEC 1600
Brother Antonio and family lived in Santa Fe, where he became one of the ringleaders of the anti-Rosas movement, leading to the assassination of Gov. Rosas in 1642. Antonio was beheaded on July 21, 1643, on the Santa Fe plaza. Alonso was also arrested and ordered beheaded along with Antonio, but he and 13 others managed to escape. Alonso moved his family to La Joya in the remote Rio Abajo region. No further documentation of his whereabouts exists. Of course, after escaping an order of execution, he was laying pretty low!

[Child]


4186. Diego de Trujillo was born in 1613 in Mexico City, New Spain. He died in 1682 in Casa Grandes, Spain. He married Catalina Vasquez.

4187. Catalina Vasquez was born in 1621 in Santa Fe. [Parents]

[Child]


4208. Capt. Cristobal Vaca was born in 1567 in Mexico City, New Spain. He died in 1613. He married Dona Ana Pacheco Ortiz in 1582. [Parents]

of good stature, dark complexioned and well-featured Appearance: 1600

Onate soldier
Cristobal Vaca was also one of Oñate's soldiers and the son of Juan de Vaca of the 1540 Coronado Expedition. Cristobal was of good stature and swarthy, arriving with wife Dona Ana Ortiz, three grown daughters and a young son, Antonio. All were born in Mexico City and joined the colonists settling in San Gabriel.
The original family name was Cabeza de Vaca, though the spelling Baca seemed to begin with sons Antonio and Alonzo, who remained in New Mexico after the Pueblo Revolt. The family quickly grew over the following generations. Many of New Mexico's Baca's are descendants of Cristobal de Vaca, and sons Antonio and Alonso.
Antonio and family lived in Santa Fe, where he became one of the ringleaders of the anti-Rosas movement, leading to the assassination of Gov. Rosas in 1642. Antonio was beheaded on July 21, 1643, on the Santa Fe plaza. Brother Alonso was also arrested and ordered beheaded along with Antonio, but he and 13 others managed to escape. Alonso moved his family to La Joya in the remote Rio Abajo region. No further documentation of his whereabouts exists. Of course, after escaping an order of execution, he was laying pretty low!
Some of the Baca families remained in New Mexico following the Pueblo Revolt, such as Ignacio Baca, wife Juana and sons Alonso and Andres. By 1684, Ignacio was assistant Alcalde (mayor) of San Lorenzo. He died in 1689. Juana and son Alonso were killed in 1893, during an Indian uprising, and son Andres was killed shortly thereafter in Nambe.
Today, Baca is the most dominant surname in New Mexico, with descendants in virtually every town and village in the state. The Bacas are also one of the oldest families in Socorro.

4209. Dona Ana Pacheco Ortiz was born in 1570 in Mexico City, New Spain. She died in 1620 in Santa Cruz de la Canada, New Mexico. [Parents]

[Child]


4214. Diego Marquez was born in 1602. He died on Jul 21 1643 in Santa Fe. He married Bernadina Vasquez in 1621. [Parents]

Diego Marquéz is the first known hacienda owner in Los Cerrillos.

4215. Bernadina Vasquez was born in 1606. She died in 1660. [Parents]

[Child]


4360. Juan de Valencia was born in 1550.

[Child]


4368. Martin Vasquez y Gil de Lara (Zermeno) was born in 1575 in Ciudád de México, Nueva España . He died in 1620. He married Ana Garcia de Lara Miranda. [Parents]

4369. Ana Garcia de Lara Miranda was born in 1581 in Santa María de los Lagos, Nueva Galicia, Nueva España . She died in 1660.

[Child]


4372. Juan de Alcala y Zamora was born in 1570. He married Lenor de Orozco. [Parents]

4373. Lenor de Orozco was born in 1574 in Nueva España . [Parents]

[Child]


4374. Juan de la Mora y Mendoza.Juan married Francisca Ochoa Garibay in 1613 in Zamora, Michoacan, Nueva España .

4375. Francisca Ochoa Garibay. [Parents]

[Child]


4380. Francisco de Salazar Hachero died on Jul 21 1643.

OCCUPATION: Soldier escorts in 1625, Procurator General of New Mexico in 1634, Regidor of Santa Fe in 1641.

[Child]


4382. Miguel de Hinojos is printed as #2206.

4383. Zuni Woman was born in 1621 in Zuni Pueblo, Nuevo México .

Fray Angélico identifies her as Apache

[Child]


4400. Cristobal Vaca was born in 1567 in Ciudád de México, Nueva España . He died in 1613. He married Ana Ortiz in 1582. [Parents]

of good stature, dark complexioned and well-featured Appearance: 1600

Onate soldier
Cristobal Vaca was also one of Oñate's soldiers and the son of Juan de Vaca of the 1540 Coronado Expedition. Cristobal was of good stature and swarthy, arriving with wife Dona Ana Ortiz, three grown daughters and a young son, Antonio. All were born in Mexico City and joined the colonists settling in San Gabriel.
The original family name was Cabeza de Vaca, though the spelling Baca seemed to begin with sons Antonio and Alonzo, who remained in New Mexico after the Pueblo Revolt. The family quickly grew over the following generations. Many of New Mexico's Baca's are descendants of Cristobal de Vaca, and sons Antonio and Alonso.
Antonio and family lived in Santa Fe, where he became one of the ringleaders of the anti-Rosas movement, leading to the assassination of Gov. Rosas in 1642. Antonio was beheaded on July 21, 1643, on the Santa Fe plaza. Brother Alonso was also arrested and ordered beheaded along with Antonio, but he and 13 others managed to escape. Alonso moved his family to La Joya in the remote Rio Abajo region. No further documentation of his whereabouts exists. Of course, after escaping an order of execution, he was laying pretty low!
Some of the Baca families remained in New Mexico following the Pueblo Revolt, such as Ignacio Baca, wife Juana and sons Alonso and Andres. By 1684, Ignacio was assistant Alcalde (mayor) of San Lorenzo. He died in 1689. Juana and son Alonso were killed in 1893, during an Indian uprising, and son Andres was killed shortly thereafter in Nambe.
Today, Baca is the most dominant surname in New Mexico, with descendants in virtually every town and village in the state. The Bacas are also one of the oldest families in Socorro.

4401. Ana Ortiz was born in 1563 in Ciudád de México, Nueva España . She died in 1620.

[Child]


4406. Diego Marquez was born in 1602. He died in 1643. He married Bernadina Vasquez. [Parents]

Beheaded in 1643 for his part in the assasination of Governor Rosas by Nicholas Ortiz.

4407. Bernadina Vasquez was born in 1606 in Reyno de Nuevo México . [Parents]

[Child]


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