I know there are De Leons in Jalisco,Nuevo Leon,Puebla, Mexico City and other places
I was lucky to find a Book on Ebay Called Matrimonios en la Ciudad de Mexico 1568-1577 Primer libro de Matrimonios de La Ciudad De Mexico where some De Leons are mentioned .I have compiled some lists on this the Leal and De Leon since this is the same family and also my Paternal Line ,My wife's line has De Leon also but her's are the ones from Jalisco I'f I'm not mistaking
anyone out there researching the De Leon Line ?
Thanks!
de Leon
I am researching my paternal de Leon line, the only information I have is
my grandfather name Bartolo de Leon and grandmother Mercedes Medina. She was the daughter of Antonio Medina and Felicitas Magana. My grandparents had two sons, Prodigios de Leon and Fernando de Leon. My understanding I have is that my father
had de Leon relatives at Torreon Coahuila or Durango. Prodigios was born in 1903, my Father Fernando was born 1910, Prodigios supposedly at Michoacán.
Once again trying to find a
i'm not sure if the de leons are all related. but the ones in colotlan/huejucar/tlaltenango area are likely to all be descendents of a man named manuel de leon, who was born in the mid-1600's. for some unknown reason, neither of his parents have that last name
DE LEON
When I asked Arturo Ramos about this in 2008, he answered me by e-mail and responded:
" Jose:
My suspicion is that Manuel de Leon was the first person in his family with that surname. His marriage document clearly describes him as a mestizo and since Josepha de Escobedo, I am pretty sure was of pure Spanish ancestry, that would make his father the indigenous person in the pair. It was not uncommon for indigenous people in the 17th century to have NO surnames AND "de la Cruz" was a very common assignment of a name in lieu of a surname for indigenous people.
It is likely that if he lived in Colotlan, which his marriage document says he did, and he was marrying the daughter of a rich Spanish family, that he was a Tlaxacaltec soldier or official and thus it was a political marriage (as many are and were). Therefore his family likely had a Nahuatl surname and his father was in the "transition" to a Spanish name and thus did not use one regularly enough for the priests to put it down...
To give you an idea of the names adopted by the Tlaxcaltecs (and some Tepehuan families as well). Some common Tlaxacaltec names from Colotlan include Romero, Flores, Rios (all nature referencing) and Covarrubias and Escobedo (names of two of the most powerful landed Spanish families in the region... thus emulating)."
I think that Arturo meant to say that it was Manuel de Leon's mother Catalina de Garibai who was of pure Spanish ancestry.
Joseph de Leon
DE LEON
Another surname theory posed by Arturo Ramos a few years ago at a Nueva Galicia convention in Milpitas, California was "Multi-linear Naming Practices" There was one in particular that caught my attention.
One of Arturo's theorys was in which a child was baptized the name of one of his ancestors. In example, the child was given the ancestor's name in it's entirety; first name and surname of his ancestor. i.e. suppose Manuel de Leon's maternal grandfather was, in fact, named MANUEL DE LEON?
Just saying...
Joseph de leon
De Leon
I have not researched the De Leon in my direct line. Maternal 7th Great Grandmother Rosalia De Leon (abt 1650) married Sebastian Coronado (abt 1650 in Aguascalientes) they had several children including Nicolas Coronado de Leon who married Antonia Gonzales de la Vega. Hope it helps a little.