Roots in Michoacan, Morelia, 1500s
Hi
Found this amazing family tree in the Morelia records:
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1-18784-15792-41?cc=1883388&wc…
From:
Mexico, Michoacán, Cathol...Church Records, 1649-1909
Morelia
Arquidiócesis de Morelia
Información matrimonial y actas diversas 1555-1599
I have no idea yet why its included, but its a family of spaniards, mestizos and caciques...with a couple of ordens de santiago and an orden de calatrava.
If you know you have roots in Michoacan, Morelia, this tree may be of interest.
Below is a list of surnames on the tree...
Surnames:
Guzman
Ximenez
Hernandez
Rivera
Abalos
Sambrano
Ochoa
Rodriguez de Rivera
Ramirez (conquistador del orden de santiago)
Rangel
Aquila
Velasquez
Ruiz
Enriquez de Rivera
Gonzalez
Albarado
Mata
de Santa Anna
de Santiago
Regards
Denise Fastrup
Don Jose Manuel de Santa Anna
I should have mentioned:
Starts with Don Jose Manuel de Santa Anna as the root (most recent individual) of the tree.
And - I know Michoacan is off topic, but I am following a lead on Petronila de Moctezuma, who possibly lived for a while in the area as a child.
Regards,
Denise
Don Jose Manuel de Santa Anna
Denise,
Indeed this is an amazing document.
Thanks for sharing it!
Victoriano Navarro
Morelia family tree
Hi Victoriano
You are most welcome! I do realize that people moved around a lot, so perhaps someone in this forum has connections to the Morelia area...Michoacan borders on Jalisco, and Morelia lies between Guadalajara and Mexico City.
Regards
Denise
Family tree
Denise
In looking through the Spanish archives (PARES) for Moctzuma's descendants (and the elusive Petronila), I have found some trees like this. Occasionaly they would be in color, they were really quite amazing.
On the Petronila quest ...
The Codex Chimalpahin has an interesting statement concerning, apparently, five other children of Fernando Sotelo de Moctezuma (he was the son of Diego Arias de Sotelo) without naming them. The Codex clearly states that there were 10 children (the first five are the names normally seen), and that the other's names are unknown; they were living in "Michhuacan" 2ith their father; "Michhuacan" I assume is Michoacan. See volume 2, pp. 107-111, "Lineage of the Valderrama de Moteuccumas". Have you seen this?
I never found Petronila in the pedigree charts that I found in PARES.
George Fulton
Pleasanton, CA
Codex Chimalpahin
Hello George
I had in fact seen a reference to this codex in one of your previous comments in this forum, and I have tried to get it through the Danish Library system, however, they will not send it. So it will have to wait until I can travel to Copenhagen (I live in Denmark). I have really enjoyed reading your contributions, and I appreciate your serious approach to research.
I have (for fun mostly) looked up some information in Pares bases on directions provided in this forum. Difficult, but I managed!
The search for info in Michoacan(Morelia, the large town near Tarimbaro) stems from my idea that if Diego Sotelos children were living on his (wifes) encomienda,which he stated during his trial for the Martin Cortes conspiracy, they might have been confirmed in a church there. The Spanish is hard for me to read, but I am hoping I would recognize the name Sotelo or Moctezuma if I saw it....
In any case, there ought to be some Sotelo de Moctezumas there somewhere, even if not Petronila. Two historical sources place the family there. If you want to take a look at the church records I am going through, let me know so we can coordinate it. There are supposedly a mix of docs including confirmations (which I havent yet found), starting in the 1550's of Morelia. 675 images in all...
Regards
Denise
ANDARIEGOS Y POBLADORES.
Denise
Denmark! The internet truly makes this a small world! I discern from your profile that Copenhagen is a pretty substantial journey for you.
There is a book on Michoacan families that has a moderate amount of information about the Sotelo family "scattered" throughout it. It is called: ANDARIEGOS Y POBLADORES. NUEVA ESPAÑA Y NUEVA GALICIA (SIGLO XVI).
You can download the entire book as a pdf. Just do a google search for "Andariegos y Pobladores." This should come up as the first item on the list. It is 666 pages and the book is fully searchable.
Although the focus is Michoacan, it does have information on families relevent to Los Altos.
George Fulton
Pleasanton, CA
Andariegos y Pobladores
George,
Thanks for the tip! I will get to it after work, the book is one I was not aware of. And you are right, I live as far in Copenhagen as you can get and still be in Denmark.
I just came back from the US with a couple of other books on early colonial Mexico (Nahuas and Spaniards; The Encomenderos of New Spain; P. de Fuentes' The Conquistadors). Right now, this is where my interest lies. Reading about this era has answered questions I had about the movements of people on my family tree. I am not descended from the Sotelo de Moctezuma family (so far as I know) but the mystery attached to Petronila caught my imagination.
Regards
Denise