Gómez & Rosales Family of El Paso, Texas

Regina de VERAAge: 53 years16201673

Name
Regina de VERA
Birth about 1620 60
Shared note: According to her will, Regina was born in Cuencame, south of Torreón.
Birth of a daughter
#1
Augustina VERA GONZALES

Archive Entries
Shared note: Litigation: Sobre pesos, por Francisco de Lima en representacion de Regina de Vera, viuda de Domingo Gonzalez, contra la testamentaria de Antonio Perez de Molina. 7 ff. G-70 Año 1643
Baptism of a daughterRegina VERA GONZALES
March 3, 1639 (Age 19 years)
Baptism of a sonJuan GONZALES
July 16, 1640 (Age 20 years)
Baptism of a daughterAugustina VERA GONZALES
October 3, 1641 (Age 21 years)
Death of a husbandDomingo GONZALES
1642 (Age 22 years)

Baptism of a daughterJosepha GONZALES
October 6, 1642 (Age 22 years)
Marriage of a childAndres del HIERRORegina VERA GONZALESView this family
April 19, 1651 (Age 31 years)
Marriage of a childBartolomé del HIERROAntonia GONZALESView this family
September 9, 1658 (Age 38 years)
Death June 2, 1673 (Age 53 years)

Family with parents - View this family
father
mother
herself
sister
Family with Domingo GONZALES - View this family
husband
herself
daughter
daughter
4 years
daughter
Josepha GONZALES
Baptism: October 6, 1642 50 22San Jose, Hidalgo del Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico
-2 years
son
Juan GONZALES
Baptism: July 16, 1640 48 20San Jose, Hidalgo del Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico
son
son
daughter
daughter
daughter
Domingo GONZALES + Ana de GRADOS - View this family
husband
husband’s wife
Marriage:

Birth

According to her will, Regina was born in Cuencame, south of Torreón.

Archive Entries

Litigation: Sobre pesos, por Francisco de Lima en representacion de Regina de Vera, viuda de Domingo Gonzalez, contra la testamentaria de Antonio Perez de Molina. 7 ff. G-70 Año 1643

Death

Regina left a will. A copy is in the University of Arizona's Collections > Documentary Relations of the Southwest › Biofile VERA, REGINA DE BID Number 4464 Birth N.D.: CUENCAME Death 1673 Jun 02: PARRAL Occupation 1673: PARRAL/VECINA1651 Jun 17: PARRAL/(6 PESOS CONTRIBUTION TO GOVT.)1654 Jan 22: PARRAL/(DECLARES 150 QUINTALES OF FLOUR) Ethnicity CRIOLLA Family VERA, GASPAR DE (F)DELGADO, MARIA (M)GONZALEZ, LEONOR DE (DA)GONZALEZ, MARIA DE (DA) (MARRIED TO LIMA, FRANCISCO DE)GONZALEZ, DOMINGO DE (SN)GONZALEZ, MELCHOR (SN) (LICENCIADO, SACERDOTE)GONZALEZ, JUAN DE (SN)GONZALEZ, ANTONIA DE (DA) (MARRIED TO HIERRO, BARTOLOMEDEL)GONZALEZ, JOSEPHA DE (DA)VERA, REGINA DE (DA) (MARRIED TO HIERRO, ANDRES DEL) Marriage N.D.: PARRAL/GONZALEZ, DOMINGO Notes MARRIED TO THIS MAN AT TIME OF HER DEATH. HUSBAND LISTED AS A CAPT.?? Source WILL AND TESTAMENT, PRIMARY SOURCE AZU, FILM 318, PARRAL 1673 A, FR. 306-310 Family (unnnamed) LIMA, FRANCISCO DE (SNL)GUTIERREZ CORTEZ, JOSEPH (SNL) (MARRIED TO GONZALEZ, LEONOR DE)HIERRO, BARTOLOME DEL (SNL)HIERRO, ANDRES DEL (SNL) (CAPT.)

Shared note

@N25@

@N25@

Manuel Jorge was born about 1592, in Portuguese Tangier, North Africa, the son of Antonio Jorge and María Alvarez.17 He may have emigrated to the mining frontier of New Spain between 1615 and 1620, since, by the mid to late 1620s, he had become a merchant at Cuencamé. Sometime prior to 1632, Manuel Jorge married Ana de Vera of Cuencamé, the daughter of CAPT. GASPAR DE VERA(or Veira)18 and MARIA DELGADO. GASPAR DE VERA had been constable of Cuencamé in 1604. Antonio Jorge de Vera, the eldest child of Manuel Jorge and Ana de Vera, was probably born at Cuencamé, around the year 1633. Manuel Jorge, Antonio's younger brother was born about 1636.

The silver discovery at Parral in 1631 led the Jorge family to relocate, and Manuel appears on a March, 1633 list of Parral retail merchants. Manuel Jorge and Ana de Vera baptized numerous children in Parral; Antonio Jorge de Vera had at least 9 siblings. Virtually all of the Jorge children's padrinos were individuals of Portuguese ancestry. Manuel Jorge lived in Parral for about 22 years, from 1633 until 1655. He wrote his will on 7 June 1655 and was buried in Parral on 18 September 1655. Francisco de Lima was one of the executors of Manuel Jorge's modest estate. According to Manuel's will, Antonio Jorge was already a resident of New Mexico by June 1655.

At about age twenty, Antonio Jorge de Vera left Parral and emigrated to New Mexico during the term of Gov. Hernando de Ugarte. He had arrived in New Mexico by 1652 or 1653, at which time he married Gertrudes Baca, the cousin of Pedro Durán y Chávez II. Antonio Jorge de Vera, the younger, son Antonio Jorge de Vera, the elder, and Gertrudes Baca, was born around 1654 at El Alamo, four to five leagues south of Santa Fe. At some point prior to 1680, the Jorge family moved to Albuquerque's north valley, where they established a modest ranch in the vicinity of present-day Los Griegos.

In late November 1644, Francisco de Lima was married in Parral to María Gonzales, the daughter of CAPT DOMINGO GONZALES and REGINA DE VERA. Regina was the sister of Ana de Vera, Manuel Jorge's wife; therefore, Francisco de Lima was Manuel Jorge's nephew by marriage. Domingo Gonzales and Regina de Vera acted as godparents for Ana Jorge de Vera, daughter of Manuel Jorge and Ana de Vera in 1639. CAPT DOMINGO GONZALES, was born around 1592 in Portuguese Tangier. Some time before 1642, CAPTAIN GONZALES, became the business agent for fray Tomás Manso and fray Juan de Salas of New Mexico.

Mexico City agent for Manuel Jorge and DOMINGO GONZALES was Francisco Franco Moreira, the wealthy Portuguese merchant who was persecuted and expropriated by the Inquisition in the 1640s. Moreira and his associate, Amaro Díaz de Maturana, were among the many Mexico City brokers who exchanged refined silver for specie, which they shipped north to Parral.

Countless individuals emigrated to the New World between 1580 and 1640, when Spain held Portugal captive, many were part of the general Iberian emigration, others fleeing anti-Jewish attitudes and policies. More than forty adult males of Portuguese ancestry in the Parral district---including the two from North Africa, Manuel Jorge and CAPT DOMINGO GONZALES---were compelled to register by the government in 1642. In some sense this registration was evidence of a wave of Lusophobia that swept the Spanish Indies in the 1630s and 1640s that grew out of the marked tendency in seventeenth-century Spanish America to confuse Portuguese with Portuguese New Christian and crypto-Jews. In another sense, the registration was an act of allegiance to the Spanish grown in light of the Portuguese restoration in 1640.

Although the evidence is circumstantial, it seems logical to conclude that some of the Portuguese of Parral had New Christian ancestry. Some may have been crypto-Jews. Indeed, many of Parral's most conspicuous Portuguese demonstrated their loyal to the Church in overt ways. DOMINGO GONZALES and Gregorio de Carvajal, assumed responsibility for the completion of the church in Parral, which might have been an effective survival strategy... Nevertheless, in the minds of some of their Spanish neighbors, the simple fact that these individuals---Gonsales, Carvajal, Lima, et al.---were Portuguese made them suspect.

From: Commerce of the Camino Real: Trade Between Nueva Vizcaya and New Mexico Before the Pueblo Revolt By Rick Hendricks on http://newmexicohistory.org

DeathPage 1 of Regina de Vera's Will, 1673Page 1 of Regina de Vera's Will, 1673
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DeathPage 2 (Partial) of Regina de Vera's Will, 1673Page 2 (Partial) of Regina de Vera's Will, 1673
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