Tom McCabes Genealogy 2022

Cristoval ENRRIQUEZ1684

Name
Cristoval ENRRIQUEZ
Given names
Cristoval
Surname
ENRRIQUEZ
Note: Sargeant Major Crístobal Enrriques of New Mexico, pre uprising.
Military
Spanish Military of New Mexico
August 14, 1680
Note: Cristoval Enrriquez was one of the military leaders in New Mexico at the time of the Indian Revolt i…
Census September 29, 1680
Note: 1680 CENSUS and MUSTER
Residence October 2, 1681
Note: [Autos and judicial proceedings concerning certain persons excusing themselves from Royal service. […
Death before 1684

Note: Dead at the time of his daughter Juana's baptism in 1684.
Baptism of a daughterJuana ENRRIQUEZ y MENDOSA
December 18, 1684
Note: Parroquia de San Bartolomé, Valle de San Bartolomé, Nueva Vizcaya, Nueva España.
Family with Maria DOMINGUEZ de MENDOZA - View this family
himself
wife
daughter
Juana ENRRIQUEZ y MENDOSA
Baptism: December 18, 1684Valle de San Bartolome, Chihuahua, Nueva Vizcaya
Death: March 11, 1761Hidalgo del Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico
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Military

Cristoval Enrriquez was one of the military leaders in New Mexico at the time of the Indian Revolt in 1680. Cristoval's name appears in various official records and he was a personal witness to the destruction and military decisions made on the escape to the south. An example follows.

La Isleta, August 14, 1680. Writ of Alonso Garcia [fol. 321r/17r/299r/1r]

These writs were presented on September 6, 1680, before His Lordship, the Lord governor and captain general. In the pueblo of La Isleta on the fourteenth day of August, 1680, Field Commander Alonso Garcia, lieutenant governor and captain general of the jurisdictions of Rio del Norte Abajo by appointment of Lord Don Antonio de Otermin, governor and captain general of these provinces of New Mexico.

I, said Lieutenant General of said jurisdictions, say that on Sunday, the eleventh of said month, general word reached us regarding the residents of the jurisdiction of Sandia. [They] were retreating with their families from the general convocation that all the Christian Indians had made to annihilate said provinces by killing all the priests and residents of them – as in effect they have achieved – since in the pueblo of Santo Domingo on the day of the glorious Saint Lawrence, they killed the Christians of said pueblo ... And the following day they killed Captain Agustin de Carbajal and Doña Damiana de Mendoza, his wife, and all his family; and likewise Sergeant Major Cristobal de Anaya and Doña Lenor de Mendoza,... continued in the pueblo of Jemez. Yet miraculously the reverend father preacher, Friar Francisco Muñoz, 7 escaped from them, together with Sergeant Major Luis Granillo, royal magistrate of the said pueblo, and three soldiers who were in his company. The whole community of the said pueblo followed them, fighting, as far as the pueblo of Zia. And had I, the said lieutenant general, not gone out to meet said ambuscade with four soldiers whom I brought with me, they could have killed said father preacher, Friar Francisco Muñoz, and Sergeant Major Luis Granillo, ... mocking us, said Christians rang the bells, with great shrieks. After I withdrew with the said two reverend fathers, the uprising grew, and it was generally said that the Lord governor and captain general, Don Antonio de Otermin, was dead,... and he signed it. Antonio de Salas14 [rubric].

Sergeant Major Luis Granillo said that, being chief bailiff of the jurisdiction of the Jemez, he was advised by an Indian named Muza, a native [fol. 322v] of said pueblo, of how all the natives of the kingdom wished to rise up, to take place on August 10 of this year at night... [He said] it is known for certain that it is a general uprising, and there are no forces to surpress it, for which reason he agrees with the preceding opinions, and he signed it. Luis Granillo [rubric].

Sergeant Major Cristobal Enriquez said that he agrees with the rest of the above opinions and gave this as his opinion, and he signed it. Cristobal Enriquez [rubric].

Census

1680 CENSUS and MUSTER

A PLACE OPPOSITE LA SALINETA, DONA ANA COUNTY NEW MEXICO List of refugees who fled to southern New Mexico after the onset of the Pueblo Revolt.

Enriquez, Cristobal 29 Sept 1680 Sargento Mayor, passed muster with a lean horse and mare, and his arms. Married with a family of seven small children and nine servants. Signed.

Residence

[Autos and judicial proceedings concerning certain persons excusing themselves from Royal service. [El Paso, Sept-Oct, 1681]

The governor sent Juan de Godoy to Thome Dominguez and his associates to demand that they present themselves to serve in the Entrada (return to New Mexico) or to explain why they could not. Here is the entry from the official record of Cristobal Enriquez's response. [Enrriquez was ill and did die 2 years later.]

[2 Oct 1681] Then immediately on the said day, month, and year, I, the said Sargento Mayor Juan Lucero de Godoy, made known the auto of the senior governor and captain-general to Sargento Mayor Cristobal Enriquez in person, who, having heard and understood it, said that while he lacks the health and ability to serve his Majesty, as he has always done (hitherto] at his own cost and expense, he will do so now on the entrada into New Mexico, he being assured of the safety of his wife and children and of his property, which consists of two droves of mares and five hundred head of sheep, giving notice that on his return from the expedition which will be made for the entrada into New Mexico he desires to go to seek a place in which to main- tain his family. He gave this as his reply and signed it with me, the said Sargento Mayor Juan Lucero de Godoy, with my assist- ing witnesses. JUAN LUCERO DE GODOY (rubric) ; CRISTOBAL ENRIQUEZ (rubric); ANTONIO DE AYALA (rubric) ; CRISTOBAL DE VELASCO.

Name

Sargeant Major Crístobal Enrriques of New Mexico, pre uprising.

Death

Dead at the time of his daughter Juana's baptism in 1684.