Skip to main content

User account menu

  • Log in
Home

Test Site

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Contacts
  • Old Albums
  • New Albums
  • Archives
  • Files
  • Forums
  • Recent Forum Comments
  • Links
  • Films
  • Notary
  • Map

La Historia y Población de Aguascalientes (1575 - 1790)

Breadcrumb

  • Home
  • Forums
  • Genealogy Research
  • La Historia y Población de Aguascalientes (1575 - 1790)
By Johnnypj | Wed, 2007-01-03 20:30

Peter Gerhard described early Aguascalientes history in "The North Frontier of New Spain." On Oct. 22, 1575, La Villa de Aguascalientes was created by decree and affiliated with nearby Santa Maria de los Lagos (now Lagos de Moreno). The first notice of a parish at Asunción was circa 1605, but chaplains served various presidios before that. Bernal Sánchez spoke of a priest at the Villa in 1601, but as we all know, the marriages and baptisms we now have access to only begin in 1616.

It is believed that the Chichimecs at contact numbered about 8,500 (this would have been Guachichiles, Zacatecas and probably some Caxcanes). Gerhard writes that "the period 1561-1589 was one of retrenchment when some haciendas were abandoned." Aguascalientes was founded in 1575 but was reduced to only two vecinos and 16 soldados in 1582-1585. After that, the war subsided and hostilities withdrew north, with the last Indian attack taking place in 1593.

Gerhard notes that "Peace brought a tide of Spanish settlers beginning in the 1590s, mostly cattlemen and farmers, together with Indian (mainly Náhuatl-speaking) and Negro retainers." The Villa became "inhabited by powerful hacendados who monopolized land and water."

Gaspar de la Fuente claims that in 1610, he found 24 or 25 Spanish vecinos, about 50 families of mestizos, over 100 mulatos, 20 Negro slaves and only 10 Indians in La Villa. He explained that "most of these people worked on neighboring haciendas."

Gerhard writes, "By 1681 various haciendas [of Aguascalientes] had chapels and resident clergy." The 1760 Parish census showed 640 Indians and 5,386 non-Indian families for a total of 20,411 "personas de comunión y confesión" - not including Ciénega de Mata. Including infants this may have represented 34,000 persons.

The 1770 census gave a total of 28,074.

The 1790 census gives: 25,715 people, made up of:

1. 10,004 Spaniards
2. 8,617 Indians
3. 3,357 Mulattoes
4. 3,737 Others

Source: Peter Gerhard, "The North Frontier of New Spain" (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press).

John Schmal

________________________________________________________________________
Check out the new AOL. Most comprehensive set of free safety and security tools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from across the web, free AOL Mail and more.

  • Log in to post comments
Genealogy Research
  • Reset your password

Recent Forum Comments

Subject: Bringing back Juan de Moscoso y Sandoval
Comment Date: 2024-12-17
Last Comment: AshlynnCastaneda
Subject: Maria Velasco
Comment Date: 2024-12-16
Last Comment: DelgadoLopezVelasco
Subject: Maria Ygnacia Nomelin and Jose Miguel Espinosa
Comment Date: 2024-11-27
Last Comment: Gil4SC

Most Recent Genealogy Research Forum Topics

2024-11-18
Maria Ygnacia Nomelin and Jose Miguel Espinosa
2024-10-18
Vazquez de Mercado in Pinos, ZAC.
2024-09-21
Property records

Most Recent History, Culture and General Discussion Topics

2024-04-10
Romo De Vivar: Descendants of the Influential Jewish Family Ha Levi
2024-03-19
Way to show 400 years of family
2023-05-01
DNA Doe Project --- Identification: Parga

Most Recent Announcements and Event Topics

2024-11-21
New Member
2024-10-25
New Member: Jorge Casarez
2024-04-02
New Member

Language switcher

  • English
  • Español
Powered by Drupal
Subscribe to RSS feed

Developed & Designed by Alaa Haddad