Davis Uriah I | Born 1707
DE SOTO-MAYOR, Juan Antonio Montano
1651 - Bef 1696 (< 44 years)-
Name DE SOTO-MAYOR, Juan Antonio Montano [1] Born 1651 Mexico City, Mexico [2] Gender Male Died Bef 1696 [3] Person ID I10432 Uriah Davis I - Genealogy Last Modified 21 Jun 2018
Family DE VERA, Isabel Jorge, d. 25 Nov 1736 Married Aft 1677 Children 1. MONTAÃO, Juan 2. MONTAÃO, Jose, b. 1675, Guadalupe del Paso, Kingdom of New Mexico , d. 29 Jun 1756, Tome, Valencia County, New Mexico (Age 81 years) 3. MONTAÃO, Polonia, b. Bef 1693, d. Yes, date unknown 4. MONTAÃO, Juana DoÃa, b. Bef 1693, Guadalupe del Paso, Kingdom of New Mexico , d. Yes, date unknown 5. MONTAÃO, MarÃa Magdalena, b. Bef 1693, Guadalupe del Paso, Kingdom of New Mexico , d. Bef 23/23 Mar 1717/1718 (Age < 25 years) 6. MONTAÃO, Leonor, b. Bef 1693, Guadalupe del Paso, Kingdom of New Mexico , d. Yes, date unknown 7. MONTAÃO, Jose Lucas, b. Bef 1693, d. 1721 (Age > 28 years) Last Modified 24 Jun 2018 Family ID F3522 Group Sheet | Family Chart
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Notes
[Chavez.FTW]
Juan Antonio de Soto-Mayor Montano, or names reversed, had come to New Mexico as a convict shortly before the Indian Rebellion, although he is not listed with the 1677 group under Lazaro de Mizquia. He married after his arrival. In 1680 he passed muster as a convict with a complete set of weapons, his wife, a female servant, but no children. [Revolt, I, p. 157].
The next year he gave his age as thirty, when he was described as being of medium height, lisping in speech, and with a fair and pimply skin. [Revolt, I, pp 77, 99]. He was a native of Mexico City. [AASF, DM 1694, Nos. 19, 25, 29].
Juan Antonio Montano Soto-Mayor and his wife, Isabel Jorge de Vera, returned with Vargas in 1693 and settled in Santa Fe; after he husband's death, Isabel moved to the Rio Abajo.
Twice he is referred to as a native of Mexico City, he appeared as a witness in three nuptial investigations of 1694. But he was dead by 1696 when reference was made to his widow, Isabel Jorge de Vera, as a grand-daughter of Captain Antonio Baca of pre-revolt times. She died on November 25, 1736.
Three known sons were Jose, Juan and Lucas. Three of their daughters, Leonor, Magdalena and Juana, married three Duran y Chavez brothers, Luis, Antonio and Nicolas, respectively. A fourth, Polonia, became the wife of Salvador de Santisteban. Several of the children were born at Guadalupe del Paso during the twelve-year exile. These were Jose, Lucas, another Jose, Polonia, Leonor, Magdalena and Juana. The last three became the wives of three sons of Don Fernando Duran y Chavez.
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Sources - [S370] New Mexico Roots Ltd., 304-5.
1707, June (No. 4) Albuquerque, Luis de Chavez (19) of Atrisco, son ofCapt. Don Fernando Duran y Chavez and Da. Luica Hurtado, españoles ofAtrisco, and Da. Leonor Montaño (13), d. of Antonio Montaño, deceased,and Da. Isabel Jorge, also españoles of Atrisco. Pair related 3tf and 4thdegree consanguinity, and bride already violated by groom; dispensationgranted because of groom's humility;
Witnesses: Jose de Quintana, notary and bondsman for dispensation fee;Diego Padilla (21), Joaquin Sedillo (29), Sebastian Canseco (30),Feliciano Candelaria.
Pair married June 13, 1708 (sic). - [S366] Origins of New Mexico Families (A Genealogy of the Spanish ColonialPeriod), 76.
The next year he gave his age as thirty, when he was described as beingof medium hight, lisping in speech, and with a fair and pimply skin. Hewas a native of Mexico City. - [S366] Origins of New Mexico Families (A Genealogy of the Spanish ColonialPeriod), 234.
Juan Antonio Montano Soto-Mayor and his wife, Isabel Jorge de Vera,returned with Vargas in 1693 and settled in Santa Fe; after he husband'sdeath, Isabel moved to the Rio Abajo.
Twice he is referred to as a native of Mexico City, he appeared as awitness in three nuptial investigationsof 1694. But he was dead by 1696when reference was made to his widow, Isabel Jorge de Vera, as agrand-daughter of Captain Antonio Baca of pre-revolt times. She died onNovember 25, 1736.
- [S370] New Mexico Roots Ltd., 304-5.