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Francisco de Salazar Hachero (abt. 1600 - 1643) Francisco de Salazar Hachero was the
father of Bartolomé de Salazar, [abt.
1630-1673], according to the Great New Mexico Surname Index. We have the
following about Francisco from Origins of
FRANCISCO DE SALAZAR
first appears in the soldier-escorts of 1625, and then in 1643. In 1634, if it was the same man, he was
Procurator General of We
have the following from pages 109 and 110 of When [Governor Luis] Rosas, the king’s representative [in New
Mexico] actually struck with a cane and
bloodied the heads of two friars who ventured to Santa Fe as emissaries [of
the friars, who were in a state of hostilities with the governor], calling them liars, pigs, traitors,
heretics, and the like, any hope of reconciliation vanished [between the
Catholic Church partisans and Governor Rosas and his backers]. Each side blamed the other for the dismal
state of the colony and the discontent of the Indians. The Morale could hardly have been worse
in the spring of 1641 as the heavy, mule-drawn covered wagons of the triennial
mission supply service [from the interior of New Spain] crawled northward over the camino real
accompanied by armed riders and the
retinues of replacements for Rosas and [Head Friar Juan de] Salas.
[The new] Gov. Juan Flores de Sierra y Valdez was
sick. Trying to supervise the residencia [a sort of trial at the end of a
governor’s term] of Luis de Rosas, he
accepted the counsel of the former governor’s enemies. Cabildo elections,
meanwhile, brought outspoken critics [of Rosas] Francisco de Salazar and Juan
de Archuleta [I] [also our ancestor] to power as regidores and Antonio Baca [our uncle] as an alcalde ordinario. Then [the new Governor] Sierra y A young soldier, Nicolás Ortiz, became their means of
revenge. Born in Zacatecas, Ortiz had
first appeared in Santa Fe about 1634 as a teenaged member of an armed escort;
he stayed on and married María de
Bustillo, niece of Antonio Baca. After the new Governor, Luis Rosas, arrived
in It was a cold
Antonio Baca did not. Along with brother-in-law Juan de Archuleta and
other relatives and associates in the anti-Rosas clique, the incredulous Baca found himself in the summer of
1643 confined by order of the new governor,. Alonso Pacheco y Heredia, and
sentenced to be beheaded. The Custos [head
friar] Hernando de Covarrubias insisted
on administering the last rites to the eight men facing death. Baca could not believe that he was to be
executed, but he was. Armed with secret
and detailed instructions from the unbending
Bishop-Viceroy Juan de Palafox y Mendoza, who considered the friars and
their faction guilty of treason, Pacheco had resolved to carry out the harshest
possible punishment against the lay leaders, “to get rid of them by a brief and
exemplary punishment.” Father Covarrubias and the New Mexicans who carried out the gory business on the morning of July 21 must have experienced conflicting emotions. Self-serving or not, these men had stood by the Franciscans, and their executioners were kin to the condemned. Covarrubias reported that when Francisco de Salazar’s punishers tried to behead him with his own dagger, they made a bad job of it. “For God’s sake,” he screamed, “sharpen that thing and put me out of my misery!” Then, claimed Covarrubias, Salazar’s severed head recited the entire true and essential creed of the Roman Catholic faith. The crowd summoned to the plaza
that afternoon included Juan de Archuleta II and other relatives of the
victims. [no doubt including Francisco Salazar’s son, Bartolomé] Governor
Pacheco addressed them gravely, reiterating the pardon to the majority of the
anti-Rosas partisans, revealing his
secret instructions from In the conspiracy of army captains that resulted in the assassination of former-Governor
Luis Rosas of Key
Figures in the Assassination of Governor Luis Rosas in 1642
Nicolas
was our cousin-by-marriage. His wife
María was the daughter of our uncle, Simón Pérez de Bustillo [abt.1576-?] and
our aunt, Juana de Zamora [Baca]. María was also the half-sister of the
executed Nicolás Pérez de Bustillo. 2.
Antonio Baca:
Antonio was the main ring-leader in the anti-Rosas faction that brought about the
Governor’s death. He was also the leader of the people who defied the Governor
by barricading themselves with the Friars at Santo Domingo Pueblo. His turbulent
career ended when he was beheaded
along with seven others AntonioBaca
[[abt.1590-1643] was our uncle, the son of Cristóbal de Baca. He was also married to an aunt of ours, Yumar
Pérez de Bustillo [abt.1591-?]. The Diego
Márquez [abt.1601-1643] was our direct ancestor. 4. Cristóbal
Enríques: He was a first cousin of Agustín de Carvajal. (Pg. 15
"origins"). Their mothers were sisters. In 1660 Agustin was accused of marrying his
close relative, Estefania Enriquez, Cristóbal's daughter. Estefania was a
second cousin of Agustin's first wife, María Márquez. Cristobal was among the eight
conspirators beheaded in 1643. Cristóbal
seems to have had kinship to our Márquez
family. 5. Agustín
Carvajal: He was one of the fourteen men ordered executed for sedition
by Governor Pacheco in 1643 but escaped the sentence along with his Durán y
Chaves brother-in-law (Fernando). He was the son-in-law of Cristóbal Enríques,
who was executed. Agustín
seems to have had kinship to our Márquez family. 6.
Juan Ruiz de Hinojos: He was
another soldier beheaded in 1643 for
the Rosas anti-faction affair. Beatriz Pérez de Bustillo was his mother. His
brother Miguel acted as bondsman for Nicolás Ortiz. Juan was our
uncle, the brother of Miguel Hinojos, our direct ancestor. He was also our cousin through his Pérez
Bustillo kinship. Nicolás was our
double cousin. His mother was the sister
of our ancestor María de Villanueva [Baca] and of Antonio Baca. His father was the brother of two of our
ancestors, Ana Pérez de Bustillo [Archuleta] and Beatriz Pérez de Bustillo
[Hinojos].
Juan
de Archuleta was our direct ancestor. He
was a first cousin to Nicolás Pérez de Bustillo, Juan Ruiz de Hinojos, and Juan
de Archuleta. He was a nephew to Antonio
Baca. 9. Diego Martín Barba: He was the son of Alonzo Barba and was a captain
living in No known kinship
to us. 10.
Francisco de
Salazar: Salazar was the Procurator
General of He
was our direct ancestor, but there is no known kinship to other conspirators.
Fernando
was a son ofPedro Durán y Chávez and Isabel Bohórquez de Baca, a sister to
Antonio Baca and to two of our direct ancestors: María de Villanueva [Baca],
wife of Simón de Abendaño; and Alonso Baca.
Thus he was our cousin. He was the brother of Pedro below. 11.
Pedro Durán y
Chaves: He was the nephew of Antonio Baca and one of the four masked
men who accompanied the assassin, Nicolas Ortiz, in the murder of Governor
Rosas. For his complicity, he was banished from Pedro
was our cousin, the son of our aunt, Isabel Bohórquez de Baca. Isabel was the sister of Antonio Baca and of
our ancestors María de Villanueva [Baca] and Alonso Baca. Pedro’s wife was our aunt, Elena Domínguez de
Mendoza, so he was also our uncle-by-marriage.
He was the brother of the above Fernando Durán y Chaves. 13. Diego
del Río de Losa: He witnessed the murder of Governor Rosas. At that time
he was secretary of the Cabildo (City Council). Francisco del Río listed on pg.
92 of "Origins of New Mexico Families" was his son, not his brother. No
known kinship to us. 14. Antonio de Salas: He was a guard
at the Palace of the Governors when Rosas was assassinated. Antonio was the
second husband of María de Abendaño, our ancestor, after her annulled first
marriage to Diego de Vera. So Antonio
was our step-ancestor. He and María de Abendaño together reared our ancestor,
María de Vera, who later married Diego de Montoya. 15. Francisco
López de Aragon: In 1642 he acted as the attorney for Nicolas Ortiz.
His wife was Ana Baca, who was an aunt or a cousin of ours. Francisco was an
uncle or cousin by marriage. 16. Francisco
Luján: He was involved in the Rosas murder affair but escaped the
execution of less fortunate compatriots. He was the brother of Juan Luján II
below. Francisco
was our direct ancestor, the father of Domingo Luján, who was in the 1693
re-colonizing of 17. Juan Luján II: He was involved in the Rosas affair
somehow but avoided execution. He was
the brother of the above Francisco Luján. His daughter María later married Juan
de Archuleta II. Both were our direct
ancestors. Juan
II was our direct ancestor, as was his
brother Francisco.
If Alonso was the brother of Catalina de Salazar, he was
our uncle. 19.
Juan Tapia: He escaped death for treason in 1643. He was
a native of Juan was the son
of another Juan Tapia and Francisca Robledo, our aunt. He was our cousin. We also have Tapia ancestors in our
Córdova-Mendez ancestry. Manuel does not
appear to have been close kin to us, although we do have the surname
Peralta in our family tree.. 21. Luis
Martín Serrano: Luis was accused
by a later governor, Mendizábal,of having been the masked intruder who broke
down the door of the home in which ex-Governor Rosas was a prisoner the night
he was killed. Mendizabal did not like Luis because he was friendly with the
friars during Mendizábal’s feud with them.
The Governor’s claim never resulted in any prosecution of Luis. Luis is our direct ancestor through three of his
children. CHILDREN OF
FRANCISCO DE SALAZAR HACHERO [1] Bartolomé de Salazar, our ancestor.
See his biography. Submitted by Donald Rivara, June 23, 2009. Copyright © Genealogy Trails All Rights Reserved with Full Rights Reserved for Original Contributor |