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Genízaro

Genízaros (or Genizaros) was the name for detribalized Native Americans (Indians) from the 17th to 19th century in the Spanish colony of New Mexico and neighboring regions of the American southwest. Genízaros were usually women and children who had been captured in war by the Spanish or purchased from Indian tribes who had held them captive as slaves. To circumvent Spanish laws forbidding slavery, the purchaser (or rescuer) of a genízaro had the obligation to introduce them to Christianity and Spanish customs. Genízaros worked as indentured servants, shepherds, and laborers. They occupied the lowest rung of status-conscious Spanish society in New Mexico but slowly assimilated and intermarried into Spanish and later Mexican (1821-1846) and American (1846-present day) society. The descendants of genízaros are also called genízaros and the word has become a term of pride for the descendants of the original Indian captives and slaves.[1][2][3][4] In 1793, genízaros are estimated to have comprised up to one third of the 29,041 people living under Spanish rule in New Mexico.[5][6]

New Spain had a prohibition of indigenous slavery implemented from 1543 onwards, but it excluded those captured in the context of war.[4] The restrictions of slavery also meant that genízaros were to be convicted and sentenced to servitude for a specific timespan, at which time they earned freedom. They were even encouraged to become landowners themselves by Spanish government landgrants, or to join the regional militia.[7] After abolition of slavery was proposed in 1810 during Mexican independence,[8] the practice of slavery began to become unpopular in the Spanish Empire, even more so after abolition was included officially by José María Morelos in the Sentimientos de la Nación of 1813. This became law after Solemn Act of the Declaration of Independence of Northern America of First Mexican Republic and during the era of the centralist Republic. Genízaros joined other citizen-soldiers of New Mexico during the Chimayó Rebellion of 1837, to fight for New Mexico's separation from the centralist Republic of Mexico; In fact, the commander of the rebellion José Gonzales was a genízaro.[9]

Genízaros settled in several New Mexican villages, such as Belén, Tomé, Valencia, Carnuel, Los Lentes, Las Trampas, Socorro, and San Miguel del Vado. Genízaros also lived in Albuquerque, Bernalillo, Atrisco, Santa Fe, Chimayó, Taos, Abiquiú, and Las Vegas, NM. Most genízaros were, or their ancestors had been, slaves of Indian tribes, particularly the Plains tribes who raided and enslaved members of tribes allied with the Spaniards, such as the Apaches.[10]

In 2007, genízaros and their contemporary descendants were recognized as indigenous people by the New Mexico Legislature.[11][12] During the early 21st century, they have comprised much of the population of the South Valley of Albuquerque, and significant portions of the population of northern New Mexico, including Española, Taos, Santa Fe, Las Vegas, in addition to that of southern Colorado.

Name edit

The term genízaro is a Spanish word borrowed from the Italian word giannizzero, which was adopted from the Ottoman Turkish word yeniçeri.[13] This Turkish word referred to slaves who were trained as soldiers for the Ottoman Empire. (The Turkish word was also adopted into English as "janissary"). The first known use of the word genízaro in New Mexico was during the early 1660s when a politician was accused of mistreating a genízara servant, whose father was a Pueblo and whose mother was Apache-Quivira (Wichita). The term became used generally after 1692 when the Spanish regained control of New Mexico after the Pueblo revolt.[14]

The word genízaro also had a military meaning in New Mexico. Genízaro militia and scouts were important in defending New Mexico from raiding Comanche, Apache, and Navajo warriors. The genízaros were organized formally in 1808 into a genízaro Troop, commanded by a corporal from their ranks and with a supply system dedicated for them.[15]

History edit

Genízaros were typically indigenous people who had been captured and enslaved by other Indian tribes and whom Franciscan monks were obligated legally to rescue by paying ransom. The former slaves were made indentured servants in order to repay such debt, typically for a period of a number of years.[16]

During the late 1700s and early 1800s, genízaros comprised a significant proportion of the population of what is now the southwest United States. They founded a number of localities, such as Belén, Tomé, Valencia, Carnué, Los Lentes, Las Trampas, Socorro and San Miguel del Vado. There were also genízaros in towns such as Albuquerque, Atrisco, Santa Fe, Chimayó, Taos, Abiquiú and Las Vegas.

The debt of a ransomed Native American, often a child, was usually 10 to 20 years of service to the person paying the ransom. Young women were especially prized. The experience of most ransomed Native Americans—- a genízaro—- was "bondage on a continuum that ranged from near slavery to familial incorporation, but few shed the stigma of servility". Descendants of genízaros typically were also considered genízaros. But, as in the case of the rest of colonial Mexico, this classification was not an absolute impediment to social mobility.[17]

The Comanche and other tribes brought their captives to trade fairs and offered them for sale. In 1770, a female captive from 12 to 20 years old sold for two good horses and some small items; a male was worth only one-half as much.[18]

Many of the genízaros complained of mistreatment by the Spanish. Based on a policy established by the Governors of New Mexico, they were settled in land grants on the periphery of Spanish settlements. These settlements became buffer communities for larger Spanish towns in the event of attack by the enemy tribes surrounding the province.[3] The genízaros in the frontier communities become mediators between the often-hostile Indian tribes surrounding the Spanish settlements and the Spanish authorities.[19]

The following description from the 1740s of the Tome-Valencia settlements by a Spanish religious official, Fray Menchero, describes genízaros and their settlement on land grants:

"This is a new settlement, composed of various nations [tribes], who are kept in peace, union, and charity by the special providence of God and the efforts of the missionaries,... the Indians are of the various nations that have been taken captive by the Comanche Apaches, a nation so bellicose and so brave that it dominates all those of the interior country...They sell people of all these nations to the Spaniards of the kingdom, by whom they are held in servitude, the adults being instructed by the fathers and the children baptized. It sometimes happens that the Indians are not well treated in this servitude, no thought being given to the hardships of their captivity, and still less to the fact that they are neophytes, and should be cared for and treated with kindness. For this reason many desert and become apostates. [20]

The settlements of Tomé and Belén, just south of Albuquerque, were described by Juan Agustín Morfi as follows in 1778:

"In all the Spanish towns of New Mexico there exists a class of Indians called genízaros. These are made up of captive Comanches, Apaches, etc. who were taken as youngsters and raised among us, and who have married in the province…They are forced to live among the Spaniards, without lands or other means to subsist except the bow and arrow which serves them when they go into the back country to hunt deer for food… They are fine soldiers, very warlike… Expecting the genízaros to work for daily wages is a folly because of the abuses they have experienced, especially from the alcaldes mayores in the past… In two places, Belen and Tome, some sixty families of genizaros have congregated."[21]

Tribal origins edit

According to DNA studies, Hispanos of New Mexico have significant proportions of Amerindian genes (between 30 and 40% of the Nuevomexicano genome) due to the interbreeding between Spanish and genízaros.[22] Most genízaros were Navajo, Pawnee, Apache, Kiowa Apache, Ute, Comanche, and Paiute, who had been purchased at a young age and worked as domestic servants and sheepherders.[3] Throughout the Spanish and Mexican period, Genízaros settled in several New Mexican villages such as Belén, Tomé, Valencia, Carnuel, Los Lentes, Socorro, and San Miguel del Vado. Genízaros also lived in Albuquerque, Atrisco, Santa Fe, Chimayó, Taos, Abiquiú, and Las Vegas, NM.

By the mid-18th century, the Comanche dominated the weaker tribes in the eastern plains and sold children that they kidnapped from these tribes to the Spanish villagers.[3] By the Mexican and early American period (1821–1880), almost all of the genízaros were of Navajo ancestry. During negotiations with the United States military, Navajo spokesmen raised the issue of Navajos being held as servants in Spanish/Mexican households. When asked how many Navajos were among the Mexicans, they responded: "over half the tribe".[23] Most of the captives never returned to the Navajo nation but remained as the lower classes in the Hispanic villages.[23] Members of different tribes intermarried in these communities.

Presently their descendants comprise much of the population of Atrisco, Pajarito, and Barelas in the South Valley of Albuquerque, and significant portions of the population of Las Vegas in Eastern New Mexico.[24]

19th century edit

In 1821, Mexico became independent of Spain, and New Mexico became a territory within the First Mexican Empire. The Treaty of Córdoba enacted by Mexico decreed that indigenous tribes within its borders were citizens of Mexico. During Spanish rule, genízaros and Pueblo natives had often been treated as second-class citizens, although they were protected by the Laws of the Indies.[25]

Officially, the newly independent Mexican government proclaimed a policy of social equality for all ethnic groups, and the genízaros were officially considered equals to their vecino (villagers of mainly mixed racial background) and Pueblo neighbors. During this period, use of the term genízaro was ended officially for church and government documents.[26] In practice, however, Mexico was far from egalitarian. Many genízaros remained culturally and economically marginal in New Mexican society.

Economic and social conditions during the Mexican period were so bad that in 1837, the Pueblo, genízaros, coyotes, and vecinos revolted against the Mexican government. Rebels beheaded Albino Perez (the Governor of New Mexico), and killed all of the Mexican troops in Santa Fe. They formed a new government and elected as governor José González, a genízaro of Taos Pueblo and Pawnee ancestry.[26][27] The revolt was often referred to as the Chimayoso Revolt, after the community of Chimayó in northern New Mexico, which was home to José Ángel González and many other mixed-blood indigenous peoples.[27] The Chimayoso revolt was one of many against the Mexican government by indigenous groups during this period, which included the Mayan revolt in Yucatán.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Lawrence, Deborah; Lawrence, Jon (2016). Contesting the Borderlands: Interviews on the Early Southwest. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 67. ISBN 9780806151946.
  2. ^ Masich, Andrew E. (2018). Civil War in the Southwest Borderlands, 1861–1867. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 311. ISBN 9780806160962.
  3. ^ a b c d Archibald (1978).
  4. ^ a b "Indian Slavery Once Thrived in New Mexico. Latinos Are Finding Family Ties to It". The New York Times. January 28, 2018. Retrieved October 17, 2021.
  5. ^ Gutiérrez (1991), p. 171.
  6. ^ "Descendants Of Native American Slaves In New Mexico Emerge From Obscurity". NPR.org. December 29, 2016. Retrieved October 17, 2021.
  7. ^ "GENÍZAROS". Encyclopedia of the Great Plains. Retrieved October 17, 2021.
  8. ^ "Mr. Hidalgo's side abolishing slavery; repealing the laws regarding taxes; imposing alcabala for national and foreign effects; prohibiting the use of sealed paper, and extinguishing the tobacco, gunpowder, colors and other tobacco shops". 500 años de México en documentos. Retrieved October 5, 2015.
  9. ^ "Colonization, Political Conflict & Rebellion". myText CNM. May 21, 2018. Retrieved October 17, 2021.
  10. ^ Gonzales (2014), p. 582.
  11. ^ House Memorial 40 (HM40), "Genízaros, In Recognition," 2007 New Mexico State Legislature, Regular Session.
  12. ^ Senate Memorial 59 (SM59), "Genizaros, In Recognition," 2007 New Mexico State Legislature, Regular Session.
  13. ^ genízaro, ra (in Spanish) (22nd ed.). Madrid: Real Academia Española. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  14. ^ Brooks (2002), p. 129.
  15. ^ Magnaghi, Russell M. "Tropade Genízaro". In Wishart, David J. (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Great Plains. University of Nebraska–Lincoln. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  16. ^ Fuente, Ulises (15 August 2016). "Cuando España (casi) conquistó el Oeste". La Razón (in Spanish). Madrid. También les acompañan indios genízaros, es decir, niños de una tribu robados por otra y que los franciscanos tenían la obligación de rescatar comprándolos. (They are also accompanied by Genízaro Indians, that is, children from one tribe stolen by another and that the Franciscans had the obligation to rescue by buying them.)
  17. ^ Brooks (2002), pp. 123–132.
  18. ^ Magnaghi, Russell M. (1990), "Plains Indians in New Mexico: The Genizaro Experience," Great Plains Quarterly, 414, p. 87
  19. ^ Brooks (2002), p. 138.
  20. ^ Hackett (1923).
  21. ^ Morfi (1977).
  22. ^ Simon Romero (February 1, 2018) Familias de Nuevo México descubren que sus antepasados eran esclavos indígenas. Published by The New York Times.
  23. ^ a b Brugge (1968).
  24. ^ Gallegos (2010).
  25. ^ Gutiérrez (1991).
  26. ^ a b Rael-Galvéz (2002).
  27. ^ a b Chavez (1955).

See also edit

References edit

  • Archibald, Robert (1978). "Acculturation and Assimilation in Colonial New Mexico". New Mexico Historical Review. 53 (3).
  • Brooks, James F. (2002). Captives & Cousins: Slavery, Kinship, and Community in the Southwest Borderlands. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture; University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-2714-2.
  • Brugge, David M. (1968). Navajos in the Catholic Church Records of New Mexico, 1694-1875 (3rd ed.). Window Rock, Arizona: Research Section, Parks and Recreation Dept. Navajo Tribe. ISBN 978-1934691397.
  • Chavez, Fr A. (1955). "Jose Gonzales, Genizaro Governor". New Mexico Historical Review. 30 (2): 190–194.
  • Gallegos, Bernardo (2010). Martin, Kathleen J. (ed.). Dancing the Comanches, The Santo Niño, La Virgen (of Guadalupe) and the Genizaro Indians of New Mexico. Ashgate Publishers. pp. 203–208. ISBN 978-0754666318. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Gonzales, Moises (2014). "The Genizaro Land Grant Settlements of New Mexico". Journal of the Southwest. 56 (4): 583–602. doi:10.1353/jsw.2014.0029. S2CID 110030860.
  • Gutiérrez, Ramon A. (1991). When Jesus Came, the Corn Mothers Went Away, Marriage, Sexuality, and Power in New Mexico, 1500-1846. Stanford. ISBN 978-0804718325.
  • Hackett, Charles W., ed. (1923). Historical Documents Relating to New Mexico, Nueva Vizcaya, and Approaches Thereto. Vol. 1. collected by Adolph Bandelier & Fanny Bandelier. Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Institute. p. 395.
  • Morfi, Juan Agustin (1977) [1783], Account of Disorders in New Mexico in 1778, translated and edited by Marc Simmons, Historical Society of New Mexico, OCLC 3502950
  • Rael-Galvéz, Estévan (2002). Identifying and Capturing Identity: Narratives of American Indian Servitude, Colorado and New Mexico, 1750-1930 (PhD thesis). University of Michigan.

Further reading edit

  • Avery, Doris Swann (2008). (PDF) (MA thesis). University of Montana. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-17.
  • Brooks, James F. (1996). "This Evil Extends Especially to the Feminine Sex...Negotiating Captivity in the New Mexico Borderlands". Feminist Studies. Williamsburg: University of North Carolina Press. 22 (2): 279–309. doi:10.2307/3178414. JSTOR 3178414.
  • Demos, John Putnam (1994). The Unredeemed Captive: A Family Story from Early America. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0333650103.
  • Ebright, Malcolm (1996). "Breaking New Ground: A Reappraisal of Governors Vélez Cachupín and Mendinueta and their Land Grant Policies". Colonial Latin American Historical Review. 5 (2): 195–230.
  • Ebright, Malcolm; Hendricks, Rick (2006). The Witches of Abiquiú: The Governor, the Priest, the Genízaro Indians and the Devil. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0826320315.
  • Gallegos, B. (2017). Postcolonial Indigenous Performances: Coyote Musings on Genizaros, Hybridity, Education, and Slavery. Rotterdam, The Netherlands: Sense Publisher. ISBN 978-94-6351-036-3.
  • Gandert, Miguel; Lamadrid, Enrique; Gutiérrez, Ramón; Lippard, Lucy; Wilson, Chris (2000). Nuevo Mexico Profundo: Rituals of an Indo-Hispanic Homeland. Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0890133491.
  • Himmerich y Valencia, Robert (August 2020). "Genízaro". Encyclopedia.com.
  • Horvath, Steven M. (1977). "The Genízaro of Eighteenth-Century New Mexico: A Reexamination". Discovery. School of American Research: 25–40.
  • Horvath, Steven M. (1978). "Indian Slaves for Spanish Horses". The Museum of the Fur Trade Quarterly. 14 (4): 5.
  • Horvath, Steven M. (1979). The social and political organization of the Genízaros of Plaza de Nuestra Señora de los Dolores de Belén, New Mexico, 1740-1812 (PhD thesis). Brown University. pp. 130–133. OCLC 7263672.
  • Jones, Sondra (2000). The Trial of Don Pedro Leon Luján: The Attack Against Indian Slavery and Mexican Traders in Utah. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. pp. 132–33. ISBN 978-0874806151.
  • Lafayette. Statement of Mr. Head of Abiquiú in Regard of the Buying and Selling of Payutahs, 30 April 1852. Ritch Collection of Papers Pertaining to New Mexico. San Marino, California: Huntington Library. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Magnaghi, Russell M. (1994). "The Genízaro Experience in Spanish New Mexico". In Vigil, Ralph; Kaye, Frances; Wunder, John (eds.). Spain and the Plains: Myths and Realities of Spanish Exploration and Settlement on the Great Plains. Niwot: University Press of Colorado. p. 118. ISBN 978-0870813528.
  • Pinart Collection, PE 52:28, Governor Tomás Vélez Cachupín, Decree, Santa Fe, 24 May 1766; PE 55:3, 1790 Census for Abiquiú.
  • Twitchell, Ralph Emerson, ed. (2008) [1914]. SANM (Spanish Archives of New Mexico). Vol. Series I. Sunstone Press. pp. 85, 183, 494, 780, 1208, 1258. ISBN 978-0865346475.
  • Twitchell, Ralph Emerson, ed. (2008) [1914]. SANM (Spanish Archives of New Mexico). Vol. Series II. Sunstone Press. pp. 477, 523, 555, 573. ISBN 978-0865346482.
  • Simmons, Marc (1964). "Tlascalans on the Spanish Borderlands". New Mexico Historical Review. 39 (2): 101–110.
  • Swadesh, Frances Leon (1978). "They Settled by Little Bubbling Springs". El Palacio. Quarterly Journal of the Museum of New Mexico. 84 (3): 19–20, 42–49.

External links edit

    genízaro, genizaros, name, detribalized, native, americans, indians, from, 17th, 19th, century, spanish, colony, mexico, neighboring, regions, american, southwest, were, usually, women, children, been, captured, spanish, purchased, from, indian, tribes, held, . Genizaros or Genizaros was the name for detribalized Native Americans Indians from the 17th to 19th century in the Spanish colony of New Mexico and neighboring regions of the American southwest Genizaros were usually women and children who had been captured in war by the Spanish or purchased from Indian tribes who had held them captive as slaves To circumvent Spanish laws forbidding slavery the purchaser or rescuer of a genizaro had the obligation to introduce them to Christianity and Spanish customs Genizaros worked as indentured servants shepherds and laborers They occupied the lowest rung of status conscious Spanish society in New Mexico but slowly assimilated and intermarried into Spanish and later Mexican 1821 1846 and American 1846 present day society The descendants of genizaros are also called genizaros and the word has become a term of pride for the descendants of the original Indian captives and slaves 1 2 3 4 In 1793 genizaros are estimated to have comprised up to one third of the 29 041 people living under Spanish rule in New Mexico 5 6 New Spain had a prohibition of indigenous slavery implemented from 1543 onwards but it excluded those captured in the context of war 4 The restrictions of slavery also meant that genizaros were to be convicted and sentenced to servitude for a specific timespan at which time they earned freedom They were even encouraged to become landowners themselves by Spanish government landgrants or to join the regional militia 7 After abolition of slavery was proposed in 1810 during Mexican independence 8 the practice of slavery began to become unpopular in the Spanish Empire even more so after abolition was included officially by Jose Maria Morelos in the Sentimientos de la Nacion of 1813 This became law after Solemn Act of the Declaration of Independence of Northern America of First Mexican Republic and during the era of the centralist Republic Genizaros joined other citizen soldiers of New Mexico during the Chimayo Rebellion of 1837 to fight for New Mexico s separation from the centralist Republic of Mexico In fact the commander of the rebellion Jose Gonzales was a genizaro 9 Genizaros settled in several New Mexican villages such as Belen Tome Valencia Carnuel Los Lentes Las Trampas Socorro and San Miguel del Vado Genizaros also lived in Albuquerque Bernalillo Atrisco Santa Fe Chimayo Taos Abiquiu and Las Vegas NM Most genizaros were or their ancestors had been slaves of Indian tribes particularly the Plains tribes who raided and enslaved members of tribes allied with the Spaniards such as the Apaches 10 In 2007 genizaros and their contemporary descendants were recognized as indigenous people by the New Mexico Legislature 11 12 During the early 21st century they have comprised much of the population of the South Valley of Albuquerque and significant portions of the population of northern New Mexico including Espanola Taos Santa Fe Las Vegas in addition to that of southern Colorado Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Tribal origins 2 2 19th century 3 Notes 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksName editThe term genizaro is a Spanish word borrowed from the Italian word giannizzero which was adopted from the Ottoman Turkish word yeniceri 13 This Turkish word referred to slaves who were trained as soldiers for the Ottoman Empire The Turkish word was also adopted into English as janissary The first known use of the word genizaro in New Mexico was during the early 1660s when a politician was accused of mistreating a genizara servant whose father was a Pueblo and whose mother was Apache Quivira Wichita The term became used generally after 1692 when the Spanish regained control of New Mexico after the Pueblo revolt 14 The word genizaro also had a military meaning in New Mexico Genizaro militia and scouts were important in defending New Mexico from raiding Comanche Apache and Navajo warriors The genizaros were organized formally in 1808 into a genizaro Troop commanded by a corporal from their ranks and with a supply system dedicated for them 15 History editGenizaros were typically indigenous people who had been captured and enslaved by other Indian tribes and whom Franciscan monks were obligated legally to rescue by paying ransom The former slaves were made indentured servants in order to repay such debt typically for a period of a number of years 16 During the late 1700s and early 1800s genizaros comprised a significant proportion of the population of what is now the southwest United States They founded a number of localities such as Belen Tome Valencia Carnue Los Lentes Las Trampas Socorro and San Miguel del Vado There were also genizaros in towns such as Albuquerque Atrisco Santa Fe Chimayo Taos Abiquiu and Las Vegas The debt of a ransomed Native American often a child was usually 10 to 20 years of service to the person paying the ransom Young women were especially prized The experience of most ransomed Native Americans a genizaro was bondage on a continuum that ranged from near slavery to familial incorporation but few shed the stigma of servility Descendants of genizaros typically were also considered genizaros But as in the case of the rest of colonial Mexico this classification was not an absolute impediment to social mobility 17 The Comanche and other tribes brought their captives to trade fairs and offered them for sale In 1770 a female captive from 12 to 20 years old sold for two good horses and some small items a male was worth only one half as much 18 Many of the genizaros complained of mistreatment by the Spanish Based on a policy established by the Governors of New Mexico they were settled in land grants on the periphery of Spanish settlements These settlements became buffer communities for larger Spanish towns in the event of attack by the enemy tribes surrounding the province 3 The genizaros in the frontier communities become mediators between the often hostile Indian tribes surrounding the Spanish settlements and the Spanish authorities 19 The following description from the 1740s of the Tome Valencia settlements by a Spanish religious official Fray Menchero describes genizaros and their settlement on land grants This is a new settlement composed of various nations tribes who are kept in peace union and charity by the special providence of God and the efforts of the missionaries the Indians are of the various nations that have been taken captive by the Comanche Apaches a nation so bellicose and so brave that it dominates all those of the interior country They sell people of all these nations to the Spaniards of the kingdom by whom they are held in servitude the adults being instructed by the fathers and the children baptized It sometimes happens that the Indians are not well treated in this servitude no thought being given to the hardships of their captivity and still less to the fact that they are neophytes and should be cared for and treated with kindness For this reason many desert and become apostates 20 The settlements of Tome and Belen just south of Albuquerque were described by Juan Agustin Morfi as follows in 1778 In all the Spanish towns of New Mexico there exists a class of Indians called genizaros These are made up of captive Comanches Apaches etc who were taken as youngsters and raised among us and who have married in the province They are forced to live among the Spaniards without lands or other means to subsist except the bow and arrow which serves them when they go into the back country to hunt deer for food They are fine soldiers very warlike Expecting the genizaros to work for daily wages is a folly because of the abuses they have experienced especially from the alcaldes mayores in the past In two places Belen and Tome some sixty families of genizaros have congregated 21 Tribal origins edit According to DNA studies Hispanos of New Mexico have significant proportions of Amerindian genes between 30 and 40 of the Nuevomexicano genome due to the interbreeding between Spanish and genizaros 22 Most genizaros were Navajo Pawnee Apache Kiowa Apache Ute Comanche and Paiute who had been purchased at a young age and worked as domestic servants and sheepherders 3 Throughout the Spanish and Mexican period Genizaros settled in several New Mexican villages such as Belen Tome Valencia Carnuel Los Lentes Socorro and San Miguel del Vado Genizaros also lived in Albuquerque Atrisco Santa Fe Chimayo Taos Abiquiu and Las Vegas NM By the mid 18th century the Comanche dominated the weaker tribes in the eastern plains and sold children that they kidnapped from these tribes to the Spanish villagers 3 By the Mexican and early American period 1821 1880 almost all of the genizaros were of Navajo ancestry During negotiations with the United States military Navajo spokesmen raised the issue of Navajos being held as servants in Spanish Mexican households When asked how many Navajos were among the Mexicans they responded over half the tribe 23 Most of the captives never returned to the Navajo nation but remained as the lower classes in the Hispanic villages 23 Members of different tribes intermarried in these communities Presently their descendants comprise much of the population of Atrisco Pajarito and Barelas in the South Valley of Albuquerque and significant portions of the population of Las Vegas in Eastern New Mexico 24 19th century edit In 1821 Mexico became independent of Spain and New Mexico became a territory within the First Mexican Empire The Treaty of Cordoba enacted by Mexico decreed that indigenous tribes within its borders were citizens of Mexico During Spanish rule genizaros and Pueblo natives had often been treated as second class citizens although they were protected by the Laws of the Indies 25 Officially the newly independent Mexican government proclaimed a policy of social equality for all ethnic groups and the genizaros were officially considered equals to their vecino villagers of mainly mixed racial background and Pueblo neighbors During this period use of the term genizaro was ended officially for church and government documents 26 In practice however Mexico was far from egalitarian Many genizaros remained culturally and economically marginal in New Mexican society Economic and social conditions during the Mexican period were so bad that in 1837 the Pueblo genizaros coyotes and vecinos revolted against the Mexican government Rebels beheaded Albino Perez the Governor of New Mexico and killed all of the Mexican troops in Santa Fe They formed a new government and elected as governor Jose Gonzalez a genizaro of Taos Pueblo and Pawnee ancestry 26 27 The revolt was often referred to as the Chimayoso Revolt after the community of Chimayo in northern New Mexico which was home to Jose Angel Gonzalez and many other mixed blood indigenous peoples 27 The Chimayoso revolt was one of many against the Mexican government by indigenous groups during this period which included the Mayan revolt in Yucatan Notes edit Lawrence Deborah Lawrence Jon 2016 Contesting the Borderlands Interviews on the Early Southwest University of Oklahoma Press p 67 ISBN 9780806151946 Masich Andrew E 2018 Civil War in the Southwest Borderlands 1861 1867 University of Oklahoma Press p 311 ISBN 9780806160962 a b c d Archibald 1978 a b Indian Slavery Once Thrived in New Mexico Latinos Are Finding Family Ties to It The New York Times January 28 2018 Retrieved October 17 2021 Gutierrez 1991 p 171 Descendants Of Native American Slaves In New Mexico Emerge From Obscurity NPR org December 29 2016 Retrieved October 17 2021 GENIZAROS Encyclopedia of the Great Plains Retrieved October 17 2021 Mr Hidalgo s side abolishing slavery repealing the laws regarding taxes imposing alcabala for national and foreign effects prohibiting the use of sealed paper and extinguishing the tobacco gunpowder colors and other tobacco shops 500 anos de Mexico en documentos Retrieved October 5 2015 Colonization Political Conflict amp Rebellion myText CNM May 21 2018 Retrieved October 17 2021 Gonzales 2014 p 582 House Memorial 40 HM40 Genizaros In Recognition 2007 New Mexico State Legislature Regular Session Senate Memorial 59 SM59 Genizaros In Recognition 2007 New Mexico State Legislature Regular Session genizaro ra in Spanish 22nd ed Madrid Real Academia Espanola a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Brooks 2002 p 129 Magnaghi Russell M Tropade Genizaro In Wishart David J ed Encyclopedia of the Great Plains University of Nebraska Lincoln Retrieved 4 August 2020 Fuente Ulises 15 August 2016 Cuando Espana casi conquisto el Oeste La Razon in Spanish Madrid Tambien les acompanan indios genizaros es decir ninos de una tribu robados por otra y que los franciscanos tenian la obligacion de rescatar comprandolos They are also accompanied by Genizaro Indians that is children from one tribe stolen by another and that the Franciscans had the obligation to rescue by buying them Brooks 2002 pp 123 132 Magnaghi Russell M 1990 Plains Indians in New Mexico The Genizaro Experience Great Plains Quarterly 414 p 87 Brooks 2002 p 138 Hackett 1923 Morfi 1977 Simon Romero February 1 2018 Familias de Nuevo Mexico descubren que sus antepasados eran esclavos indigenas Published by The New York Times a b Brugge 1968 Gallegos 2010 Gutierrez 1991 a b Rael Galvez 2002 a b Chavez 1955 See also editMission IndiansReferences editArchibald Robert 1978 Acculturation and Assimilation in Colonial New Mexico New Mexico Historical Review 53 3 Brooks James F 2002 Captives amp Cousins Slavery Kinship and Community in the Southwest Borderlands Chapel Hill N C Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 2714 2 Brugge David M 1968 Navajos in the Catholic Church Records of New Mexico 1694 1875 3rd ed Window Rock Arizona Research Section Parks and Recreation Dept Navajo Tribe ISBN 978 1934691397 Chavez Fr A 1955 Jose Gonzales Genizaro Governor New Mexico Historical Review 30 2 190 194 Gallegos Bernardo 2010 Martin Kathleen J ed Dancing the Comanches The Santo Nino La Virgen of Guadalupe and the Genizaro Indians of New Mexico Ashgate Publishers pp 203 208 ISBN 978 0754666318 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Gonzales Moises 2014 The Genizaro Land Grant Settlements of New Mexico Journal of the Southwest 56 4 583 602 doi 10 1353 jsw 2014 0029 S2CID 110030860 Gutierrez Ramon A 1991 When Jesus Came the Corn Mothers Went Away Marriage Sexuality and Power in New Mexico 1500 1846 Stanford ISBN 978 0804718325 Hackett Charles W ed 1923 Historical Documents Relating to New Mexico Nueva Vizcaya and Approaches Thereto Vol 1 collected by Adolph Bandelier amp Fanny Bandelier Washington D C Carnegie Institute p 395 Morfi Juan Agustin 1977 1783 Account of Disorders in New Mexico in 1778 translated and edited by Marc Simmons Historical Society of New Mexico OCLC 3502950 Rael Galvez Estevan 2002 Identifying and Capturing Identity Narratives of American Indian Servitude Colorado and New Mexico 1750 1930 PhD thesis University of Michigan Further reading editAvery Doris Swann 2008 Into the Den of Evils The Genizaros in Colonial New Mexico PDF MA thesis University of Montana Archived from the original PDF on 2010 06 17 Brooks James F 1996 This Evil Extends Especially to the Feminine Sex Negotiating Captivity in the New Mexico Borderlands Feminist Studies Williamsburg University of North Carolina Press 22 2 279 309 doi 10 2307 3178414 JSTOR 3178414 Demos John Putnam 1994 The Unredeemed Captive A Family Story from Early America Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0333650103 Ebright Malcolm 1996 Breaking New Ground A Reappraisal of Governors Velez Cachupin and Mendinueta and their Land Grant Policies Colonial Latin American Historical Review 5 2 195 230 Ebright Malcolm Hendricks Rick 2006 The Witches of Abiquiu The Governor the Priest the Genizaro Indians and the Devil Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0826320315 Gallegos B 2017 Postcolonial Indigenous Performances Coyote Musings on Genizaros Hybridity Education and Slavery Rotterdam The Netherlands Sense Publisher ISBN 978 94 6351 036 3 Gandert Miguel Lamadrid Enrique Gutierrez Ramon Lippard Lucy Wilson Chris 2000 Nuevo Mexico Profundo Rituals of an Indo Hispanic Homeland Santa Fe Museum of New Mexico Press p 58 ISBN 978 0890133491 Himmerich y Valencia Robert August 2020 Genizaro Encyclopedia com Horvath Steven M 1977 The Genizaro of Eighteenth Century New Mexico A Reexamination Discovery School of American Research 25 40 Horvath Steven M 1978 Indian Slaves for Spanish Horses The Museum of the Fur Trade Quarterly 14 4 5 Horvath Steven M 1979 The social and political organization of the Genizaros of Plaza de Nuestra Senora de los Dolores de Belen New Mexico 1740 1812 PhD thesis Brown University pp 130 133 OCLC 7263672 Jones Sondra 2000 The Trial of Don Pedro Leon Lujan The Attack Against Indian Slavery and Mexican Traders in Utah Salt Lake City University of Utah Press pp 132 33 ISBN 978 0874806151 Lafayette Statement of Mr Head of Abiquiu in Regard of the Buying and Selling of Payutahs 30 April 1852 Ritch CollectionofPapers Pertaining to New Mexico San Marino California Huntington Library a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Magnaghi Russell M 1994 The Genizaro Experience in Spanish New Mexico In Vigil Ralph Kaye Frances Wunder John eds Spain and the Plains Myths and Realities of Spanish Exploration and Settlement on the Great Plains Niwot University Press of Colorado p 118 ISBN 978 0870813528 Pinart Collection PE 52 28 Governor Tomas Velez Cachupin Decree Santa Fe 24 May 1766 PE 55 3 1790 Census for Abiquiu Twitchell Ralph Emerson ed 2008 1914 SANM Spanish Archives of New Mexico Vol Series I Sunstone Press pp 85 183 494 780 1208 1258 ISBN 978 0865346475 Twitchell Ralph Emerson ed 2008 1914 SANM Spanish Archives of New Mexico Vol Series II Sunstone Press pp 477 523 555 573 ISBN 978 0865346482 Simmons Marc 1964 Tlascalans on the Spanish Borderlands New Mexico Historical Review 39 2 101 110 Swadesh Frances Leon 1978 They Settled by Little Bubbling Springs El Palacio Quarterly Journal of the Museum of New Mexico 84 3 19 20 42 49 External links editIndio Hispano Legacy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Genizaro amp oldid 1192176325, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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