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His wife, also from that city, was the daughter of Francisco Pacheco. Their children born in Mexico City were Juana de Zamora, Isabel de Bohórquez, María de Villanueva, and Antonio Baca. Of the daughters, Juana married Simón Pérez de Bustillo, Isabel was the wife of Pedro Durán y Chaves, and María married Simón de Abendaño. [2]
In 1565, he earned the chaplaincy of the Chapel of St Peter in Seville Cathedral. [3]At around that time, Pacheco entered Fernando de Herrera's circle of "doctos amigos" ["learned friends"], [4] poets and humanists, which included Francisco de Medina, who had studied Theology at the same time as Pacheco, [2] Juan de Mal Lara, [4] Diego Girón [4] Baltasar del Alcázar, and Gonzalo Argote de ...
The Chapel of Our Lady of Light, or La Castrense, was a military chapel on the south side of the Santa Fe Plaza which was built in 1760 by Governor Francisco Antonio Marín del Valle. To complete the interior of the chapel, Marín del Valle brought masons from Zacatecas, Mexico to carve a massive stone reredos. Archaeological investigations of ...
Bernardo de Miera y Pacheco, a native of Valle de Carriedo, Cantabria, Spain, lived in Chihuahua before he moved to El Paso in 1743. From 1754–56 he lived in Santa Fe. Multi-talented, he was an army engineer, merchant, Indian fighter, government agent, rancher and artist.
As a result, he drew perhaps his last map, covering an area centered on the Rio Grande from Santa Fe up to the Arkansas River. [2] On 4 or 11 April 1785, Bernardo de Miera y Pacheco died in Santa Fe. [2] His wife, Estefania, had died less than a year and a half earlier, also in Santa Fe. [1]
Ricardo Fidel Pacheco Rodríguez (born 18 September 1963) is a Mexican politician affiliated with the PRI. As of 2013 he served as Deputy of the LXII Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Durango. He also served as Senator during the LX and LXI Legislatures. [1]
Carlos Navarro Montoya (see Ricardo Jorge Navarro) Willington Ortiz, Julio César Ortiz (nephew) [619] Nixon Perea, Andrés Perea (son) [620] Robinson Rentería, Wason Rentería, Carlos Rentería (brothers) [621] Freddy Rincón, Manuel Rincón, Ignacio Rincón (brothers), Sebastián Rincón (son) [622] Hugo Rodallega, Carmen Rodallega (cousin ...
After that execution, he granted a pardon to the rest of the rebels of Santa Fe de Nuevo México. However, he ordered them to obey the policies of the Crown, otherwise he would kill them. In addition, he placed the heads of those executed throughout the square of the provincial capital so that the population would remember what would happen to ...