Hello, it is true what you say about this classification upgrade
because I found that in my own research. My ancestor Jose Domingo
Apodaca was classified as a mestizo in his marriage certificate from
1784. His wife was espanola. Of course, his son Antonio Apodaca
would be mestizo too, right? But when I found the marriage record of
the son, he was classified as espanol, the same as the mother. Was
the indian blood lost from one generation to the next? I have read
that these racial terms had no scientific basis, and they were used
to describe the appearance of the individual, rather than his ethnic
mixture.
--- In ranchos@yahoogroups.com, alice wissing <alice_wissing@y...>
wrote:
> Folks,
>
> I can't remember where I read this, but in some parts of Mexico
the term Coyote simply meant a Mestizo, with the person not
necessarily being part black. It's probably safe to say that if a
person is looking though records and seeing the terms coyote and
mestizo used during the same time period, the coyote was probably
someone who appeared to be part black and Indian. In researching
ancestors from Durango, I found that people who were born mulato or
coyote often got a classification upgrade when marrying an
Espanol.
>
> Alice
>
> Joseph Puentes <makas@n...> wrote:
>
>
> http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/rg/frameset_rg.asp?
Dest=G1&Aid=&Gid=&Lid=&Sid=&Did=&Juris1=&Event=&Year=&Gloss=&Sub=&Tab
=&Entry=&Guide=WLSpanis.ASP
>
> [this is a might long link. if it doesn't work you might have to
rebuild it in the URL window]
>
> go to "Racial Ternminology"
>
> ============================================
>
> or:
>
> go to www.familysearch.org and
>
> go to "Library"
>
> go to "Education"
>
> go to "Family History Library Publications" [another time go
to "Research Guidance" and do a search under "Mexico" For a wealth
of info]
>
> go to "Word Lists"
>
> go to "Spanish Genealogical Word list"
>
> go to "Racial Terminology"
>
> and you'll see that "Coyote" means:
>
> Coyote Spanish (#65533;), Indian (3/8), and Negro (1/8)
> I was trying to find other references but wasn't able to find any.
If anyone has a cross reference to the meaning of Coyote that would
be great. I guess what I'm trying to say is that this is only one
source of information and it would be safe to consider it but much
safer to consider it in the light of another reference or two. Just
like our genealogy when we see it once we have confidence but if we
see the same couples over and over with other children we "know" we
have it right. Never hurts and always helps to have multiple
sources.
> ====================
>
> keep the questions coming,
>
> joseph
>
>
> latina1955@a... wrote:
> In a message dated 3/12/2004 11:55:28 AM Central Standard Time,
gmccrary@z... writes:
> The baptism
> records for my family line have the children in one family
labelled
> as Indios, Mestizos and coyotes!
> What are coyotes?
>
>
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