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Joseph, I guess what I meant is that an African slave, to me, was one like the ancestors of the African-Americans and Negroes of Brazil. In facial features and body type they look to me like the tribes found on the Ivory Coast or Gold Coast of Africa, and not like the North Africans (Ethiopians and Moroccans) that the Moors in Spain were descended from. I heard of stories of Moors who came to the New World with the Conquistadores. I didn't think they were slaves, more like indentured servants who could be freed. I have seen the descriptions of people in the microfilmed records as Negro, Mulato, Mestizo, Coyote, and Yndio, but not in relation to anyone of my ancestors I could identify. They were all (until 1821) identified as Espanol. After 1821, there are no descriptions as to race. In my family it is known that my mother's side had Piro Indian blood around her grand-father's time. He was born around 1854, and my father told me that he was a Mestizo, even though he was not dark or curly-haired like his cousins. I couldn't figure out what "coyote" meant. I guess it means "Native"? I also have seen Yndio Genizaro as a description. Wonder what that means. ----- Original Message ----- From: Joseph Puentes Sent: Wednesday, June 22, 2005 7:11 PM To: ranchos@yahoogroups.com Subject: [ranchos] Moorish or Slave
Emilie Garcia wrote: So Joseph, you are not really descended from an African slave I really couldn't say one way or the other. the MtDNA results are my maternal (mom's mom's mom's mom's) side and I have no documented records past my grandmother. . .in fact I didn't know her name until recently: Antonia Lopez from somewhere in Jalisco.
But on my paternal side going out to some GGGG grandparents some are identified in baptism records as mestizo, coyote, mulatto, and negro. , but maybe from someone with Moorish or Arab blood. The Moors were the powers in Spain only until shortly before the ancestors of the current Spaniards had kicked them and the Jews and Arabs out. A Spanish friend from the Basque country told me she was proud not to be "hija de moro ni de indio". (She can't help it- the Basques are very proud). I knew that my father's surname OLAGUE is Basque, because he told me so. http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/Fact.aspx?fid=10&yr=0&ln=Olague
http://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/geneal/index_gc.html
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