Skip to main content

User account menu

  • Log in
Home

Test Site

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Contacts
  • Old Albums
  • New Albums
  • Archives
  • Files
  • Forums
  • Recent Forum Comments
  • Links
  • Films
  • Notary
  • Map

Error message

Warning: Undefined array key "tibristinishafriclephitrimig" in Drupal\comment\Controller\CommentController->commentPermalink() (line 127 of core/modules/comment/src/Controller/CommentController.php).

Book on Colonial Mexico

  • Add
  • By Corrine Ardoin | Wed, 2007-05-16 13:15

    At a used book store, I found a great book called, "Land and Society in
    Colonial Mexico," by Francois Chevalier, published by UC California Press in
    Berkeley in 1970. It is about the "hacienda," its background and how it
    continues to play a role in Mexico today. It goes back to the 16th and 17th
    centuries in detail. It also has a great map of 16th century Mexico showing
    the various communities and what type of community they were, where Spanish,
    Creole, etc., points out the great estates, food production, mining, etc..
    Well, it just shows a lot and I think this book will be a good sourcebook.

    One of the passages in it I would like to share for now is in a chapter
    called "Factors Limiting the Great Estates." It reads: "The region of Lagos
    and Los Altos de Jalisco presents a peculiar problem. Its small landowners
    bear today the same names as the modest stockmen of the early seventeenth
    century: Macias, Anda, Padilla, Ornelas, Torres, Isaci, Aranda. Yet the big
    haciendas seem to have divided the entire region among themselves. The
    small, unencumbered rancho of our day is relatively recent phenomenon,
    dating from the end of the eighteenth century at the earliest and usually
    from the nineteenth. It is possible that the rancho represents the old
    holding, or rented land, which had later split away from the big estate. If
    so, the ranchero would have unintentionally avenged his Creole ancestors
    who, after having been reduced to the status of sharecroppers and tenant
    farmers, thus regained their independence a century or so later."

    Anyways, I thought that was particularly interesting. I'm not sure I know
    what he's saying exactly, but it's interesting!

    Corrine Ardoin

    • Log in to post comments

    Corrine Ardoin

    18 years 2 months ago

    Permalink

    Book on Colonial Mexico

    At a used book store, I found a great book called, "Land and Society in
    Colonial Mexico," by Francois Chevalier, published by UC California Press in
    Berkeley in 1970. It is about the "hacienda," its background and how it
    continues to play a role in Mexico today. It goes back to the 16th and 17th
    centuries in detail. It also has a great map of 16th century Mexico showing
    the various communities and what type of community they were, where Spanish,
    Creole, etc., points out the great estates, food production, mining, etc..
    Well, it just shows a lot and I think this book will be a good sourcebook.

    One of the passages in it I would like to share for now is in a chapter
    called "Factors Limiting the Great Estates." It reads: "The region of Lagos
    and Los Altos de Jalisco presents a peculiar problem. Its small landowners
    bear today the same names as the modest stockmen of the early seventeenth
    century: Macias, Anda, Padilla, Ornelas, Torres, Isaci, Aranda. Yet the big
    haciendas seem to have divided the entire region among themselves. The
    small, unencumbered rancho of our day is relatively recent phenomenon,
    dating from the end of the eighteenth century at the earliest and usually
    from the nineteenth. It is possible that the rancho represents the old
    holding, or rented land, which had later split away from the big estate. If
    so, the ranchero would have unintentionally avenged his Creole ancestors
    who, after having been reduced to the status of sharecroppers and tenant
    farmers, thus regained their independence a century or so later."

    Anyways, I thought that was particularly interesting. I'm not sure I know
    what he's saying exactly, but it's interesting!

    Corrine Ardoin

    History, Culture and General Discussion
    • Reset your password

    Recent Forum Comments

    Subject: Bringing back Juan de Moscoso y Sandoval
    Comment Date: 2024-12-17
    Last Comment: AshlynnCastaneda
    Subject: Maria Velasco
    Comment Date: 2024-12-16
    Last Comment: DelgadoLopezVelasco
    Subject: Maria Ygnacia Nomelin and Jose Miguel Espinosa
    Comment Date: 2024-11-27
    Last Comment: Gil4SC

    Most Recent Genealogy Research Forum Topics

    2024-11-18
    Maria Ygnacia Nomelin and Jose Miguel Espinosa
    2024-10-18
    Vazquez de Mercado in Pinos, ZAC.
    2024-09-21
    Property records

    Most Recent History, Culture and General Discussion Topics

    2024-04-10
    Romo De Vivar: Descendants of the Influential Jewish Family Ha Levi
    2024-03-19
    Way to show 400 years of family
    2023-05-01
    DNA Doe Project --- Identification: Parga

    Most Recent Announcements and Event Topics

    2024-11-21
    New Member
    2024-10-25
    New Member: Jorge Casarez
    2024-04-02
    New Member
    Powered by Drupal
    Subscribe to RSS feed

    Developed & Designed by Alaa Haddad