374. Juana (Ana)10 López(1869) was born before 1663, the first event for which there is a recorded date. Juana died after 1724.(1870)
She married an unknown person. (See an unknown person for the children resulting from this marriage.)
Juana became the mother of Jacinto Sánchez De Iñigo 1663.(1871) Juana became the mother of Pedro Sánchez De Iñigo in Nuevo Mexico, 1674.(1872)
Juana (Ana) López had the following children:
375
i.
Francisca9 Sánchez De Iñigo(1873) (living status unknown).
+
329
ii.
Jacinto Sánchez De Iñigo was born 1663.
376
iii.
Pedro Sánchez De Iñigo(1874) was
born in Nuevo Mexico 1674.(1875) Pedro
died before 1720.(1876) He married twice. He married Leonor Baca in El Real De San Lorenzo, 1691.(1877) (Additional notes for Leonor Baca(1878)) He married María Luján in Bernalillo, Kingdom Of New
Mexico, before 1700.(1879) (Additional notes
for María Luján(1880)) María became the mother
of Pedro Ii Sánchez De Iñigo 1700.(1881)
María became the mother of Manuela Sánchez De Iñigo January 13, 1700/01. María became the mother of Francisca
Xaviera Sánchez De Iñigo December 13, 1715.(1882)
At 26 years of age Pedro became the father of Pedro Ii Sánchez De Iñigo 1700.(1883) At 26 years of age Pedro became the father of Manuela Sánchez De Iñigo January 13, 1700/01. At 41 years of age Pedro became the father of Francisca Xaviera Sánchez De Iñigo December 13, 1715.(1884) Pedro and Jacinto Sánchez de Iñigo were two natives of New Mexico, evidently brothers, who escaped the 1680 Indian Massacre as minors, and returned to re-settle New Mexico in 1693. Or else they were born at Guadalupe del Paso, considered then a part of New Mexico.
Pedro Sánchez de Iñigo was born "in New Mexico, " the natural son of Ana (Juana) López. On January 7, 1692, he married Leonor Baca at El Real de San Lorenzo [AASF, DM, 1691, No. 3]. A Francisca Sánchez de Iñigo, the wife of Captain Juan García de Noriega, was most likely his sister. And he could well be a "Pedro López de Yñiguez" who was soldering at Guadalupe del Paso prior to the Reconquest. [AASF, DM, 1694, No. 3].
Pedro first settled in the Rio Arriba area, and in 1696 his wife was killed by the Indians of San Ildefonso with her mother, a brother, and her two children. [Old Santa Fe, Vol. III, pp. 332-373].
By the turn of the century Pedro had married a María Luján at Bernalillo, moving shortly afterwards back to the Rio Arriba country. [Spanish Archives, II, Nos. 187, 828]. At Santa Cruz, in 1710, he gave his age as thirty-six, stating that he was a resident there, and married. [AASF, DM 1710, No. 3]. In 1713 he was mentioned as a brother-in-law of Diego Martín, son of Domingo Martín. [Spanish Archives, I, No. 430. María Luján could very well be a daughter of Juan Luján and Juana Dominguez.]
He was dead by 1720 when a daughter got married.
He had a son, Pedro II, who gave his age as twenty-seven in 1727 [AASF, DM 1727, No. 1] being therefore a son by the second wife. Other children were: Manuela, born January 13, 170l [AASF, B-13, Bern]; Olaya, who maried Diego Gonzalez of Santa Cruz in 1720 [AASF, DM, 1720, No. 2]; Francisca Xaviera, December 13, 1715, who became the wife of Juan Quintana; [AASF, DM M-24; Spanish Archives, I, No. 723]; and Antonia, wife of Juan José de la Cerda. [AASF, DM, 1721, No. 2].
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