Juan Bravo de Medrano, I Count of Santa Rosa

Don Juan Bravo de Medrano[2][3] (1650 in Pánuco, Zacatecas – May 15, 1710) was the 1st Count of Santa Rosa[1][4] and a noble from the Bravo de Medrano family in Zacatecas. Juan Bravo de Medrano was the Lieutenant General of the Kingdom of Nueva Galicia,[5] Maestre de Campo of his tercio, and held the first noble title in Zacatecas, granted by King Charles II of Spain on February 8, 1691.[2][1][6] The title of Conde de Santa Rosa is linked to an immense estate, centered around the Santa Rosa hacienda situated between Jerez and Juchipila. The Count of Santa Rosa is a descendant of the founder of Zacatecas, Baltasar Temiño de Bañuelos, and the founder of Guadalajara, Cristóbal de Oñate. Juan married Doña Juana de Altamirano Castilla y Aguayo.[7]

Juan Bravo de Medrano
Born
Juan Bravo de Medrano

1650
DiedMay 15, 1710
Occupation(s)Maestre de Campo, Lieutenant General of Nueva Galicia, mining
TitleI Count of Santa Rosa[1]
PredecessorEstablished
SuccessorDon Felipe Bartolome Bravo de Medrano y Acuña Altamirano, II Count of Santa Rosa
SpouseDoña Juana de Altamirano Castilla y Aguayo
Children2, Don Felipe Bartolome Bravo de Medrano y Acuña Altamirano, Manuela Bravo de Medrano y Acuña Altamirano y Castilla
Parent(s)Don Felipe Bartolome Bravo de Acuña
Catalina de Medrano y Oñate

Family

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Don Juan Bravo de Medrano[8] was the son of Don Felipe Bartolome Bravo de Acuña[9] and Catalina de Medrano y Oñate.[10]

Ancestry

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Juan's mother Catalina de Medrano y Oñate was the daughter of Captain Juan de Medrano y Ulloa y Velazquez[11][12] and Catalina Temiño-Bañuelos y Oñate Rivadeneira.[13][14]

Captain Juan de Medrano y Ulloa y Velazquez was the son of Diego de Medrano, born in either Penacerrada, Alava or Soria, and Catalina de Velazquez.[15]

Juan Bravo de Medrano's maternal grandmother Catalina Temiño-Bañuelos y Oñate y Rivadeneira was the daughter of Diego Ruiz Temiño de Bañuelos Zaldívar (born 1562, Zacatecas, Mexico)[16] Councilor and General Depositary of Zacatecas, and Catalina de Oñate y Rivadeneira, the latter was a direct descendant of Cristóbal de Oñate.[17]

Juan Bravo de Medrano's maternal great-grandfather was Diego de Temiño-Banuelos-Saldivar and Catalina de Oñate y Rivadeneira. Their daughter Catalina de Oñate y Bañuelos was born in 1609, Zacatecas and married Juan de Medrano y Ulloa y Velazquez (b. 1609, Santo Domingo) on 20 August 1629 in Madrid, Spain.[18] Catalina de Oñate y Bañuelos and Juan de Medrano y Ulloa y Velazquez were the parents of Catalina de Medrano y Oñate, mother of the first count of Santa Rosa.[19]

Descendant of the founder of Zacatecas

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Juan Bravo de Medrano is the maternal great-great-grandson of Baltasar Temiño de Banuelos [es], Lieutenant Captain General of Neuva Galicia, prominent founder and miner of Zacatecas, Mexico. In 1572, he married María de Zaldivar y Mendoza, with whom he had six children. In memory of him there is a lagoon in Zacatecas called Bañuelos.[20]

Early life

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Juan Bravo de Medrano was born in Pánuco, Zacatecas, around 1650.[2] Juan Bravo de Medrano became the first Zacatecan to purchase a noble title,[1] becoming the first Count of Santa Rosa on February 8, 1691, thanks to his mining success and due to his pacification of Colotlán and the Sierra del Nayarit [es].[21] He was also the Lieutenant Capitán General of Nueva Galicia.[5] This lineage of counts bestowed significant nobility upon Zacatecas, engaging in a competition of honor and wealth throughout the Enlightenment century and the so-called Bourbon reforms.[21] Prominent Zacatecan miners maintained a private army, often consisting of two or three hundred men, whether to defend their own territories or the interests of the Crown. Don Juan Bravo de Medrano was also the Maestre de campo in Zacatecas, and therefore maintained a tercio and a personal guard consisting of eight German halberdiers, paid by the king, who accompanied him everywhere.[21]

Don Juan Bravo de Medrano, I Count of Santa Rosa, owned the Santa Rosa de Malpaso hacienda from 1691, the year his mother Catalina de Medrano y Oñate bequeathed it to him, until his death in 1710.[2] The community of Malpaso has its origins in a land grant on February 8, 1561. Throughout its history, Malpaso has had various owners. In the 17th century, it belonged to the family of Juan Bravo de Medrano, the first Count of Santa Rosa, hence its name: Santa Rosa de Malpaso, named after its first patron, Santa Rosa de Lima. The construction of the Santa Rosa hacienda was of strong craftsmanship, as can still be seen in the walls of the Fort (known as El Caracol) that was built back in the distant last years of the 16th century, and as can be seen in the very thick walls of the barns and big house.[22] Juan and his mother Catalina de Medrano y Oñate built a temple with a beautiful façade in honor of Saint Rose of Lima. Currently, the Patron Saint is the Lord of Malpaso or the Ascension, and its façade looks very different.[2]

 
Vetagrande, Zacatecas

The father of the Count of Santa Rosa, General Bartolomé Bravo de Acuña, an enterprising miner from Vetagrande, began acquiring lands (centered around the Santa Rosa hacienda situated between Jerez and Juchipila) in the mid-17th century. These properties were added to his wife Catalina de Medrano y Oñate's dowry, descended from majorat founder Cristóbal de Oñate. The first Count of Santa Rosa, Juan Bravo de Medrano, continued acquiring lands, ranging from medium-value estates to large domains and mines mostly in Vetagrande.[23]

Lands and mines owned

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Remains of the Votive Pyramid in La Quemada, Zacatecas

Juan Bravo de Medrano owned large mining and agricultural estates, including the haciendas of Real de Pánuco, Vetagrande, Malpaso, Palomas, San Nicolás in Pinos, Santa Rosa in Juchipila, and Santa Rosa in Tlaltenango.[2] In 1699, Don Juan Bravo de Medrano, I Count of Santa Rosa purchased the Palomas hacienda from the clergyman Francisco de Arratia for 5,362 pesos.[23] By 1695, he had acquired lands from the Querétaro convent of Santa Clara de Jesús: La Quemada, Los Edificios, El Cericillo, and El Arenal, southwest of Zacatecas, not far from the lands associated with the Santa Rosa hacienda, also known as Santa Rosa de Malpaso.[24] Estimated in 1777 after an owner's death, Joseph Martinez de Bustamante, the hacienda had a total value of 57,736 pesos 2 reales.[23]

This included 1,000 pesos for El Fuerte, 4,000 pesos for Malpaso, 1,500 pesos for El Eje, 2,500 pesos for Santa Rosa, with the main residence valued at 1,800 pesos. The property also included 20 sitios of livestock and nearly 180 caballerías of land, equivalent to 14,144.4 hectares (34,988 acres or 141.444 km).[23] Adding tools, seeds, and livestock (247 mules, 248 oxen, 161 donkeys, and nearly 2,500 horses), its value reached 69,851 pesos 5 reales. However, the hacienda had mortgages and numerous debts, some dating back 40 years, exceeding a third of its value. It was consequently sold by Captain Bustamante's widow, Gertrudis Díaz de la Campa, a relative of the Count of San Mateo, to Ventura de Arteaga, then the general administrator for José de la Borda.[23]

Real de Pánuco Mine in Zacatecas

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State of Zacatecas in Mexico

In the mid-17th century, Medrano's father Bartolome Bravo de Acuna purchased the Real de Pánuco mines in Zacatecas. Between 1620 and 1630, Zacatecas experienced prosperity in silver production unmatched until the early 18th century. However, setbacks such as the Vetagrande mine flooding in 1619-1620, epidemics, and migration occurred.[5] His mines would have utilized Jerónimo de Ayanz y Beaumont's steam-powered pump system to drain water and gas out of the mines.[25]

In the 17th century, the Real de Pánuco mine was prosperous; 27 grinding mills, 41 smelting mills, 14 amalgamation mills, 39 owners of mines and mills, one blacksmith, among others.[5] Despite Pánuco's thriving economy in the mid-17th century, the descendants of its discoverers, among the wealthiest individuals in Spanish America, inherited illustrious names but faced more debts.[5]

Bartolome Bravo de Acuna was succeeded by his son and heir Juan Bravo de Medrano, I Count of Santa Rosa. His son Don Felipe Bartolome Bravo de Medrano y Acuña Altamirano, II Count of Santa Rosa, inherited flooded mines and debts, leading to the inability to sustain the family business. When the II Count of Santa Rosa died, notorial records indicate his properties which included the Pánuco smelters and the amalgamation facilities.[5][26]

Family background

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Baltasar Temiño de Bañuelos in Zacatecas

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Representation of Juan's great-great-grandfather Baltasar Temiño de Bañuelos, lieutenant of the captain general of the Kingdom of New Galicia, in the coat of arms of Zacatecas.

Don Juan Bravo de Medrano's mother Catalina de Medrano y Oñate was the maternal great-granddaughter of Baltasar Temiño de Banuelos (Sevilla, 1530 – Zacatecas, 1600), the "discoverer" and one of the founders of Zacatecas.[20] Baltasar moved to Guadalajara, capital of the Kingdom of Nueva Galicia, where he made contact with Cristóbal de Oñate, who proposed him to Juan de Tolosa and Diego de Ibarra as captain of the expedition that would culminate in the founding of the mines of Zacatecas around 1548, discovered by Juan de Tolosa two years earlier, and which would become the largest silver producers in New Spain during the 16th century.[20]

Juan Bravo de Medrano's great-great-grandfather Baltasar Temino de Bañuelos arrived in Zacatecas around 1546 or 1548, the year of its foundation, which would mean that he was only present at the formal act of foundation, although historians refer to him as one of the four conquerors of the mines. In 1550, Baltasar was one of the main miners of Zacatecas, either individually or in company.[20] In 1557, he was named deputy of mines when Gaspar de Tapia was mayor of Zacatecas. Baltasar, in 1562, was the owner of one of the thirty-five haciendas "de beneficio de azogue" that existed in the province of Zacatecas. In the war against the Chichimeca Natives, he was named lieutenant captain general of Nueva Galicia in 1572 by Viceroy Enriquez.[20]

Juan Bravo de Medrano's maternal grandfather was Captain Don Juan de Medrano y Ulloa y Velazquez.[27][12] He was born in Santo Domingo into the noble house of Medrano. He is the son of Don Diego de Medrano[15] and Doña Catalina de Velazquez.[28] Captain Juan de Medrano is the husband of Catalina Temiño-Bañuelos y Oñate Rivadeneira, daughter of Diego Ruiz Temiño de Bañuelos and Catalina de Oñate y Rivadeneira and granddaughter of Don Alonso de Oñate Salazar, brother of the famous conquistador Juan de Oñate y Salazar, both sons of Cristóbal de Oñate, a descendant of the noble house of Haro.[29] Cristóbal's palace in Guadalajara, inherited by the Medrano family, became the setting of a 19th century play and tragedy entitled El Palacio de Medrano.

In 1640, Cristóbal's son Don Cristóbal de Oñate and Captain Don Juan de Medrano paid 1,654 pesos, 3 tomines, and 3 grains of 20 quintals of mercury in favor of Philip IV of Spain.[30] The Count of Santa Rosa's maternal grandfather Juan de Medrano y Ulloa y Velazquez could be the brother of Diego de Medrano, born in Santo Domingo in the 16th century, who died in Guadalajara (Mexico), 1630. Diego was the Oidor in Guadalajara.[31] Diego de Medrano was also the son of Diego de Medrano, from Soria, royal treasurer of Santo Domingo, and Doña Catalina de Velazquez, from Santo Domingo. Diego's paternal grandparents were Diego Alfonso de Medrano, from Soria, and Francisca Rodríguez Barrionueva. His brother Juan de Medrano served as the governor of the province of Chametla, Sinaloa.[31] The Marriage of Juan de Medrano y Ulloa y Velazquez with Doña Catalina de Temiño-Bañuelos y Oñate y Rivadeneira commenced in Zacatecas (Mexico). The wedding ceremony took place on the 24th of January, 1635.[32] Captain Juan de Medrano y Ulloa y Velazquez is the father of Capitan General Diego de Medrano y Bañuelos Saldívar y Mendoza, maternal uncle, and Catalina de Medrano y Oñate, mother of Don Juan Bravo de Medrano.[12]

Juan Bravo de Medrano's maternal uncle Capitan General Don Diego de Medrano y Bañuelos, born in Madrid on May 14, 1636, baptized in the parish of San Nicolas, served as Chief Constable of the Holy Inquisition in Zacatecas and Provincial Alcalde of the Holy Brotherhood of Nueva Galicia.[33] In 1666, the Royal Treasury requested 500 liters of salt from Captain Don Diego de Medrano.[34] In 1674, The Count's uncle was the provincial mayor of the Holy Brotherhood; in 1679 he became perpetual provincial mayor. In 1676, Captain Don Diego de Medrano was the corregidor, with a salary of 500 pesos de minas, which is issued to him for said duty.[35] General Diego de Medrano was the husband of Maria Correa de Silva (b. February 21, 1638 Madrid, Spain), married on May 23, 1661, in the Madrid parish of San Juan. He is the father of Margarita de Medrano y Correa de Silva and Nicolás de Medrano y Bañuelos.[36] He passed away in Zacatecas on May 24, 1687, witnessed by Diego Vazquez.[33]

In Zacatecas, on December 17, 1708, the first cousins of Juan Bravo de Medrano are documented as the owners and patrons of the chapel of the Reyes in the church of Santa María, Zacatecas, in favor of Licentiate Nicolás de Medrano, commissioner of the Holy Office of the Inquisition;[37] and his brothers, Captains José de Medrano and Juan de Medrano, and Doña Margarita Magdalena de Medrano, children of Captain General Diego de Medrano y Bañuelos, and his wife Doña María Correa de Silva, founders of the mentioned chapel in Zacatecas.[38][37]

Marriage and heir

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Juan Bravo de Medrano married Doña Juana Altamirano Castilla y Aguayo. His wife was the daughter of José Altamirano y Castilla[39] and Juana de Soto Agredano y Carbajal Aguayo.[40]

Don Juan Bravo de Medrano and Doña Juana Altamirano Castilla y Aguayo had two children:

  • Don Felipe Bartolome Bravo de Medrano y Acuña Altamirano, II Count of Santa Rosa,[41] (b. between 1669 and 1729, Zacatecas) husband of Dolores de Navarrete y Argote. He is the father of Ana Josefa Bravo de Medrano y Acuña y Navarrete Argote;[42] and the grandfather of Don Jose Vicente Beltran y Bravo de Medrano y Acuña, III Count of Santa Rosa, Priest[43]
  • Manuela Bravo de Medrano y Acuña Altamirano y Castilla[44] (b. between 1669 and 1729, Zacatecas)

Death

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Juan Bravo de Medrano died on May 15, 1710, without leaving a will. His debts, which his wife Juana Altamirano de Castilla and children committed to paying, amounted to 104,330 pesos 6 granos, primarily owed to the aviator Nicolás de Landa, a resident of Mexico.[23]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Galve, Conde de (2021-11-17). "Siendo don Juan Bravo de Medrano conde de Santa Rosa". Manuscrito.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Jiménez, Guillermo Alvino (2010). Juan Bravo de Medrano, Conde de Santa Rosa (in Spanish). G. Alvino Jiménez.
  3. ^ Galve, Conde de (2021-11-17). "Habiendo tenido noticias de que don Juan Bravo de Medrano". Manuscrito.
  4. ^ Enciso Contreras, José (2008). "Decretos inhibitorios, justicia privativa provincial y local. El caso del Conde de Santa Rosa en Zacatecas (S. XVIII)". Derecho, instituciones y procesos históricos: XIV Congreso del Instituto Internacional de Historia del Derecho Indiano. [Lima, 22 al 26 de septiembre de 2003], Vol. 2, 2008, ISBN 978-9972-42-858-6, págs. 377-396. Instituto Riva-Agüero: 377–396. ISBN 978-9972-42-857-9.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Souza, Marcos André Torres de; Costa, Diogo Menezes (2018-07-20). Historical Archaeology and Environment. Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-90857-1.
  6. ^ "Maestre de Campo Don Juan Bravo-Acuña y Medrano Oñate, 1er Conde de Santa Rosa". geni_family_tree. 1670. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  7. ^ "Doña Juana Altamirano Castilla y Aguayo". geni_family_tree. 1664-03-18. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  8. ^ Galve, Conde de (2021-11-17). "Habiéndome representado el capitán don Juan Bravo de Medrano". Manuscrito.
  9. ^ "Don Felipe Bartolome Bravo de Acuña". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  10. ^ "Catalina de Medrano y Oñate". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  11. ^ PDCP, CI/TEC; Bañuelos, Baltazar de; Alburquerque, Duque de; Oñate Bañuelos, Catalina de (2022-03-15). "El capitán Don Juan de Medrano y Ulloa minero". Manuscrito.
  12. ^ a b c "Capitán Juan de Medrano y Ulloa". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  13. ^ "Catalina Temiño-Bañuelos y Oñate Rivadeneyra, 2nd esposa". geni_family_tree. 1615. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  14. ^ "Descendents of Lord Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza". www.somosprimos.com. Retrieved 2024-08-03.
  15. ^ a b "Diego de Medrano". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  16. ^ "Diego Ruiz Temiño de Bañuelos". geni_family_tree. 1562. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  17. ^ "Catalina de Oñate y Rivadeneira". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  18. ^ Fundadores de Nueva Galicia - Guadalajara - Tomo I, by Guillermo Garmendia Leal. Page 144
  19. ^ "Descendents of Lord Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza". www.somosprimos.com. Retrieved 2024-03-04.
  20. ^ a b c d e "Baltasar Temiño de Bañuelos | Real Academia de la Historia". dbe.rah.es. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  21. ^ a b c Langue, Frédérique (2005-02-14). "Los grandes hacendados de Zacatecas: permanencia y evolución de un modelo aristocrático". Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos. Nouveaux Mondes Mondes Nouveaux - Novo Mundo Mundos Novos - New World New Worlds (in Spanish). doi:10.4000/nuevomundo.631. ISSN 1626-0252.
  22. ^ "Santa Rosa Hacienda". labestad.reduaz.mx. Retrieved 2024-02-02.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Langue, Frédérique (1992), "Chapitre VI. Les dynasties à l'épreuve du temps", Mines, terres et société à Zacatecas (Mexique) de la fin du xviie siècle à l’indépendance, Histoire moderne (in French), Paris: Éditions de la Sorbonne, pp. 239–278, ISBN 979-10-351-0462-7, retrieved 2024-02-01
  24. ^ "Malpaso History | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  25. ^ Davids, Karel; Davids, Carolus A. (2012-11-09). Religion, Technology, and the Great and Little Divergences: China and Europe Compared, C. 700-1800. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-23388-1.
  26. ^ Archive of the History of Zacatecas, Fondo Poder Judicial, Serie Civil, Caja 5.
  27. ^ https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/61540288.pdf Page 17
  28. ^ "Catalina Velazquez". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  29. ^ https://www.geni.com/people/Alonso-de-Oñate-Salazar/6000000003896572008
  30. ^ Herrera, Mateo de (2021-10-04). "Obligación en favor de su majestad contra don Cristóbal de Oñate y el capitán don Juan de Medrano por 1654 pesos 3 tomines 3 granos de 20 quintales de azogue". Manuscrito.
  31. ^ a b "Diego de Medrano | Real Academia de la Historia". dbe.rah.es. Retrieved 2024-02-03.
  32. ^ Authorized copy in Mexico 1714. M-66, ff. 7 to 10v. 636.
  33. ^ a b "Capitán General Diego de Medrano Bañuelos Saldívar Mendoza". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  34. ^ Espinoza, Phelipe de (2022-03-15). "La Real Hacienda contra el capitán Don Diego de Medrano por 500 fanegas de sal". Manuscrito.
  35. ^ PDCP, CI/TEC; Rivera, Fray Payo de; Merlo, Francisco de; Ramírez de Zamora, Juan; Salazar, Antonio de; Estrada, Andrés de (2021-08-23). "Al capitán don Diego de Medrano corregidor en inter de esta ciudad con 500 pesos de minas de salario lo que se le libra por dicha razón". Manuscrito.
  36. ^ PDCP, CI/TEC (2022-04-08). "Doña Isabel Rodríguez y Don Nicolás de Medrano". Manuscrito.
  37. ^ a b "Photos in Photos of Catalina Temiño-Bañuelos y Oñate Rivadeneyra, 2nd esposa". www.geni.com. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  38. ^ Zacatecas, 1708. December 17. Authorized copy from the same year. M-66, ff. 28 to 48. Pages 48v to 49v are blank
  39. ^ "José Altamirano y Castilla". geni_family_tree. 1620. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  40. ^ "Juana de Soto Agredano y Carbajal Aguayo". geni_family_tree. 1624-08-09. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  41. ^ "Don Felipe Bartolome Bravo y Acuña Altamirano, 2nd Conde de Santa Rosa". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  42. ^ "Ana Josefa Bravo de Acuña y Navarrete Argote". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  43. ^ "Don Jose Vicente Beltran y Bravo-Acuña, Conde de Santa Rosa, Presbitero". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  44. ^ "Manuela Bravo de Acuña Altamirano y Castilla". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2024-02-01.