• Reset your password

User account menu

  • Log in
Home
Drupal 11 - DO NOT USE THIS SITE TO REGISTER OR TO BECOME MEMBER!!

Main navigation

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

Breadcrumb

  • Home
  • Forums
  • Genealogy Research
  • Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz

Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz

By HERJOE59 | 1:59 PM MST, Fri June 19, 2020

My family came from encarnacion de diaz area in Jalisco Mexico and was wandering what tribe of Indians were prevalent in that area around 1700 time frameSent from my Sprint Samsung Galaxy S9.

Profile picture for user meef98367

meef98367

4 years 11 months ago

Permalink

Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz

I have a list for "grupos y lenguas de indigenas" of Nueva Galicia for 1525 to 1621. The tribe listed then for Xalisco was "tecozquin" but there were so many others later on. Our DNA simply gives us "indigenous" and a general area. There really is no way to pinpoint a tribe yet to the DNA. I am haplogroup C - Native American, Pre-columbian. My mother was from the Pueblo tribes of New Mexico (Piro-Manso-Tiwa) and the language was Uto-Aztecan

________________________________
From: Research on behalf of herjoe59
Sent: Friday, June 19, 2020 1:59 PM
To: research@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz

My family came from encarnacion de diaz area in Jalisco Mexico and was wandering what tribe of Indians were prevalent in that area around 1700 time frameSent from my Sprint Samsung Galaxy S9.

  • Log in to post comments

margeval

4 years 11 months ago

Permalink

In reply to Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz by meef98367

Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz

My dad’s mother’s indigenous Haplogroup was A. I KNOW for a fact we descend from (1) Moctezuma, (2) Miguel Caldera’s indigenous mother, (3) and other anonymous indigenous ancestors from Zacatecas and Chihuahua. I do wish I knew who the anonymous ones were.

> On Jun 20, 2020, at 19:22, Emilie Garcia wrote:
>
> I have a list for "grupos y lenguas de indigenas" of Nueva Galicia for 1525 to 1621. The tribe listed then for Xalisco was "tecozquin" but there were so many others later on. Our DNA simply gives us "indigenous" and a general area. There really is no way to pinpoint a tribe yet to the DNA. I am haplogroup C - Native American, Pre-columbian. My mother was from the Pueblo tribes of New Mexico (Piro-Manso-Tiwa) and the language was Uto-Aztecan
>
> ________________________________
> From: Research on behalf of herjoe59
> Sent: Friday, June 19, 2020 1:59 PM
> To: research@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
> Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz
>
> My family came from encarnacion de diaz area in Jalisco Mexico and was wandering what tribe of Indians were prevalent in that area around 1700 time frameSent from my Sprint Samsung Galaxy S9.

  • Log in to post comments

margeval

4 years 11 months ago

Permalink

In reply to Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz by meef98367

Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz

Can you please send me a copy of that list or let me know where I can find it? Thanks! Happy Anniversary!!!!

> On Jun 20, 2020, at 19:22, Emilie Garcia wrote:
>
> I have a list for "grupos y lenguas de indigenas" of Nueva Galicia for 1525 to 1621. The tribe listed then for Xalisco was "tecozquin" but there were so many others later on. Our DNA simply gives us "indigenous" and a general area. There really is no way to pinpoint a tribe yet to the DNA. I am haplogroup C - Native American, Pre-columbian. My mother was from the Pueblo tribes of New Mexico (Piro-Manso-Tiwa) and the language was Uto-Aztecan
>
> ________________________________
> From: Research on behalf of herjoe59
> Sent: Friday, June 19, 2020 1:59 PM
> To: research@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
> Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz
>
> My family came from encarnacion de diaz area in Jalisco Mexico and was wandering what tribe of Indians were prevalent in that area around 1700 time frameSent from my Sprint Samsung Galaxy S9.

  • Log in to post comments
Profile picture for user meef98367

meef98367

4 years 11 months ago

Permalink

In reply to Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz by margeval

Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz

I will have to look for it in my files and send it to you.

Emilile

________________________________
From: Research on behalf of M Vallazza
Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2020 1:26 AM
To: research@nuestrosranchos.org
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz

Can you please send me a copy of that list or let me know where I can find it? Thanks! Happy Anniversary!!!!

> On Jun 20, 2020, at 19:22, Emilie Garcia wrote:
>
> I have a list for "grupos y lenguas de indigenas" of Nueva Galicia for 1525 to 1621. The tribe listed then for Xalisco was "tecozquin" but there were so many others later on. Our DNA simply gives us "indigenous" and a general area. There really is no way to pinpoint a tribe yet to the DNA. I am haplogroup C - Native American, Pre-columbian. My mother was from the Pueblo tribes of New Mexico (Piro-Manso-Tiwa) and the language was Uto-Aztecan
>
> ________________________________
> From: Research on behalf of herjoe59
> Sent: Friday, June 19, 2020 1:59 PM
> To: research@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
> Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz
>
> My family came from encarnacion de diaz area in Jalisco Mexico and was wandering what tribe of Indians were prevalent in that area around 1700 time frameSent from my Sprint Samsung Galaxy S9.

  • Log in to post comments

W Johnston

4 years 11 months ago

Permalink

In reply to Researching type of Indians prevalent in Encarnacion de Diaz by meef98367

Mitochondrial DNA Studies of Indigenous Peoples

In our family, the mitochondrial haplogroup is D1. The most recent locations were Colotlan and Tlaltenango, moving back and forth. The earliest record we have on the mtDNA line is a woman born c 1655 whose daughters were born 1693 and c1684, with the 1693 birth at Tlaltenango.

I searched -- still do since more studies are coming out -- on the web and found a recent anthropological study in which they tested people who had all four of their grandparents considered to be from the same indigenous population. Comparing the specific mtDNA mutations of our flavor of D1 to the mutation network in the study, ours match those of people considered now to be Nahua.

I take the anthropological study's DNA results, specific and precise as they are, as needing more extensive DNA testing to verify or modify them. But the correspondence of our mutations with those of the people they tested and considered to be Nahua was clearly a match.

The maps of pre-Columbian regions of indigenous people place the Nahua a fair distance southeast of the Colotlan-Tlaltenango area, so that this particular line of the ancestors of our D1 would have had to have migrated northwest.

The lesson seems to be that location in 1700 is not necessarily an indicator of original location or of which original people included that branch of your family.

Hopefully, other anthropological studies of Y-DNA haplogroups can also add to this. But from what I have seen, the great majority of Y-DNA haplogroups of kits in our family have origins in Spain and not in indigenous populations in Mexico.

  • Log in to post comments

maven200

4 years 10 months ago

Permalink

In reply to Mitochondrial DNA Studies of Indigenous Peoples by W Johnston

Native Ancestors

Hello,
I have not been lucky with records for indigenous direct ancestors however I was able to trace my Orozco line from Tlaltenango to Teocaltiche 1670. In the record, it states my ancestor spoke in his language of Otomi. I found this interesting and it confirms that many native groups were displaced or migrated to other regions of mexico. This was both exciting and sad. I learned that without proof i really cant attribute native ancestors to local tribes.
Maven

  • Log in to post comments
Genealogy Research

User login

  • Reset your password

Recent Forum Comments

Subject: test forum topic for announcements
Comment Date: 2024-09-20
Last Comment: Lee Ingram
Subject: test 2
Comment Date: 2024-08-08
Last Comment: Lee Ingram
Subject: test 2
Comment Date: 2024-07-31
Last Comment: Lee Ingram

Most Recent Genealogy Research Forum Topics

2024-08-08
test 2
2024-07-31
test 2
2024-06-19
Jose Cresencio Bugarin

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

2024-07-18
test forum topic for announcements
2024-06-22
Test Forum message
2024-04-02
New Member

Language switcher

  • English
  • Español
Powered by Drupal

Copyright © 2025 Company Name - All rights reserved

Developed & Designed by Alaa Haddad