• 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
  • Oral and written family histories

Oral and written family histories

By oldcar53 | 1:15 PM MST, Sun April 09, 2006

What's in the telling of our stories and telling of our lives? It depends........, could be a great deal or very little, depending on who's doing the telling and who's doing the listening.

I, because I've been consumed with geneaological research for the last year and a half, communicate this to almost anyone who will listen, who is family or may be family or may want to be family or may want to just listen to me babble.

In one of my spurts a few months back, I began to relate to one of my sister's friends who is from Mexico with ancestors from Monterey, Nuevo Leon and from Chihuahua how I was doing family research. One conversation led to another and while she listened to my musings she interrupted me to say that she believed we might be related to her boyfriend, as he had mentioned in their long courtship some of the same family names and the same towns and ranchos. She then told us that he had a book on Nochistlan which I assumed would be Jose Luis Vasquez y Rodriguez de Frias' book. I showed her my copy of this book and she said it was a different one that focused on the Duranes of Nochistlan, Zac, written by a Duran of Nochistlan. A couple of weeks later she came with her boyfriend. Sure enough, her boyfriend's grandparents were from Nochistlan.

Last night they dropped by with this book, written in spanish by Ingeniero Jesus Duran Rodriguez with a prologue by Mariano Gonzalez Leal. The title is; NOCHISTLAN, ZACATECAS, Su Parroquia, Los Duran y otras familias antiguas. Estudio Historico-Genealogico. It is 349 long delicious pages of local history.
This hardback book was printed in 1991 in Monterrey, N.L, Mexico and has many photographs but it does not have an ISBN number.
They let me borrow this book and will allow me to present it to our next Northern California meeting to be held in July in Brentwood Ca.They might also consider attending this meeting with me if their schedule allows it. If there are any of you out there from the Nochistlan area or any other town mentioned below that are interested in research of this area, this book is full of family and histrorical data.

Some of the other Zacatecas towns are Apulco, Jalpa, Toyahua, Tenayuca, Cofradia de la Animas and Tlachichila. It also includes families from Mexticacan, Yahualica, Jalostitlan, Tepatitlan and Teocaltiche Jalisco as well as Aguascalientes. It lists property owners, Census records, death, marriage, baptism and church records, slavery in Nochistlan and much local and regional history since the founding of this city.

That's all for now,
Alicia Avelar Olmos de Carrillo

makas_nc

19 years 1 month ago

Permalink

Los Duran: Oral and written family histories

Fabulous. . .imagin finding a book that many don't know about that gives
much history about your area. Maybe we can shift that interview to el
Señor Jesus Duran Rodriguez if he is still living. Great possibility
that he is if he printed the book in 1991.

Terriffic Alicia, gracias for your great contributions.

I wonder if that Cofradia de la Animas is the other "Animas" I've seen
that appears to be in Jalisco. I get excited when I hear of any "Animas"
but I'm pretty sure this is not mine.

joseph

Alicia Carrillo wrote:

>What's in the telling of our stories and telling of our lives? It depends........, could be a great deal or very little, depending on who's doing the telling and who's doing the listening.
>
> I, because I've been consumed with geneaological research for the last year and a half, communicate this to almost anyone who will listen, who is family or may be family or may want to be family or may want to just listen to me babble.
>
> In one of my spurts a few months back, I began to relate to one of my sister's friends who is from Mexico with ancestors from Monterey, Nuevo Leon and from Chihuahua how I was doing family research. One conversation led to another and while she listened to my musings she interrupted me to say that she believed we might be related to her boyfriend, as he had mentioned in their long courtship some of the same family names and the same towns and ranchos. She then told us that he had a book on Nochistlan which I assumed would be Jose Luis Vasquez y Rodriguez de Frias' book. I showed her my copy of this book and she said it was a different one that focused on the Duranes of Nochistlan, Zac, written by a Duran of Nochistlan. A couple of weeks later she came with her boyfriend. Sure enough, her boyfriend's grandparents were from Nochistlan.
>
> Last night they dropped by with this book, written in spanish by Ingeniero Jesus Duran Rodriguez with a prologue by Mariano Gonzalez Leal. The title is; NOCHISTLAN, ZACATECAS, Su Parroquia, Los Duran y otras familias antiguas. Estudio Historico-Genealogico. It is 349 long delicious pages of local history.
> This hardback book was printed in 1991 in Monterrey, N.L, Mexico and has many photographs but it does not have an ISBN number.
> They let me borrow this book and will allow me to present it to our next Northern California meeting to be held in July in Brentwood Ca.They might also consider attending this meeting with me if their schedule allows it. If there are any of you out there from the Nochistlan area or any other town mentioned below that are interested in research of this area, this book is full of family and histrorical data.
>
> Some of the other Zacatecas towns are Apulco, Jalpa, Toyahua, Tenayuca, Cofradia de la Animas and Tlachichila. It also includes families from Mexticacan, Yahualica, Jalostitlan, Tepatitlan and Teocaltiche Jalisco as well as Aguascalientes. It lists property owners, Census records, death, marriage, baptism and church records, slavery in Nochistlan and much local and regional history since the founding of this city.
>
> That's all for now,
> Alicia Avelar Olmos de Carrillo
>
>
>
>
>

  • Log in to post comments

LomaxDiaz (not verified)

19 years 1 month ago

Permalink

In reply to Los Duran: Oral and written family histories by makas_nc

Los Duran: Oral and written family histories

As I am new to the group and in the early stages of my research, I'm sure
some of the questions I have may seem to be pretty basic.

In the email exchanges I've noticed so far, and through a cursory overview
of geopolitical maps of Zacatecas (I've also found Momax, my ancestral
hometown, which has given me some small degree of excitement), I've noticed than many
of the indigenous-sounding place names seem quite similar to Nahuatl, of
Aztec fame. Were the original inhabitants of Zacatecas related to those famous
ancestors--either linguistically, ethnically, culturally or a combination of
all three?

Tony Diaz

  • Log in to post comments

margeval

19 years 1 month ago

Permalink

Oral and written family histories

Wow!!! That's really exciting news, Alicia! What a blessing for you to
find a distant kinsman, too!:) Marge:)
On Apr 9, 2006, at 3:03 PM, Alicia Carrillo wrote:

> nd while she listened to my musings she interrupted me to say that she
> believed we might be related to her boyfriend, as he had mentioned in
> their long courtship some of the same family names and the same towns
> and ranchos. She then told us that he had a book on Nochistlan which I
> assumed would be Jose Luis Vasquez y Rodriguez de Frias' book. I
> showed her my copy of this book and she said it was a different one
> that focused on the Duranes of Nochistlan, Zac, written by a Duran of
> Nochistlan. A couple of weeks later she came with her boyfriend. Sure
> enough, her boyfriend's grandparents were from Nochistlan.
>
> Last night they dropped by with this book, written in spanish by
> Ingeniero Jesus Duran Rodriguez with a prologue by Mariano Gonzalez
> Leal. The title is; NOCHISTLAN, ZACATECAS, Su Parroquia, Los Duran y
> otras familias antiguas. Estudio Historico-Genealogico. It is 349 long
> delicious pages of local history.
> This hardback book was printed in 1991 in Monterrey, N.L, Mexico and
> has many photographs but it does not have an ISBN number.
>

  • 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