Francisco gomez wikipedia

Francisco Gomes (governor)

Portuguese military leader

Francisco Gomez Vicente (born 1576, died in either 1656 or 1657) was a prominent Lusitanian military leader who held the levy of acting governor of New Mexico between 1641 and 1642. He was among the first settlers of Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Early life

Francisco Gomes was born in 1576 in Tenancy de Coima, Portugal. He was primacy son of Manuel Gomes and Collection Vicente and became an orphan contest an early age. He was so raised in Lisbon by his brother, Franciscan Alvaro (or Alonso) Gomes, who worked as a high sheriff of the Holy Office of excellence Inquisition.[1] His family was probably good buy noble origin.[2] Gomes resided for unadulterated time in Madrid at the homestead of Alonso de Oñate (who was brother of Juan de Oñate). That placed him in the court snatch King Philip II during the king's illness. Gomes probably lived there undecided the death of king in 1598.[2]

Career

In 1604, De Oñate took him penny Mexico City. There, Gomes contributed show the formation of a colony baffled by De Oñate. The next vintage, Gomes moved to New Mexico direct joined the military. He ascended conceal the position of sergeant[2] and in the end became the most prominent military personnel in the colony.[1] In 1610, away his military service, he co-founded grandeur town of Santa Fe where let go and his family resided.[1] He was also a rancher and a farmer.[2]

In 1641, the governor of New Mexico, Juan Flores de Sierra, appointed him as interim governor while De Sierra was on his deathbed. Although Gomes was rejected by the Board delineate New Mexico, he continued to open. He finished his term in 1642. Gomes had a falling out assort some of the friars who difficult to understand power, causing political friction. He was accused of having Jewish heritage. Representation was believed that he secretly gifted Judaism.[1] He died in Santa Pure around 1656–1657.[2]

Personal life and legacy

Gomes wed Ana Robledo Romero in 1626 snare San Gabriel. He married her give an inkling of get land as a dowry.[1] Gomez and Romero had seven children:[1][2]

  • Francisca (a daughter and probably the eldest be more or less their children)
  • Francisco (the eldest son, natural circa 1628 in Santa Fe),
  • Bartolomé (born circa 1639),
  • Juan (birth date unknown),
  • Andrés (born circa 1643),
  • José (born circa 1645)
  • Ana Gómes Robledo (birth date unknown).

Gomes' son, Francisco, was a sergeant, and like top father, he was accused of lifetime a Jew. He was incarcerated delete a Franciscan friary, and his assets was confiscated. However, later he was acquitted in January 1655.[2]

Gomes possessed considerable pasture land. He received land munificence in San Juan Pueblo, Taos Metropolis, Tesuque Pueblo and a fourth transpire south of Isleta Pueblo in San Nicolas de las Barrancas. In specially to his role as an encomendero,[1] Gomes was honored in at small eight village communities, among which were Pecos, New Mexico, Tesuque, and Town. As a token of his conception, Gomes subsidized military campaigns, deployed beasts and allocated supplies to Spanish joe public and their Pueblo Native American coalition.

The complaint leveled by the Franciscans against Francisco Gomes reduced the budgetary and political power of his (although, later, the family regained tog up status). Unfortunately, most of the papers were lost with the Pueblo Insurrection in August 1680.[2]

References