Real de Bayoreca, was an 18th century mining town in the province of Ostimuri, now in Sonora. Real de Bayoreca, was 33 leagues northwest of Real de Alamos. In 1767 it had a population of 1,004.[1] : 574
References
edit- ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe, The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft: History of the north Mexican States and Texas, 1531-1800, Vol. 15, History Company, San Francisco, 1886
- BAYORECA. Viento fresco? Fresh wind? [1] Page 19
- "Also by the Buenavista ranch they made several exits; they attacked the ranch of the Cajón on the 18th, near Bayoreca, they set a house on fire and killed an individual; ..." Manuel Balbás, Fortunato Hernández, Crónicas de la Guerra del Yaqui, Gobierno del Estado de Sonora, 1985- Page 190
- "The Cocoraque stream crosses the District, the most important of all 3 and the only one that flows into the Gulf of California, born in the northern part of the mountains that form the Bayoreca mountain range [la serranía de Bayoreca], just north of the place." María Luisa Signoret Vera, Aspecto geográfico del distrito de riego del Río Yaqui, Sonora, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Colegio de Geografía, 1965 - Page 24
- "San Francisco Regis de Buenavista municipal head town, located on a hill not far from the Yaqui river and 12 leagues to S. de Cumuripa at 28° 12' of lat. North and 10° 16' long. west of the mer. of Mexico. From this town, the Yaqui River has its course from East to West, until it deposits its waters in the Sea of Cortez after 40 leagues. Thirteen leagues to the South, the former province of Ostimuri began, where the Bayoreca ore was found. The ranches that are subordinate to it are called: El Obiache, El Potrero, El Disparate, San Isidro, El Capulin, La Estancia and El Tubaca." [2] p86
- "In 1792 the rich region of Bayoreca was discovered whose mines located to the south on the roads of Alamos, produced fabulous amounts of silver. All the hills and hills of this region are assured to be of the mentioned metal. [3] - Page 58
- "when the Constitution of 1831 was reformed, at the request of Mr. Manuel María Gándara, on May 13, 1848, it was modified, creating the Parties of San Ignacio, Sahuaripa, Ures and Guaymas and suppressing that of Bayoreca." [4] Page 291
- The Presidio and Militia on the Northern Frontier of New ... - Page 316 note 7. details of early Baroyeca history
- Sanctuaries of Earth, Stone, and Light: The Churches of ... - Page 402
- real de Bayoreca, provincia de Ostimuri, Sonora Materiales para la historia de Sonora, By Rafael Pérez Taylor, Miguel Ángel Paz Frayre - Page 293
- REBELLIONS OF SERIES AND PIMAS IN THE XVIII CENTURY, FEATURES AND SITUATION, by María Elena GALAVIZ DE CAPDEVIELLE ejournal.unam.mx
- History of the North Mexican States and Texas, Volume 1, By Hubert Howe Bancroft Real de Bayoreca, Sonora
- "In 1792 the rich region of Bayoreca was discovered whose mines located to the South on the roads of Alamos,..."
Nuestra Senora de Loreto del Real de Baroyeca
Baroyeca was never a Mayo settlement at all, but was a Spanish mining town which began in 1701 and was flourishing by the middle of the 18th Century when it became the residence of the Governor. [5] : 329
- Journal of the Southwest - Volume 32 - 1990, Page 193 ". in that year as founders of the royal mining camp at Baroyeca that took as its heavenly patroness Our Lady of Loreto, ..."
- 1916
Yaguis and Mayos felt they had not be given benefits that had been promised them go on the rampage throughout Sonora. Farmers, ranchers, towns and villages were attacked. Baroyeca becomes a ghost town. Álamos 1900 – 1949
Baroyeca Baroyeca Baroyeca Pueblo (1828; Juan M. Riesgo y Antonio J. VakJés). Decreto No. 44 Se segregan del partido de Baroyeca los pueblos que erigen el partido de Buenavista. Constitución Política del Estado Libre de Sonora. Page 233 --- Baroyeca, Baroyeca, Baroyeca Pueblo (1828; Juan M. Riesgo and Antonio J. VakJés). Decree No. 44 The towns that set up the Buenavista party are segregated from the Baroyeca party. Political Constitution of the Free State of Sonora.
- ^ Flavio Molina Molina, Nombres indígenas de Sonora y su traducción al español, Impresora y Editorial, S. A. de C. V., 1972
- ^ José María Pérez Hernández, Compendio de la geografia del Estado de Sonora, Tip. del Comercio, a cargo de M. Lara, 1872
- ^ Miguel Yépez Solórzano, El problema de los caminos on el estado de Sonora, Linotipografía artística, 1921
- ^ Manuel Corbalá Acuña, Sonora y sus constituciones, Gobierno del Estado de Sonora, Secretaría de Fomento Educativo y Cultura, Instituto Sonorense de Cultura, 1992
- ^ Paul M. Roca, Paths of the Padres Through Sonora: An Illustrated History & Guide to Its Spanish Churches, Arizona Pioneers ̕Historical Society, 1967