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・ Fernando Castro Palao
・ Fernando Castro Santos
・ Fernando Castro Trenti
・ Fernando Cavallini
・ Fernando Cavallini (fencer)
・ Fernando Cavallini (wrestler)
・ Fernando Cavenaghi
・ Fernando Cañales
・ Fernando Cedrola
・ Fernando Cento
・ Fernando Cepeda Ulloa
・ Fernando Cerchio
・ Fernando Cermeño
・ Fernando Cerrada
・ Fernando Cervigón
Fernando Chacón
・ Fernando Chagas Carvalho Neto
・ Fernando Chalana
・ Fernando Chamorro
・ Fernando Chamorro Alfaro
・ Fernando Chaparro
・ Fernando Charleston
・ Fernando Charrier
・ Fernando Chaves
・ Fernando Chemin Radaelli
・ Fernando Cheung
・ Fernando Chui
・ Fernando Ciangherotti
・ Fernando Claudín
・ Fernando Clavijo


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Fernando Chacón : ウィキペディア英語版
Fernando Chacón

Fernando Chacón was a Spanish soldier who served as a governor of what is now New Mexico, between 1794 and 1804. He was a Knight of the Order of Santiago.〔(Printing - New Mexico Cases )〕
==Biography==
As a young boy, Chacón joined the Spanish Army. Eventually, he became a Lieutenant Colonel.〔Hämäläinen, Pekka (2008). ( The Comanche Empire ). Yale University. Page 449.〕 He was appointed as the governor of Santa Fe de Nuevo México on August 16, 1793,〔Twitchell, Ralph Emerson. (The Spanish Archives of New Mexico, Volumen 2 ). Page 360.〕 assuming the charge in 1794.
Early in his administration, he signed the San Miguel del Vado Grant after a New Mexican, Lorenzo Marquez, delivered a petition to Chacón asking for a grant of land. The petition was signed by Marquez and fifty-one others. The signatories already had a parcel of land in Santa Fe, but it was too small for their communities' needs. In the petition, they sought land on both sides of the Pecos River at the "El Vado" ford. They had agreed to settle on the eastern border of New Mexico, where there was sufficient water and fertile lands to live well. Since this was Apache land, the petitioners agreed to provide their own firearms, as well as their own ammunition and establish bastions and towers. Chacón accepted the request and, on November 25, 1794, granted land to the petitioners. He also ordered the Mayor of Santa Fe, Antonio Jose Ortiz, to deliver legal possession of the lands to people who wanted to have them, based on the conditions and the requirements needed in such cases.〔(New Mexico Office of the State Historian: San Miguel del Vado Grant ). Posted by J. J. Bowden. Retrieved in Juny 16, 2014, to 17:00pm.〕 In 1796, with Chacón's permission, three families founded Llano San Juan in San Juan Nepomuceno, wanting to build several towns in the place.〔(Pilgrims and Promises: a poetic places journal ). Editing of spanish usage and index by Jose F. Martinez. 2013.〕
Moreover, after 1796, Chacón granted portions of land to 63 families in Taos, New Mexico, in the village of Pueblo Native Americans, an allied ethnicity to Spaniards, although this could have been done without the consent of the Native Americans (at least there is no evidence to indicate otherwise).〔Clark, Ira G (1987). (Water in New Mexico: A History of Its Management and Use ). University of New Mexico press. Page 21.〕
By decree of Salsedo, on May 3, 1804, Chacón sent an expedition to Northern New Mexico in order to find Lewis and Clark, who had begun their exploratory trip four months earlier. The expedition, consisting of 52 soldiers, Spanish settlers, and Native Americans, was led by Pedro Vial and José Jarvet〔(Trailing Lewis and Clark ). Posted by John Buescher.〕 and was named the "expedition of Captain Merri".〔Simmons, Marc. (New Mexico: an interpretive history ). Page 97.〕 The expedition left Santa Fe, New Mexico, on August 1.〔
Later in 1804, Chacón was replaced by Joaquín del Real Alencaster.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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