Maestro (maestre) de campo
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| In early times, an adjutant officer or the chief field officer (camp master). This was how the term was used both in Coronado's and in Oñate's time. By the end of the seventeenth century, "maestro de campo" was the title given to a field grade officer.
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| Condition of being a mestizo.
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| Individual of mixed Indian-European ancestry.
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| Servant; also, a son whose father has the same name ("junior"), e.g., Tomé el Mozo Domínguez de Mendoza.
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| Individual of mixed African-European ancestry.
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| Plum bob with attached wooden arm used in building.
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| Reception hall in a convent.
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| Chief supply officer of a Franciscan province or custodia.
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| An administrative unit of Spanish government, equivalent to a modern state (the province of New Mexico); also, a Franciscan administrative unit above that of custodia.
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| The head of a Franciscan province.
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| Official inquiry taken at the end of the term of a governor or other officer.
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| Individual of mixed black-Indian ancestry.
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| Pottery jar, especially for storage purposes.
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| A chartered town. Santa Fe was the only villa in New Mexico throughout most of the seventeenth century.
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| A chapel used for intermittent celebration of the Mass; also, an inspection of a town, area, or encampment by official authority.
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