Title
Their Lives, Their Wills: Women in the Borderlands, 17501846 (Women, Gender, and the West),Used
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In 1815, in the Spanish settlement of San Antonio de Bxar, a dying widow named Mara Concepcin de Estrada recorded her last will and testament. Estrada used her will to record her debts and credits, specify her property, leave her belongings to her children, make requests for her funeral arrangements, and secure her religious salvation. Wills like Estradas reveal much about womens lives in the late Spanish and Mexican colonial communities of Santa Fe, El Paso, San Antonio, Saltillo, and San Esteban de Nueva Tlaxcala in presentday northern Mexico. Using last wills and testaments as main sources, Amy M. Porter explores the ways in which these documents reveal details about religion, family, economics, and material culture. In addition, the wills speak loudly to the difficulties of frontier life, in which widowhood and child mortality were commonplace. Most importantly, information in the wills helps to explain the workings of the patriarchal system of Spanish and Mexican borderland communities, showing that gender role divisions were fluid in some respects. Supplemented by censuses, inventories, court cases, and travelers accounts, womens wills paint a more complete picture of life in the borderlands than the previously maledominated historiography of the region.
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