Diego Romo de Vivar
Captain Diego Romo de Vivar y Pérez was a Spanish adventurer, explorer, royal governor and military officer, born in Rielves, Spain. He conquered and pacified a large part of the northern region of Mexico in present day Chihuahua. He began his adventures in the Americas in the city of San Felipe, Guanajuato before becoming a fixture in Aguascalientes society among the colonial elites of Nueva Galicia.
Exploration and adventures
The adventures of the Romo de Vivar family begin with the protagonist, the younger Diego Romo de Vivar y Pérez, who was born in Rielves in 1589. He moved in 1624, following his marriage to doña María Rangel, to the Kingdom of Nueva Galicia, most likely to take charge of various lands that would have been granted to him by his father-in-law as a dowry. The marriage of Diego Romo de Vivar y Pérez and doña María would create a link between the towns of Parral and Aguascalientes, a region to which they would later emigrate, but not without first participating in the discoveries of some major sites, including one of the first salt discoveries north of Chihuahua, today known as "Villa Ahumada", discovered in 1647, when don Diego ventured there as an explorer.That same year the father-in-law of Diego Romo de Vivar y Pérez, in addition to having acquired numerous lands, was also named as alférez in Nueva Vizcaya, New Spain. Don Diego, himself, would also continue to acquire numerous properties and holdings throughout Mexico. Among his many properties was Rancho de Canutillo, later owned by Pancho Villa, who was assassinated in Parral on 20 July 1923 by Jesús Salas Barraza's men.
Don Diego was a restless man and a true adventurer, and although he settled in the current state of Aguascalientes, he explored the numerous territories north of Mexico, exploited the mines in the Parral region and contained the frequent attacks of many of the most violent indigenous tribes, including the Apaches and Comanches. He even defended the coasts of Nayarit against the attacks of pirates. His courage earned him the rank of captain and years later as the royal governor of San José del Parral, a place to which King Philip IV would grant the title of the "Silver capital of the world" in 1660.