Pueblo (people) (Spanish pueblo, "village"), Native Americans living
in compact, apartmentlike villages of stone or adobe in northwestern New
Mexico and northeastern Arizona. They belong to four distinct linguistic
groups, but the cultures of the different villages are closely related.
The eastern villages, located along the upper Río Grande near Santa
Fe and Albuquerque, include Isleta, Jemez, Nambe, Picuris, San
Ildefonso, San Juan, Santa Clara, and Taos,
whose inhabitants speak Tanoan languages; and Cochiti, Santa Ana, Santo
Domingo, San Felipe, and Zia, where Keresan languages are spoken. Two slightly
westward Keresan pueblos, Acoma and Laguna, along with the Zuñi
and Hopi pueblos, make up the western villages.
Since about 1700 the Zuñi have been concentrated in one large village in
westernmost New Mexico. Their language shows no certain relation to any
other language. The Hopi live on or near three mesas in northeastern Arizona.
Their language is part of the Uto-Aztecan language family. The Hopi pueblos
include Mishongnovi, Shongopovi, Shupapulovi, Sichomavi, Oraibi, and the
Tewa-Hopi village of Hano, founded about 1700 by Tewa-speaking refugees.
See Also Native American Languages; Hopi; Zuñi.
Archaeology and
Prehistory Archaeologists relate the Pueblo to an older Southwest
culture known by the term Basket Maker. The entire cultural sequence
is called the Anasazi (Navajo for "ancient
ones") culture. During the early Basket Maker phase (100? BC-AD 500?)
prehistoric settlements were established in the northern part of the
Southwest. The inhabitants practiced weaving. They lived in caves or
built shelters of poles and adobe mud. Pumpkins and corn were grown
as a supplement to hunting and the gathering of wild plants. Food was
stored in underground pits, often lined with stone slabs. With the addition
of a bean crop and the domestication of the turkey, agriculture became
more important than hunting and gathering during the Modified Basket
Maker period (AD 500-700). Pottery was introduced. The food storage
pits developed into semisubterranean houses and ceremonial chambers,
and buildings began to take their present connected form.
The transition from
the Basket Maker to the Pueblo culture occurred about AD 700. Stone construction
was adopted, and the connected, now-aboveground houses became larger. The
ceremonial chamber developed into the kiva, an underground chamber used
for rituals and as a male lodge. Several kinds of corn were grown, and the
cultivation of cotton may have been introduced. Pottery was produced in
a diversity of shapes and styles. During this period the Anasazi made their
greatest territorial expansion, reaching as far as central Utah, southern
Colorado, and a large part of northern Mexico.
During the Classic
Pueblo period (1050-1300) the northernmost regions were no longer occupied,
and the population became concentrated in large multistoried, terraced pueblos
and in similar villages built in recesses in cliffs. See Cliff Dweller;
Mesa Verde National Park. Notable advances occurred in pottery and weaving.
At the end of this period many large centers of Pueblo life were abandoned,
possibly because of drought or because of invading bands of Navajo and Apache.
During the Regressive Pueblo period (1300-1700) many villages inhabited
today were founded. Houses became less elaborate, but pottery and weaving
continued to develop.
Historic Period
During the Modern Pueblo period (1700-present), cattle, goats, horses,
and sheep were introduced by the Spanish, and wool replaced cotton as the
principal textile.
The Pueblos, probably
the Zuñi, were first encountered by the Spanish in 1539, by the Spanish
Franciscan missionary Marcos de Niza. A year later the Spanish explorer
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado, searching for the legendary Seven Cities
of Cíbola, led an expedition among the Hopi; failing to find any treasure,
he withdrew. In 1598 the Spanish occupied the Pueblo country, and by 1630
Spanish missions were established in almost every village. A mass Pueblo
revolt in 1680 drove the Spanish from the territory. No other indigenous
group had succeeded in doing this, and the Pueblo were not reconquered until
1692. Few of the missions were reestablished, and most of the villages continued
their ancient religion. The number of villages during this time was reduced
from about 80 to about 30. The Pueblo remained under Spanish, and then Mexican,
domination until the close of the Mexican War in 1848, when they came under
United States jurisdiction. Throughout this time, they preserved their traditional
culture to an unusually high degree, often adopting superficial religious
or governmental changes but maintaining the old ways in secrecy. The western
villages, in particular, resisted Spanish influence; in the eastern villages,
some Spanish elements were assimilated into the underlying indigenous ways.
Present-Day Life
The communal building of a present-day pueblo is a solid structure of adobe
bricks or stone set in clay and mortar. The rooms are square, with thick
flat roofs. They are built in terraced stories, and the roof of one level
is reached by a movable ladder from the level below. Traditionally, access
to the interiors is by ladders to trapdoors in the roofs, and the outer
walls have neither windows nor doors (originally a precaution against attackers).
Modern buildings, however, often have glass windows and hinged doors. Rooms
are added to the original structure as needed, and a whole village often
lives in a single complex building. Each village has at least two, and usually
several, kivas.
Social organization
is in clans and lineages. Descent is matrilineal, and women own the houses.
Marriage is monogamous and must be to someone outside the clan or group
of related clans; divorce can occur at will. Although nominally Christianized,
all Pueblo maintain-some to a great extent-their ancient beliefs. The principal
ceremonies, arranged by the secret societies that use the kivas, are held
between crop seasons and consist of prayers and thanksgivings for rain and
good crops. Particularly among the western Pueblo, ancestral and other benevolent
spirits called kachinas are revered as bringers of rain and social good.
Their spirits are believed to possess the masked dancers who impersonate
them in rituals, and dolls depicting them are given to children. Some of
the eastern Pueblos divide their villages into Summer and Winter People,
who alternate responsibility for rituals. See Snake Dance.
The Pueblo economy
is based on agriculture, supplemented by raising livestock and, often, by
the sale of handicrafts. Each village cultivates fields in common. The crops
include corn, beans, cotton, melon, squash, and chili peppers. Men generally
work the fields, weave, build houses, and conduct ceremonies; women prepare
food, care for children, make baskets and pottery, and transport water.
They often help with gardening (as they did in ancient times when hunting
was important) and in building the houses.
Each community has
an individual style and technique of basketry. Pueblo pottery is characterized
by a beauty of decoration and shape that is unique among modern Native Americans;
the work of Pueblo potters such as Maria Martinez is prized by art
collectors. Pueblo men continue to be skilled weavers, producing cotton
and woolen clothing and fine woolen blankets. In the 20th century, low incomes,
poor health care, poor schooling, and in some pueblos, unemployment, together
with a clash of values with the dominant white culture, have led to significant
anger and social distress. Most Pueblo who have left their villages return
from time to time to regain contact with the social and religious values
of their tradition.