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Quivira

Quivira was a province of the ancestral Wichita people,[1] located near the Great Bend of the Arkansas River in central Kansas,[1] The exact site may be near present-day Lyons extending northeast to Salina.

The Wichita city of Etzanoa, which flourished between 1450 and 1700, is likely part of Quivira.[2]

Spanish conquistador Francisco Vásquez de Coronado visited in 1541.

Description

 
A sketch of a Wichita community in the 19th century. The beehive-shaped grass lodges surrounded by cornfields are characteristic and appear similar to those described by Coronado in 1541.

Archaeological evidence suggests that Quivira was located near the Great Bend of the Arkansas River in central Kansas.[1] The remains of several Indigenous communities have been found near Lyons along Cow Creek and the Little Arkansas River along with articles of Spanish manufacture dating from Coronado's time.[3]

The Quivirans were almost certainly the Wichita.[1] Coronado's meager descriptions of Quivira resemble more recent post-contact Wichita communities. The Quivirans seem to have been numerous, based on the number of settlements Coronado visited, with a population of at least 10,000 persons. They were good farmers as well as bison hunters.[4] Judging from Coronado's description, they were a healthy, peaceful people.

The nation of Harahey Coronado found on the borders of Quivira may have been located on the Smoky Hill River near the present city of Salina, Kansas.[citation needed]

The next confirmed European visitor to the Great Bend region after Coronado was Étienne de Bourgmont. In 1724, along with a company of Kaw and other Indigenous explorers, de Bourgmont traveled westward from the Missouri River to a large Indigenous community believed to have an Plains Apache population.[5] The village was near Lyons, precisely where Quivira had been almost 200 years earlier.[6]

The original inhabitants of Quivira migrated to eastern Kansas and south to Oklahoma.[7] Their reasons for moving may have been to escape the encroachment of the Plains Apache, whose expansion created war and hostilities among the nations of the Great Plains. It also appears that the 18th-century Wichita of the 18th century were fewer in number than in the 16th century. This decrease is likely due to smallpox and other European diseases.

Etymology

The origin of the word "Quivira" is uncertain. The inhabitants of Coronado's Quivira called themselves "Tancoa" and "Tabas. These two names are similar to the Wichita tribes, the Tawakonis and Taovayas.[8]

Expedition

 
Route of the Coronado Expedition, 1540–1542
 
Depiction of Coronado's expedition. Coronado sets out to the north, oil painting by Frederic Remington, c. 1900

In 1540, Spaniard Francisco Vásquez de Coronado led a large expedition north from Mexico to search for wealth and the Seven Cities of Cibola. Instead of wealth, he found Indigenous farmers living in an array of communities and villages in what are today Arizona and New Mexico. These were the Hopi, Zuni, Rio Grande Pueblo, Apache, and Navajo peoples.

As Coronado arrived at the Rio Grande, he was disappointed by the lack of wealth among the Pueblo people, but he heard from a Plains Indian informant dubbed “The Turk” of a wealthy nation named Quivira far to the east, whose leader supposedly drank from golden cups hanging from the trees. Hearing of this, Coronado led an expedition of more than 1000 Spanish and Indigenous individuals onto the Great Plains in 1541. The Turk served as the expedition’s adviser.

On his journey, Coronado traversed the Staked Plains, home to two Indigenous nations: the Querecho and Teya. He was heading southeast when the Teyas told him that the Turk was taking him in the wrong direction and that Quivira was to the north. It appears the Turk was luring the Spaniards away from New Mexico with tales of wealth in Quivira, hoping perhaps that they would get lost in the vastness of the Great Plains. Coronado sent most of his slow-moving expeditionary force back to New Mexico. With 30 mounted Spaniards, Indigenous persons, priests, the Turk and Teya captives forced into service, Coronado changed course northward in search of Quivira. After a march of more than 30 days, he found a large river, probably the Arkansas, and soon met several Indigenous bison hunters, who led him to Quivira.[9]

Spanish visit

Coronado found Quivira "well settled.... The land itself being very fat and black and being very well watered by the rivulets and springs and rivers. I found prunes like those of Spain, and nuts and very good sweet grapes and mulberries." It was, he said, the best land he had seen during his long trek north from Mexico.[10] Coronado spent 25 days in Quivira and traveled about 25 leagues 100 km (65 mi) from one end of the country to the other. He found nothing more than straw-thatched villages of up to 200 houses each and fields of corn, beans, and squash. He found no gold, other than a single small piece, which he speculated the Indigenous owner acquired from a member of his own expedition.

 
Coronado found the Teyas Indians in Blanco Canyon, east of present-day Lubbock, Texas. The Querechos lived on the flat Llano Estacado above the canyon.

The Spaniards described the locals as being a "large people of good build" with many of the men being more than 6 ft (180 cm) and seemed like giants to the Spaniards. Both sexes wore minimal attire. [11]

Coronado was escorted to the border of Quivira at an area called Tabas where the neighboring nation of Harahey began. He summoned the "Lord of Harahey" who, with a retinue of nearly 200, came to meet the Spanish. The Harahey delegation were "all naked — with bows and some sort of things on their heads, and their privy parts slightly covered. It was the same sort of place ... and of about the same size as Quivira."[12] Disappointed at his failure to find wealth, Coronado turned his face toward New Mexico and marched back across the plains, met up with the rest of his army there, and the following year returned to Mexico. Before leaving Quivira, Coronado ordered the Turk executed by strangulation. The Coronado expedition had failed in its quest for gold.

Coronado left behind in New Mexico several Catholic priests and their helpers, including Friar Juan de Padilla. Padilla journeyed back to Quivira with a Portuguese assistant and several Indigenous converts. The friar and most of his companions were soon killed by people from Quivira, apparently because he wished to leave their country to visit their enemies, the Guas. Portuguese and Native survivors reported the story.[13]

Later expeditions

 
Juan de Oñate led an expedition to Quivira in 1601. Oñate was married to a granddaughter of Hernán Cortés and Isabel Moctezuma.

In 1594, Francisco Leyba (Leyva) Bonilla and Antonio de Humana (Umana) made another attempt to find the Quivira of Coronado, though it was denounced as unauthorized by Spanish officials. Only Jusepe Gutierrez, a Nahua returned from this journey. He related that Leyba had killed Umana in a quarrel and that he (Jusepe) had deserted the expedition.

Following this, in 1601, the governor of New Mexico, Juan de Oñate, undertook another expedition in search of Quivira. He found settlements of the Escanjaque and Rayado in the Central Great Plains, but no gold or silver. He learned that Leyba and other members of the Umana and Lebya expedition had been killed by Indians. In 1606, 800 people from Quivira reportedly visited Oñate in New Mexico to trade.

In his 1634 expedition, Captain Alonzo Vaca found Quivira 300 leagues east of New Mexico (this suggests more than 1,200 km (750 mi)). Another reputed expedition was undertaken in 1662 by Diego Dionisio de Penalosa, who allegedly found a large settlement he called a city, but a modern re-examination of his account concluded that the story is fanciful.[14]

Spanish accounts said Quivirans were enemies of the Escanjaques. In 1675 and 1678 came "two Spanish royal orders for the conquest of Quivira."[15]

In cartography

 
Quivira is located above New Mexico in the "Incognito Lands" in this 1710 map.

On early 16th- and 17th-century maps of North America, a large region including what is now Kansas, Oklahoma, southeastern Colorado, northeastern New Mexico and the Texas Panhandle was called "Quivira".[16][17]

Legacy

The last remnants of the formerly extensive cartographic region of Quivira today is the city of Lake Quivira and the Quivira National Wildlife Refuge in Kansas. In addition, the "Quivira Council" of the Boy Scouts serves the area of southwestern Kansas around Wichita; the central part of the area that was traditionally called Quivira.[18] The first several yearbooks printed by the University of Kansas were entitled Quivira Also, a major arterial road runs through the Johnson County suburbs of Kansas City named "Quivira Road".

A large abandoned pueblo in Torrance County, New Mexico, was named "La Gran Quivira" ("the Great Quivira"). The community was located within Tompiro-speaking Pueblo territory. During the early period of the Spanish conquest, when the town was called Pueblo de Las Humanas, a mission was built here. In the 1670s, the Tompiro communities were abandoned and absorbed into other Pueblos. The remains of Gran Quivira Pueblo and the mission are today part of Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument.

From the days of Coronado the name of "Quivira" had been associated with the idea of a great unknown city, of wealth and splendor, situated somewhere on the Eastern Plains; and it is not at all unlikely that when some party from the Rio Grande Valley, in search of game or gold, crossed the mountains and the wilderness lying to the east, and was suddenly amazed by the apparition of a dead city, silent and tenantless, but bearing the evidences of large population, of vast resources, of architectural knowledge, mechanical skill, and wonderful energy, they should have associated with it the stories heard from childhood of the mythical center of riches and power, and called the new-found wonder the Gran Quivira.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Wedel, Waldo R. (August 1970). "Coronado's Route to Quivira 1541". Plains Anthropologist. 15 (49): 161–168. doi:10.1080/2052546.1970.11908566. JSTOR 25666935.
  2. ^ Tanner, Beccy (April 21, 2018). "Mysterious 'Lost City' of Etzanoa in south-central Kansas now open to tours". The Wichita Eagle. Retrieved December 8, 2018.
  3. ^ Wedel, Waldo R; Archeological Remains in Central Kansas and the Possible Bearing on the location of Quivira. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections; Vol. 101, No. 7; 1942; pp. 1-24
  4. ^ Bragg, Caelin (March 30, 2023). "Wichita State professor uncovers forgotten native nation that could 'revolutionize' history of the Great Plains". WSU News. Wichita State University. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
  5. ^ Secoy, Frank R. The Identity of the 'Paduca: An Ethnohistorical Analysis. "American Anthropologist," New Series, Vol. 53, No. 4; [Part 1 (Oct.-Dec. 1951)]; pp. 525–42
  6. ^ Reichart, Milton; Bourgmont's Route to Central Kansas: A Reexamination. Kansas History; Vol. 2, Summer; 1979; p. 102
  7. ^ Vehik, Susan C. Wichita Culture History. "Plains Anthropologist;" Vol. 37, No. 141; 1992; pp. 311-332.
  8. ^ Vehik, Susan C. Onate's Expedition to the Southern Plains: Routes, Destinations, and Implications for Late Prehistoric Cultural Adaptations; "Plains Anthropologist;"' Vol. 312, No. 11; 1986; pp. 13-33
  9. ^ "QUIVIRA | The Handbook of Texas Online| Texas State Historical Association (TSHA)". Tshaonline.org. June 15, 2010. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  10. ^ Winship, George Parker (Ed. and Translator). The Journey of Coronado, 1540-1542, from the City of Mexico to the Grand Canon of the Colorado and the Buffalo Plains of Texas, Kansas, and Nebraska, As Told by Himself and his Followers; New York: A.S. Barnes & Co.; 1904, p.219
  11. ^ Winship; pp. 113, 209, 215, 234-235, 237
  12. ^ Winship, p. 235
  13. ^ George P. Hammon and Agapito, Rey Don Juan de Onate: Colonizer of New Mexico, 1595-1628(Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1953_, 416–19.
  14. ^ Hackett, Charles W. "New Light on Don Diego de Penalosa: Proof that he never made an expedition from Santa Fe to Quivira and the Mississippi River in 1662." Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. 6, No 3, Dec 1919, 313-335
  15. ^ Louis Houck (1908) A History of Missouri from the Earliest Explorations... Vol. I., p.p 121–48
  16. ^ Portinaro, Pierluigi. The Cartography of North America: 1500-1800 (1999)
  17. ^ . Skyways.lib.ks.us. August 12, 1902. Archived from the original on April 7, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  18. ^ Quivira Council of the Boy Scouts: September 10, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Prince, L. Bradford (1915). Spanish Mission Churches of New Mexico. Cedar Rapids, IA: The Torch Press. pp. 355–356. ISBN 0-87380-126-1. Retrieved December 2, 2008.

External links

  • The journey of Coronado, 1540-1542, from the city of Mexico to the Grand Canon of the Colorado and the buffalo plains of Texas, Kansas and Nebraska, as told by himself and his followers - Complete primary documents pertaining to Coronado's expeditions, translated by George Parker Winship, at .

quivira, province, ancestral, wichita, people, located, near, great, bend, arkansas, river, central, kansas, exact, site, near, present, lyons, extending, northeast, salina, wichita, city, etzanoa, which, flourished, between, 1450, 1700, likely, part, spanish,. Quivira was a province of the ancestral Wichita people 1 located near the Great Bend of the Arkansas River in central Kansas 1 The exact site may be near present day Lyons extending northeast to Salina The Wichita city of Etzanoa which flourished between 1450 and 1700 is likely part of Quivira 2 Spanish conquistador Francisco Vasquez de Coronado visited in 1541 Contents 1 Description 2 Etymology 3 Expedition 4 Spanish visit 5 Later expeditions 6 In cartography 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksDescription Edit A sketch of a Wichita community in the 19th century The beehive shaped grass lodges surrounded by cornfields are characteristic and appear similar to those described by Coronado in 1541 Archaeological evidence suggests that Quivira was located near the Great Bend of the Arkansas River in central Kansas 1 The remains of several Indigenous communities have been found near Lyons along Cow Creek and the Little Arkansas River along with articles of Spanish manufacture dating from Coronado s time 3 The Quivirans were almost certainly the Wichita 1 Coronado s meager descriptions of Quivira resemble more recent post contact Wichita communities The Quivirans seem to have been numerous based on the number of settlements Coronado visited with a population of at least 10 000 persons They were good farmers as well as bison hunters 4 Judging from Coronado s description they were a healthy peaceful people The nation of Harahey Coronado found on the borders of Quivira may have been located on the Smoky Hill River near the present city of Salina Kansas citation needed The next confirmed European visitor to the Great Bend region after Coronado was Etienne de Bourgmont In 1724 along with a company of Kaw and other Indigenous explorers de Bourgmont traveled westward from the Missouri River to a large Indigenous community believed to have an Plains Apache population 5 The village was near Lyons precisely where Quivira had been almost 200 years earlier 6 The original inhabitants of Quivira migrated to eastern Kansas and south to Oklahoma 7 Their reasons for moving may have been to escape the encroachment of the Plains Apache whose expansion created war and hostilities among the nations of the Great Plains It also appears that the 18th century Wichita of the 18th century were fewer in number than in the 16th century This decrease is likely due to smallpox and other European diseases Etymology EditThe origin of the word Quivira is uncertain The inhabitants of Coronado s Quivira called themselves Tancoa and Tabas These two names are similar to the Wichita tribes the Tawakonis and Taovayas 8 Expedition Edit Route of the Coronado Expedition 1540 1542 Depiction of Coronado s expedition Coronado sets out to the north oil painting by Frederic Remington c 1900 In 1540 Spaniard Francisco Vasquez de Coronado led a large expedition north from Mexico to search for wealth and the Seven Cities of Cibola Instead of wealth he found Indigenous farmers living in an array of communities and villages in what are today Arizona and New Mexico These were the Hopi Zuni Rio Grande Pueblo Apache and Navajo peoples As Coronado arrived at the Rio Grande he was disappointed by the lack of wealth among the Pueblo people but he heard from a Plains Indian informant dubbed The Turk of a wealthy nation named Quivira far to the east whose leader supposedly drank from golden cups hanging from the trees Hearing of this Coronado led an expedition of more than 1000 Spanish and Indigenous individuals onto the Great Plains in 1541 The Turk served as the expedition s adviser On his journey Coronado traversed the Staked Plains home to two Indigenous nations the Querecho and Teya He was heading southeast when the Teyas told him that the Turk was taking him in the wrong direction and that Quivira was to the north It appears the Turk was luring the Spaniards away from New Mexico with tales of wealth in Quivira hoping perhaps that they would get lost in the vastness of the Great Plains Coronado sent most of his slow moving expeditionary force back to New Mexico With 30 mounted Spaniards Indigenous persons priests the Turk and Teya captives forced into service Coronado changed course northward in search of Quivira After a march of more than 30 days he found a large river probably the Arkansas and soon met several Indigenous bison hunters who led him to Quivira 9 Spanish visit EditCoronado found Quivira well settled The land itself being very fat and black and being very well watered by the rivulets and springs and rivers I found prunes like those of Spain and nuts and very good sweet grapes and mulberries It was he said the best land he had seen during his long trek north from Mexico 10 Coronado spent 25 days in Quivira and traveled about 25 leagues 100 km 65 mi from one end of the country to the other He found nothing more than straw thatched villages of up to 200 houses each and fields of corn beans and squash He found no gold other than a single small piece which he speculated the Indigenous owner acquired from a member of his own expedition Coronado found the Teyas Indians in Blanco Canyon east of present day Lubbock Texas The Querechos lived on the flat Llano Estacado above the canyon The Spaniards described the locals as being a large people of good build with many of the men being more than 6 ft 180 cm and seemed like giants to the Spaniards Both sexes wore minimal attire 11 Coronado was escorted to the border of Quivira at an area called Tabas where the neighboring nation of Harahey began He summoned the Lord of Harahey who with a retinue of nearly 200 came to meet the Spanish The Harahey delegation were all naked with bows and some sort of things on their heads and their privy parts slightly covered It was the same sort of place and of about the same size as Quivira 12 Disappointed at his failure to find wealth Coronado turned his face toward New Mexico and marched back across the plains met up with the rest of his army there and the following year returned to Mexico Before leaving Quivira Coronado ordered the Turk executed by strangulation The Coronado expedition had failed in its quest for gold Coronado left behind in New Mexico several Catholic priests and their helpers including Friar Juan de Padilla Padilla journeyed back to Quivira with a Portuguese assistant and several Indigenous converts The friar and most of his companions were soon killed by people from Quivira apparently because he wished to leave their country to visit their enemies the Guas Portuguese and Native survivors reported the story 13 Later expeditions Edit Juan de Onate led an expedition to Quivira in 1601 Onate was married to a granddaughter of Hernan Cortes and Isabel Moctezuma In 1594 Francisco Leyba Leyva Bonilla and Antonio de Humana Umana made another attempt to find the Quivira of Coronado though it was denounced as unauthorized by Spanish officials Only Jusepe Gutierrez a Nahua returned from this journey He related that Leyba had killed Umana in a quarrel and that he Jusepe had deserted the expedition Following this in 1601 the governor of New Mexico Juan de Onate undertook another expedition in search of Quivira He found settlements of the Escanjaque and Rayado in the Central Great Plains but no gold or silver He learned that Leyba and other members of the Umana and Lebya expedition had been killed by Indians In 1606 800 people from Quivira reportedly visited Onate in New Mexico to trade In his 1634 expedition Captain Alonzo Vaca found Quivira 300 leagues east of New Mexico this suggests more than 1 200 km 750 mi Another reputed expedition was undertaken in 1662 by Diego Dionisio de Penalosa who allegedly found a large settlement he called a city but a modern re examination of his account concluded that the story is fanciful 14 Spanish accounts said Quivirans were enemies of the Escanjaques In 1675 and 1678 came two Spanish royal orders for the conquest of Quivira 15 In cartography Edit Quivira is located above New Mexico in the Incognito Lands in this 1710 map On early 16th and 17th century maps of North America a large region including what is now Kansas Oklahoma southeastern Colorado northeastern New Mexico and the Texas Panhandle was called Quivira 16 17 Legacy EditThe last remnants of the formerly extensive cartographic region of Quivira today is the city of Lake Quivira and the Quivira National Wildlife Refuge in Kansas In addition the Quivira Council of the Boy Scouts serves the area of southwestern Kansas around Wichita the central part of the area that was traditionally called Quivira 18 The first several yearbooks printed by the University of Kansas were entitled Quivira Also a major arterial road runs through the Johnson County suburbs of Kansas City named Quivira Road A large abandoned pueblo in Torrance County New Mexico was named La Gran Quivira the Great Quivira The community was located within Tompiro speaking Pueblo territory During the early period of the Spanish conquest when the town was called Pueblo de Las Humanas a mission was built here In the 1670s the Tompiro communities were abandoned and absorbed into other Pueblos The remains of Gran Quivira Pueblo and the mission are today part of Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument From the days of Coronado the name of Quivira had been associated with the idea of a great unknown city of wealth and splendor situated somewhere on the Eastern Plains and it is not at all unlikely that when some party from the Rio Grande Valley in search of game or gold crossed the mountains and the wilderness lying to the east and was suddenly amazed by the apparition of a dead city silent and tenantless but bearing the evidences of large population of vast resources of architectural knowledge mechanical skill and wonderful energy they should have associated with it the stories heard from childhood of the mythical center of riches and power and called the new found wonder the Gran Quivira 19 See also EditCity of the Caesars El Dorado Fountain of Youth La Canela Paititi Sierra de la PlataReferences Edit a b c d Wedel Waldo R August 1970 Coronado s Route to Quivira 1541 Plains Anthropologist 15 49 161 168 doi 10 1080 2052546 1970 11908566 JSTOR 25666935 Tanner Beccy April 21 2018 Mysterious Lost City of Etzanoa in south central Kansas now open to tours The Wichita Eagle Retrieved December 8 2018 Wedel Waldo R Archeological Remains in Central Kansas and the Possible Bearing on the location of Quivira Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections Vol 101 No 7 1942 pp 1 24 Bragg Caelin March 30 2023 Wichita State professor uncovers forgotten native nation that could revolutionize history of the Great Plains WSU News Wichita State University Retrieved April 1 2023 Secoy Frank R The Identity of the Paduca An Ethnohistorical Analysis American Anthropologist New Series Vol 53 No 4 Part 1 Oct Dec 1951 pp 525 42 Reichart Milton Bourgmont s Route to Central Kansas A Reexamination Kansas History Vol 2 Summer 1979 p 102 Vehik Susan C Wichita Culture History Plains Anthropologist Vol 37 No 141 1992 pp 311 332 Vehik Susan C Onate s Expedition to the Southern Plains Routes Destinations and Implications for Late Prehistoric Cultural Adaptations Plains Anthropologist Vol 312 No 11 1986 pp 13 33 QUIVIRA The Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association TSHA Tshaonline org June 15 2010 Retrieved April 3 2014 Winship George Parker Ed and Translator The Journey of Coronado 1540 1542 from the City of Mexico to the Grand Canon of the Colorado and the Buffalo Plains of Texas Kansas and Nebraska As Told by Himself and his Followers New York A S Barnes amp Co 1904 p 219 Winship pp 113 209 215 234 235 237 Winship p 235 George P Hammon and Agapito Rey Don Juan de Onate Colonizer of New Mexico 1595 1628 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1953 416 19 Hackett Charles W New Light on Don Diego de Penalosa Proof that he never made an expedition from Santa Fe to Quivira and the Mississippi River in 1662 Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol 6 No 3 Dec 1919 313 335 Louis Houck 1908 A History of Missouri from the Earliest Explorations Vol I p p 121 48 Portinaro Pierluigi The Cartography of North America 1500 1800 1999 Entry Quivira in the Kansas State Cyclopedia of 1912 Skyways lib ks us August 12 1902 Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Retrieved April 3 2014 Quivira Council of the Boy Scouts Archived September 10 2009 at the Wayback Machine Prince L Bradford 1915 Spanish Mission Churches of New Mexico Cedar Rapids IA The Torch Press pp 355 356 ISBN 0 87380 126 1 Retrieved December 2 2008 External links EditThe journey of Coronado 1540 1542 from the city of Mexico to the Grand Canon of the Colorado and the buffalo plains of Texas Kansas and Nebraska as told by himself and his followers Complete primary documents pertaining to Coronado s expeditions translated by George Parker Winship at Portal to Texas History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quivira amp oldid 1161659162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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