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Zuni people

The Zuni (Zuni: A:shiwi; formerly spelled Zuñi) are Native American Pueblo peoples native to the Zuni River valley. The Zuni people today are federally recognized as the Zuni Tribe of the Zuni Reservation, New Mexico, and most live in the Pueblo of Zuni on the Zuni River, a tributary of the Little Colorado River, in western New Mexico, United States. The Pueblo of Zuni is 55 km (34 mi) south of Gallup, New Mexico.[1] The Zuni tribe lived in multi level adobe houses. In addition to the reservation, the tribe owns trust lands in Catron County, New Mexico, and Apache County, Arizona.[2] The Zuni call their homeland Halona Idiwan’a or Middle Place.[3] The word Zuni is believed to derive from the Western Keres language (Acoma) word sɨ̂‧ni, or a cognate thereof.

Zuni
A:shiwi
Zuni girl with jar, 1903
Total population
19,228 enrolled members [citation needed] (2015)
Regions with significant populations
United States (New Mexico)
Languages
Zuni, English, Spanish
Related ethnic groups
Pueblo people
Map of historical distribution of Zuni (light green) and current Zuni land (dark green)

History edit

Archaeology suggests that the Zuni have been farmers in the general area for 3,000 to 4,000 years. It is now thought that the Ancestral Zuni people inhabited the Zuni River valley from the last millennium B.C., when they began using irrigation to farm maize on at least household-sized plots.[4][5]

 
Zuni Salt Lake, New Mexico, where the Zuni have harvested salt for centuries

Zuni culture is associated with Mogollon and Ancestral Pueblo peoples cultures, who lived in the deserts of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and southern Colorado for over two millennia. White Mound was one such settlement of pit houses, farming, and storerooms, built around 700 A.D., followed by the village of Kiatuthlanna around 800 A.D., and Allantown around 1000 A.D. These Mogollon villages included kivas. Likewise, Zuni ancestors were in contact with the Ancestral Puebloans at Chaco Canyon around 1100. The Zuni settlement called Village of the Great Kivas, was built around 1100, and included nine kivas. The Zuni region, however, was probably only sparsely populated by small agricultural settlements until the 12th century when the population and the size of the settlements began to increase. The large villages of Heshot Ula, Betatakin, and Kiet Siel were established by 1275. By the 13th century villages were built on top of mesas, including Atsinna on Inscription Rock. In the 14th century, the Zuni inhabited a dozen pueblos containing between 180 and 1,400 rooms, while the Anasazi abandoned larger settlements for smaller ones, or established new ones along the Rio Grande. The Zuni did move from the eastern portion of their territory to the western side, and built six new villages, Halona, Hawikuh, Kiakima, Matsaki, Kwakina, and Kechipaun. Halona was located 97 km north Zuni Salt Lake, and the Zuni traded in salt, corn and turquoise. Hawikuh was claimed by Niza to be one of the Seven Cities of Cibola, a legendary 16th century wealthy empire.[6][7][8]

In 1539, Moorish slave Estevanico led an advance party of Fray Marcos de Niza's Spanish expedition. Sponsored by Antonio de Mendoza who wanted Niza to "explain to the natives of the land that there is only one God in heaven, and the Emperor on earth to rule and govern it, whose subjects they all must become and whom they must serve." The Zuni reportedly killed Estevanico as a spy, or for being "greedy, voracious and bold".[7] This was Spain's first contact with any of the Pueblo peoples.[9] Francisco Vásquez de Coronado expedition followed in the wake of Niza's Seven Cities of Cibola claim. Sponsored once again by Mendoza, Coronado led 230 soldiers on horseback, 70 foot soldiers, several Franciscan priests and Mexican natives. The Spanish met 600 Zuni warriors near Hawikuh in July 1540, inflicting several casualties, and capturing the village. Coronado continued to the Rio Grande, but several priests and soldiers stayed an additional two years. The Chamuscado and Rodríguez Expedition followed in 1581, and Antonio de Espejo in 1583. Juan de Oñate visited Zuni territory in 1598 and 1604 looking for copper mines, but without success. Francisco Manuel de Silva Nieto established a mission at Hawikuh in 1629 with two Franciscan priests. They completed a church compound in 1632, and established a second mission in Halona. Shortly afterwards, the Zuni destroyed the missions, killing two priests, and then retreated to Dowa Yalanne, where they remained for the next three years. The Spanish built another mission in Halona in 1643.[7][8]: 56–59 

Before the Pueblo Revolt of 1680, the Zuni lived in six villages. After the revolt, until 1692, they took refuge in a defensible position atop Dowa Yalanne, a steep mesa 5 km (3.1 miles) southeast of the present Pueblo of Zuni; Dowa means "corn", and yalanne means "mountain". After the establishment of peace and the return of the Spanish, the Zuni relocated to their present location, returning to the mesa top only briefly in 1703.[10] By the end of the 17th century, only Halona was still inhabited of the original six villages. Yet, satellite villages were settled around Halona, and included Nutria, Ojo Caliente, and Pescado.[8]: 67–69, 73–78 

Of the three Zuni missions, only the church at Halona was rebuilt after the reconquest. According to Nancy Bonvillain, "Indeed, by the late eighteenth century, Spanish authorities had given up hope of dominating the Zuni and other western Pueblo Indians, and in 1799 only seven Spanish people were recorded as living among the Zuni.". In 1821, the Franciscans ended their missionary efforts.[8]: 71–74 

In 1848, U.S. Army Lt. Col. Henderson P. Boyakin signed a treaty with Zuni and Navajo leaders stating the Zuni "shall be protected in the full management of all their rights of Private Property and Religion...[by] the authorities, civil and military, of New Mexico and the United States." Observing the Zuni in the 1850s, Balduin Möllhausen noted "In all directions, fields of wheat and maize, as well as gourds and melons, bore testimony to their industry."[8]: 81, 83 

The Zuni Reservation was created by the United States federal government in 1877, and enlarged by a second Executive order in 1883.[8]: 86–88 

Frank Hamilton Cushing, an anthropologist associated with the Smithsonian Institution, lived with the Zuni from 1879 to 1884. He was one of the first non-native participant-observers and ethnologists at Zuni. In 1979, it was reported that some members of the Pueblo consider he had wrongfully documented the Zuni way of life, exploiting them by photographing and revealing sacred traditions and ceremonies.[11]

During the early 2000s, the Zuni opposed the development of a coal mine near the Zuni Salt Lake, a site sacred to the Zuni and under Zuni control.[12] The mine would have extracted water from the aquifer below the lake and would also have involved construction between the lake and the Zuni. The plan was abandoned in 2003 after several lawsuits.[13][8]: 117–119 

Culture edit

 
She-we-na (Zuni Pueblo). Kachina doll (Paiyatemu), late 19th century. Brooklyn Museum

The Zuni traditionally speak the Zuni language, a language isolate that has no known relationship to any other Native American language. Linguists believe that the Zuni have maintained the integrity of their language for 6,000-to-7,000 years.[15] The Zuni do, however, share a number of words from Keresan, Hopi, and Pima pertaining to religion. The Zuni continue to practice their traditional religion with its regular ceremonies and dances, and an independent and unique belief system.[citation needed]

The Zuni were and are a traditional people who live by irrigated agriculture and raising livestock. Gradually the Zuni farmed less and turned to sheep and cattle herding as a means of economic development. Their success as a desert agri-economy is due to careful management and conservation of resources, as well as a complex system of community support. Many contemporary Zuni also rely on the sale of traditional arts and crafts. Some Zuni still live in the old-style Pueblos, while others live in modern houses. Their location is relatively isolated, but they welcome respectful tourists[citation needed].

The Zuni Tribal Fair and rodeo is held the third weekend in August. The Zuni also participate in the Gallup Inter-Tribal Ceremonial, usually held in early or mid-August. The A:shiwi A:wan Museum and Heritage Center is a tribal museum that showcases Zuni history, culture, and arts.[citation needed]

Ethnobotany edit

The Zuni utilize many local plants in their culture. For an extensive list, see the main article, "Zuni ethnobotany". Zuni have developed knowledge of local plants that are used for medical practices and religious rites.[16]

Pottery edit

 
Water Jar, 1825–1850, Brooklyn Museum
 
Zuni olla, late 19th – early 20th century, 12.5″ high, Brooklyn Museum

Traditionally, Zuni women made pottery for storing food and water. They used symbols of their clans for designs. Clay for the pottery is sourced locally. Prior to its extraction, the women give thanks to the Earth Mother (Awidelin Tsitda) according to ritual. The clay is ground, sifted, mixed with water, rolled into a coil, shaped into a vessel or other design, and scraped smooth with a scraper. A thin layer of finer clay, called slip, is applied to the surface for extra smoothness and color. The vessel is polished with a stone after it dries. It is painted with home-made organic dyes, using a traditional yucca brush. The shape and painted images depend on the intended purpose of the pottery. To fire the pottery, the Zuni used animal dung in traditional kilns. Today, Zuni potters might use electric kilns. While the firing was usually a community enterprise, silence or communication in low voices was considered essential in order to maintain the original "voice" of the "being" of the clay, and the purpose of the end product.[17][18] Sales of pottery and traditional arts provide a major source of income for many Zuni people today.[19] An artisan may be the sole financial support for her immediate family as well as others. Many women make pottery or, more rarely, clothing or baskets.[20] Brown, black and red ornamentation can be found on traditional Zuni pots that are first covered with white slip. Common motifs are spiral scrolls edged with triangles, deer, as well as frogs, dragonflies and other symbols associated with rain and water. In addition to pots, Zuni produce owl figurines that are covered with white slip and painted with black and red motifs before firing.[21]

Carving and silversmithing edit

Zuni also make fetishes and necklaces for the purpose of rituals and trade, and more recently for sale to collectors.

The Zuni are known for their fine lapidary work. Zuni jewelers set hand-cut turquoise and other stones in silver.[22] Today jewelry-making thrives as an art form among the Zuni. Many Zuni have become master stone-cutters. Techniques used include mosaic and channel inlay to create intricate designs and unique patterns.

Two specialties of Zuni jewelers are needlepoint and petit point. In making needlepoint, small, slightly oval-shaped stones with pointed ends are set in silver bezels, close to one another and side by side to create a pattern. The technique is normally used with turquoise, sometimes with coral and occasionally with other stones in creating necklaces, bracelets, earrings and rings. Petit point is made in the same fashion as needlepoint, except that one end of each stone is pointed, and the other end is rounded.[citation needed]

Religion edit

Religion is central to Zuni life. Their traditional religious beliefs are centered on the three most powerful of their deities: Earth Mother, Sun Father, and Moonlight-Giving Mother. The religion is katsina-based, and ceremonies occur during winter solstice, summer, harvest, and again in winter.[8]: 14–15, 25–40 

Priesthood includes three priests (north, above and below), and Pekwin (the above priest) determines the religious calendar. A religious society is associated with each of the six kivas, and each boy is initiated into one of these societies.[23]

Shalako edit

Shalako is a series of ceremonial dances that take place throughout the night[24] on or around the winter solstice. They are closed to non-native individuals unless there is a personal invitation by a tribal member. The ceremony also blesses the houses that were built during the year. The blessing takes the form of singing that accompanies six dancers who are dressed in Shalako outfits.[25] These outfits can be as high as eight feet; the dancers wearing them represent "couriers of the rain deities come to bless new homes".[26][27][28] The dancers move from house to house throughout the night; at dawn Saiyatasha performs a final prayer and the ceremony is complete.[28]

In popular culture edit

In the novel Brave New World, a Zuni native named John comes to grip with sexual realities in the New State and how they differ from his own culture.

Gallery edit

Notable Zuni people edit

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Zuni Tribe: Facts, Clothes, Food and History ***". www.warpaths2peacepipes.com. Retrieved November 20, 2018.
  2. ^ "Welcome", Pueblo of Zuni, (retrieved 13 Feb 2011)
  3. ^ "Experience Zuni". www.zunitourism.com. Retrieved November 8, 2017.
  4. ^ Zuni Origins: Toward a New Synthesis of Southwestern Archaeology, The University of Arizona Press (2009), ISBN 978-0816528936, edited by David A. Gregory and David R. Wilcox, p. 119
  5. ^ Damp, Jonathan E. (2008). "The Economic Origins of Zuni" (PDF). Archaeology Southwest. 22 (2): 8. (PDF) from the original on September 12, 2014.; see also Damp, Jonathan E. (2010). "Zuni emergent agriculture: economic strategies and the origins of Zuni". In Gregory, David A.; Wilcox, David R. (eds.). Zuni Origins: Toward a new synthesis of Southwestern archaeology. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press. pp. 118–132. ISBN 978-0-8165-2893-6.
  6. ^ Kintigh, Keith (2008). "Zuni Settlement Patterns: A.D. 950–1680" (PDF). Archaeology Southwest. 22 (2): 15–16. (PDF) from the original on September 12, 2014.; see also Kintigh, Keith (2010). "Late prehistoric and late prehistoric settlement systems in the Zuni area". In Gregory, David A.; Wilcox, David R. (eds.). Zuni Origins: Toward a new synthesis of Southwestern archaeology. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press. pp. 361–376. ISBN 978-0-8165-2893-6.
  7. ^ a b c Pritzker 109
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Bonvillain, Nancy (2011). The Zuni. New York: Chelsea House. pp. 18–23, 56–57. ISBN 9781604137996.
  9. ^ David Roberts, The Pueblo Revolt, 56 (Simon and Schuster, 2004). ASIN B000MC1CHQ. Reprint, 2005, ISBN 0-7432-5517-8
  10. ^ Flint, Richard and Shirley Cushing Flint "Dowa Yalanne, or Corn Mountain". Archived 2012-07-14 at archive.today New Mexico Office of the State Historian. 21 April 2012.
  11. ^ Frank Hamilton Cushing, Zuni (University of Nebraska, 1979).
  12. ^ Neary, Ben (February 18, 2001). "Mining Plan Pits Tribe Against Power Industry". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 26, 2009.
  13. ^ Neary, Ben (August 5, 2003). . Santa Fe New Mexican. Archived from the original on June 30, 2004. Retrieved May 26, 2009.
  14. ^ Granger, Byrd H. (1960). Arizona Place Names. University of Arizona Press. p. 21. Retrieved December 9, 2011.
  15. ^ "Zuni Origins". Archaeology Southwest. Retrieved November 8, 2021.
  16. ^ Camazine, S.; Bye, R.A. (December 1980). "A study of the medical ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians of New Mexico". Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 2 (4): 365–388. doi:10.1016/s0378-8741(80)81017-8. PMID 6893476. Retrieved December 23, 2020.
  17. ^ Morrell, Virginia. "The Zuni Way ." September 5, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian Magazine. April 2007 (retrieved 13 Feb 2011)
  18. ^ Jesse Green, ed. Zuni: Selected Writings of Frank Hamilton Cushing. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1979. ISBN 0-8032-7007-0
  19. ^ Grugel, Andrea (2012). "Culture, religion and economy in the American southwest: Zuni Pueblo and Laguna Pueb". GeoJournal: Geography for and with Indigenous Peoples. 77 (6): 791–803. JSTOR 23325388. Retrieved December 24, 2020.
  20. ^ Belarde-Lewis, Miranda, A Zuni System of Knowledge: The Arts, University of Washington
  21. ^ Highwater, Jamake (1983). Arts of the Indian Americas. New York: Harper & Row. p. 191. ISBN 9780735104822.
  22. ^ Adair 14
  23. ^ Wright, Barton (1988). History and Background of Zuni Culture, in Patterns and Sources of Zuni Kachinas. Hamsen Publishing Company. pp. 37–38. ISBN 9780960132249.
  24. ^ "Zuni Shalako Figure". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved December 23, 2020.
  25. ^ Wright, Barton (1988). Patterns and Sources of Zuni Kachinas. Hamsen Publishing. pp. 42–45, 80–101. ISBN 9780960132249.
  26. ^ "Our Culture". Pueblo of Zuni. Retrieved December 23, 2020.
  27. ^ Bonvillain, Nancy (2011). The Zuni. New York: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 9781604137996.
  28. ^ a b Cushing, Frank (1988). The Mythic World of the Zuni. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 9780826313874.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Benedict, Ruth. Zuni Mythology. 2 vols. Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology, no. 21. New York: Columbia University Press, 1935. AMS Press reprint, 1969.
  • Bunzel, Ruth L. "Introduction to Zuni Ceremonialism". (1932a); "Zuni Origin Myths". (1932b); "Zuni Ritual Poetry". (1932c). In Forty-Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology. pp. 467–835. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1932. Reprint, Zuni Ceremonialism: Three Studies. Introduction by Nancy Pareto. University of New Mexico Press, 1992.
  • Bunzel, Ruth L. Zuni Texts. Publications of the American Ethnological Society, 15. New York: G.E. Steckert & Co., 1933
  • Cushing, Frank Hamilton, Barton Wright, The Mythic World of the Zuni, University of New Mexico Press, 1992, hardcover, ISBN 0-8263-1036-2
  • Herrick, Dennis. (2018) Esteban: The African Slave Who Explored America. University of New Mexico Press, hardcover, ISBN 978-0-8263-5981-0
  • Davis, Nancy Yaw. (2000). The Zuni enigma. Norton. ISBN 0-393-04788-1
  • Eggan, Fred and T.N. Pandey. "Zuni History, 1855–1970". Handbook of North American Indians, Southwest. Vol.9. Ed. By Alfonso Ortiz. pp. 474–481. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1979.
  • Hart, E. Richard, 2000. "Zuni Claims: An Expert Witness’ Reflections," American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 24(1): 163–171.
  • Hart, E. Richard, ed. Zuni and the Courts: A Struggle for Sovereign Land Rights. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1995. ISBN 978-0-7006-0705-1.
  • Kroeber, Alfred L. (1984). Zuni kin and clan. AMS Press. ISBN 0-404-15618-5
  • Newman, Stanley S. Zuni Dictionary. Indiana University Research Center, Publication Six. Bloomington: Indiana University, 1967. ASIN B0007F3L0Y.
  • Roberts, John. "The Zuni". In Variations in Value Orientations. Ed. by F.R. Kluckhorn and F.L. Strodbeck. pp. 285–316. Evanston, IL and Elmsford, NY: Row, Peterson, 1961.
  • Smith, Watson and John Roberts. Zuni Law: A Field of Values. Papers of the Peabody Museum of the American Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 43. Cambridge, MA: Peabody Museum, 1954.
  • Tedlock, Barbara. The Beautiful and the Dangerous: Dialogues with the Zuni Indians, New York: Penguin Books, 1992.

External links edit

zuni, people, zuni, zuni, shiwi, formerly, spelled, zuñi, native, american, pueblo, peoples, native, zuni, river, valley, today, federally, recognized, zuni, tribe, zuni, reservation, mexico, most, live, pueblo, zuni, zuni, river, tributary, little, colorado, . The Zuni Zuni A shiwi formerly spelled Zuni are Native American Pueblo peoples native to the Zuni River valley The Zuni people today are federally recognized as the Zuni Tribe of the Zuni Reservation New Mexico and most live in the Pueblo of Zuni on the Zuni River a tributary of the Little Colorado River in western New Mexico United States The Pueblo of Zuni is 55 km 34 mi south of Gallup New Mexico 1 The Zuni tribe lived in multi level adobe houses In addition to the reservation the tribe owns trust lands in Catron County New Mexico and Apache County Arizona 2 The Zuni call their homeland Halona Idiwan aor Middle Place 3 The word Zuni is believed to derive from the Western Keres language Acoma word sɨ ni or a cognate thereof ZuniA shiwiZuni girl with jar 1903Total population19 228 enrolled members citation needed 2015 Regions with significant populationsUnited States New Mexico LanguagesZuni English SpanishRelated ethnic groupsPueblo people Map of historical distribution of Zuni light green and current Zuni land dark green Contents 1 History 2 Culture 2 1 Ethnobotany 2 2 Pottery 2 3 Carving and silversmithing 2 4 Religion 2 5 Shalako 3 In popular culture 4 Gallery 5 Notable Zuni people 6 See also 7 Citations 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editArchaeology suggests that the Zuni have been farmers in the general area for 3 000 to 4 000 years It is now thought that the Ancestral Zuni people inhabited the Zuni River valley from the last millennium B C when they began using irrigation to farm maize on at least household sized plots 4 5 nbsp Zuni Salt Lake New Mexico where the Zuni have harvested salt for centuries Zuni culture is associated with Mogollon and Ancestral Pueblo peoples cultures who lived in the deserts of New Mexico Arizona Utah and southern Colorado for over two millennia White Mound was one such settlement of pit houses farming and storerooms built around 700 A D followed by the village of Kiatuthlanna around 800 A D and Allantown around 1000 A D These Mogollon villages included kivas Likewise Zuni ancestors were in contact with the Ancestral Puebloans at Chaco Canyon around 1100 The Zuni settlement called Village of the Great Kivas was built around 1100 and included nine kivas The Zuni region however was probably only sparsely populated by small agricultural settlements until the 12th century when the population and the size of the settlements began to increase The large villages of Heshot Ula Betatakin and Kiet Siel were established by 1275 By the 13th century villages were built on top of mesas including Atsinna on Inscription Rock In the 14th century the Zuni inhabited a dozen pueblos containing between 180 and 1 400 rooms while the Anasazi abandoned larger settlements for smaller ones or established new ones along the Rio Grande The Zuni did move from the eastern portion of their territory to the western side and built six new villages Halona Hawikuh Kiakima Matsaki Kwakina and Kechipaun Halona was located 97 km north Zuni Salt Lake and the Zuni traded in salt corn and turquoise Hawikuh was claimed by Niza to be one of the Seven Cities of Cibola a legendary 16th century wealthy empire 6 7 8 In 1539 Moorish slave Estevanico led an advance party of Fray Marcos de Niza s Spanish expedition Sponsored by Antonio de Mendoza who wanted Niza to explain to the natives of the land that there is only one God in heaven and the Emperor on earth to rule and govern it whose subjects they all must become and whom they must serve The Zuni reportedly killed Estevanico as a spy or for being greedy voracious and bold 7 This was Spain s first contact with any of the Pueblo peoples 9 Francisco Vasquez de Coronado expedition followed in the wake of Niza s Seven Cities of Cibola claim Sponsored once again by Mendoza Coronado led 230 soldiers on horseback 70 foot soldiers several Franciscan priests and Mexican natives The Spanish met 600 Zuni warriors near Hawikuh in July 1540 inflicting several casualties and capturing the village Coronado continued to the Rio Grande but several priests and soldiers stayed an additional two years The Chamuscado and Rodriguez Expedition followed in 1581 and Antonio de Espejo in 1583 Juan de Onate visited Zuni territory in 1598 and 1604 looking for copper mines but without success Francisco Manuel de Silva Nieto established a mission at Hawikuh in 1629 with two Franciscan priests They completed a church compound in 1632 and established a second mission in Halona Shortly afterwards the Zuni destroyed the missions killing two priests and then retreated to Dowa Yalanne where they remained for the next three years The Spanish built another mission in Halona in 1643 7 8 56 59 Before the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 the Zuni lived in six villages After the revolt until 1692 they took refuge in a defensible position atop Dowa Yalanne a steep mesa 5 km 3 1 miles southeast of the present Pueblo of Zuni Dowa means corn and yalanne means mountain After the establishment of peace and the return of the Spanish the Zuni relocated to their present location returning to the mesa top only briefly in 1703 10 By the end of the 17th century only Halona was still inhabited of the original six villages Yet satellite villages were settled around Halona and included Nutria Ojo Caliente and Pescado 8 67 69 73 78 Of the three Zuni missions only the church at Halona was rebuilt after the reconquest According to Nancy Bonvillain Indeed by the late eighteenth century Spanish authorities had given up hope of dominating the Zuni and other western Pueblo Indians and in 1799 only seven Spanish people were recorded as living among the Zuni In 1821 the Franciscans ended their missionary efforts 8 71 74 In 1848 U S Army Lt Col Henderson P Boyakin signed a treaty with Zuni and Navajo leaders stating the Zuni shall be protected in the full management of all their rights of Private Property and Religion by the authorities civil and military of New Mexico and the United States Observing the Zuni in the 1850s Balduin Mollhausen noted In all directions fields of wheat and maize as well as gourds and melons bore testimony to their industry 8 81 83 The Zuni Reservation was created by the United States federal government in 1877 and enlarged by a second Executive order in 1883 8 86 88 Frank Hamilton Cushing an anthropologist associated with the Smithsonian Institution lived with the Zuni from 1879 to 1884 He was one of the first non native participant observers and ethnologists at Zuni In 1979 it was reported that some members of the Pueblo consider he had wrongfully documented the Zuni way of life exploiting them by photographing and revealing sacred traditions and ceremonies 11 During the early 2000s the Zuni opposed the development of a coal mine near the Zuni Salt Lake a site sacred to the Zuni and under Zuni control 12 The mine would have extracted water from the aquifer below the lake and would also have involved construction between the lake and the Zuni The plan was abandoned in 2003 after several lawsuits 13 8 117 119 nbsp We Wha 1849 1896 a celebrated Zuni lhamana weaver at work on a backstrap loom photo John K Hillers c 1871 1907 nbsp Image of Zuni Pueblo created during the U S Army Corps of Topographical Engineers s 1851 expedition to Arizona which was led by Captain Sitgreaves 14 nbsp Lutakawi Zuni Governor photographed before 1925 by Edward S Curtis nbsp Zuni pueblo middle court in 1879 nbsp Zuni River Zuni Pueblo New Mexico The Zuni people have inhabited the Zuni River valley since the last millennium BCE nbsp Zuni men and the ancient Pueblo Town of Zuni c 1868 nbsp Two Zuni girls photographed by Edward S Curtis c 1926Culture edit nbsp She we na Zuni Pueblo Kachina doll Paiyatemu late 19th century Brooklyn MuseumThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The Zuni traditionally speak the Zuni language a language isolate that has no known relationship to any other Native American language Linguists believe that the Zuni have maintained the integrity of their language for 6 000 to 7 000 years 15 The Zuni do however share a number of words from Keresan Hopi and Pima pertaining to religion The Zuni continue to practice their traditional religion with its regular ceremonies and dances and an independent and unique belief system citation needed The Zuni were and are a traditional people who live by irrigated agriculture and raising livestock Gradually the Zuni farmed less and turned to sheep and cattle herding as a means of economic development Their success as a desert agri economy is due to careful management and conservation of resources as well as a complex system of community support Many contemporary Zuni also rely on the sale of traditional arts and crafts Some Zuni still live in the old style Pueblos while others live in modern houses Their location is relatively isolated but they welcome respectful tourists citation needed The Zuni Tribal Fair and rodeo is held the third weekend in August The Zuni also participate in the Gallup Inter Tribal Ceremonial usually held in early or mid August The A shiwi A wan Museum and Heritage Center is a tribal museum that showcases Zuni history culture and arts citation needed Ethnobotany edit The Zuni utilize many local plants in their culture For an extensive list see the main article Zuni ethnobotany Zuni have developed knowledge of local plants that are used for medical practices and religious rites 16 Pottery edit nbsp Water Jar 1825 1850 Brooklyn Museum nbsp Zuni olla late 19th early 20th century 12 5 high Brooklyn Museum Traditionally Zuni women made pottery for storing food and water They used symbols of their clans for designs Clay for the pottery is sourced locally Prior to its extraction the women give thanks to the Earth Mother Awidelin Tsitda according to ritual The clay is ground sifted mixed with water rolled into a coil shaped into a vessel or other design and scraped smooth with a scraper A thin layer of finer clay called slip is applied to the surface for extra smoothness and color The vessel is polished with a stone after it dries It is painted with home made organic dyes using a traditional yucca brush The shape and painted images depend on the intended purpose of the pottery To fire the pottery the Zuni used animal dung in traditional kilns Today Zuni potters might use electric kilns While the firing was usually a community enterprise silence or communication in low voices was considered essential in order to maintain the original voice of the being of the clay and the purpose of the end product 17 18 Sales of pottery and traditional arts provide a major source of income for many Zuni people today 19 An artisan may be the sole financial support for her immediate family as well as others Many women make pottery or more rarely clothing or baskets 20 Brown black and red ornamentation can be found on traditional Zuni pots that are first covered with white slip Common motifs are spiral scrolls edged with triangles deer as well as frogs dragonflies and other symbols associated with rain and water In addition to pots Zuni produce owl figurines that are covered with white slip and painted with black and red motifs before firing 21 Carving and silversmithing edit Zuni also make fetishes and necklaces for the purpose of rituals and trade and more recently for sale to collectors The Zuni are known for their fine lapidary work Zuni jewelers set hand cut turquoise and other stones in silver 22 Today jewelry making thrives as an art form among the Zuni Many Zuni have become master stone cutters Techniques used include mosaic and channel inlay to create intricate designs and unique patterns Two specialties of Zuni jewelers are needlepoint and petit point In making needlepoint small slightly oval shaped stones with pointed ends are set in silver bezels close to one another and side by side to create a pattern The technique is normally used with turquoise sometimes with coral and occasionally with other stones in creating necklaces bracelets earrings and rings Petit point is made in the same fashion as needlepoint except that one end of each stone is pointed and the other end is rounded citation needed Religion edit Further information Zuni religion Religion is central to Zuni life Their traditional religious beliefs are centered on the three most powerful of their deities Earth Mother Sun Father and Moonlight Giving Mother The religion is katsina based and ceremonies occur during winter solstice summer harvest and again in winter 8 14 15 25 40 Priesthood includes three priests north above and below and Pekwin the above priest determines the religious calendar A religious society is associated with each of the six kivas and each boy is initiated into one of these societies 23 Shalako edit Main article Shalako Shalako is a series of ceremonial dances that take place throughout the night 24 on or around the winter solstice They are closed to non native individuals unless there is a personal invitation by a tribal member The ceremony also blesses the houses that were built during the year The blessing takes the form of singing that accompanies six dancers who are dressed in Shalako outfits 25 These outfits can be as high as eight feet the dancers wearing them represent couriers of the rain deities come to bless new homes 26 27 28 The dancers move from house to house throughout the night at dawn Saiyatasha performs a final prayer and the ceremony is complete 28 In popular culture editIn the novel Brave New World a Zuni native named John comes to grip with sexual realities in the New State and how they differ from his own culture Gallery edit nbsp Zuni Girl photographed by Edward S Curtis nbsp Zunis in typical modern costume 1896 nbsp Zuni water vases nbsp Zuni pottery nbsp Zuni paint and condiment cups nbsp Zuni ceramic ladles nbsp Zuni bird effigies nbsp Zuni clay baskets nbsp Zuni animal effigies nbsp Zuni woven sashesNotable Zuni people editEmily Pinto painter Percy Tsisete Sandy Kai Sa Red Moon painter We wha weaverSee also editZuni Reservation Zuni language Zuni mythology Zuniceratops Zuni Pueblo New MexicoCitations edit Zuni Tribe Facts Clothes Food and History www warpaths2peacepipes com Retrieved November 20 2018 Welcome Pueblo of Zuni retrieved 13 Feb 2011 Experience Zuni www zunitourism com Retrieved November 8 2017 Zuni Origins Toward a New Synthesis of Southwestern Archaeology The University of Arizona Press 2009 ISBN 978 0816528936 edited by David A Gregory and David R Wilcox p 119 Damp Jonathan E 2008 The Economic Origins of Zuni PDF Archaeology Southwest 22 2 8 Archived PDF from the original on September 12 2014 see also Damp Jonathan E 2010 Zuni emergent agriculture economic strategies and the origins of Zuni In Gregory David A Wilcox David R eds Zuni Origins Toward a new synthesis of Southwestern archaeology Tucson Arizona University of Arizona Press pp 118 132 ISBN 978 0 8165 2893 6 Kintigh Keith 2008 Zuni Settlement Patterns A D 950 1680 PDF Archaeology Southwest 22 2 15 16 Archived PDF from the original on September 12 2014 see also Kintigh Keith 2010 Late prehistoric and late prehistoric settlement systems in the Zuni area In Gregory David A Wilcox David R eds Zuni Origins Toward a new synthesis of Southwestern archaeology Tucson Arizona University of Arizona Press pp 361 376 ISBN 978 0 8165 2893 6 a b c Pritzker 109 a b c d e f g h Bonvillain Nancy 2011 The Zuni New York Chelsea House pp 18 23 56 57 ISBN 9781604137996 David Roberts The Pueblo Revolt 56 Simon and Schuster 2004 ASIN B000MC1CHQ Reprint 2005 ISBN 0 7432 5517 8 Flint Richard and Shirley Cushing Flint Dowa Yalanne or Corn Mountain Archived 2012 07 14 at archive today New Mexico Office of the State Historian 21 April 2012 Frank Hamilton Cushing Zuni University of Nebraska 1979 Neary Ben February 18 2001 Mining Plan Pits Tribe Against Power Industry Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 26 2009 Neary Ben August 5 2003 Utility Drops Plans for Coal Mine Santa Fe New Mexican Archived from the original on June 30 2004 Retrieved May 26 2009 Granger Byrd H 1960 Arizona Place Names University of Arizona Press p 21 Retrieved December 9 2011 Zuni Origins Archaeology Southwest Retrieved November 8 2021 Camazine S Bye R A December 1980 A study of the medical ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians of New Mexico Journal of Ethnopharmacology 2 4 365 388 doi 10 1016 s0378 8741 80 81017 8 PMID 6893476 Retrieved December 23 2020 Morrell Virginia The Zuni Way Archived September 5 2013 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian Magazine April 2007 retrieved 13 Feb 2011 Jesse Green ed Zuni Selected Writings of Frank Hamilton Cushing Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1979 ISBN 0 8032 7007 0 Grugel Andrea 2012 Culture religion and economy in the American southwest Zuni Pueblo and Laguna Pueb GeoJournal Geography for and with Indigenous Peoples 77 6 791 803 JSTOR 23325388 Retrieved December 24 2020 Belarde Lewis Miranda A Zuni System of Knowledge The Arts University of Washington Highwater Jamake 1983 Arts of the Indian Americas New York Harper amp Row p 191 ISBN 9780735104822 Adair 14 Wright Barton 1988 History and Background of Zuni Culture in Patterns and Sources of Zuni Kachinas Hamsen Publishing Company pp 37 38 ISBN 9780960132249 Zuni Shalako Figure Smithsonian Institution Retrieved December 23 2020 Wright Barton 1988 Patterns and Sources of Zuni Kachinas Hamsen Publishing pp 42 45 80 101 ISBN 9780960132249 Our Culture Pueblo of Zuni Retrieved December 23 2020 Bonvillain Nancy 2011 The Zuni New York Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 9781604137996 a b Cushing Frank 1988 The Mythic World of the Zuni Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press ISBN 9780826313874 References editAdair John The Navajo and Pueblo Silversmiths Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1989 ISBN 978 0 8061 2215 1 Cushing Frank Hamilton Jesse Green ed Zuni Selected Writings of Frank Hamilton Cushing Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1978 ISBN 0 8032 2100 2 Pritzker Barry M A Native American Encyclopedia History Culture and Peoples Oxford Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 978 0 19 513877 1 Wade Edwin L The Ethnic Art Market in the American Southwest 1880 1980 George W Stocking Jr ed Objects and Others Essays on Museums and Material Culture History of Anthropology Vol 3 Madison University of Wisconsin Press 1988 ISBN 0 299 10324 2 Further reading editBenedict Ruth Zuni Mythology 2 vols Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology no 21 New York Columbia University Press 1935 AMS Press reprint 1969 Bunzel Ruth L Introduction to Zuni Ceremonialism 1932a Zuni Origin Myths 1932b Zuni Ritual Poetry 1932c In Forty Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology pp 467 835 Washington D C Government Printing Office 1932 Reprint Zuni Ceremonialism Three Studies Introduction by Nancy Pareto University of New Mexico Press 1992 Bunzel Ruth L Zuni Texts Publications of the American Ethnological Society 15 New York G E Steckert amp Co 1933 Cushing Frank Hamilton Barton Wright The Mythic World of the Zuni University of New Mexico Press 1992 hardcover ISBN 0 8263 1036 2 Herrick Dennis 2018 Esteban The African Slave Who Explored America University of New Mexico Press hardcover ISBN 978 0 8263 5981 0 Davis Nancy Yaw 2000 The Zuni enigma Norton ISBN 0 393 04788 1 Eggan Fred and T N Pandey Zuni History 1855 1970 Handbook of North American Indians Southwest Vol 9 Ed By Alfonso Ortiz pp 474 481 Washington D C Government Printing Office 1979 Hart E Richard 2000 Zuni Claims An Expert Witness Reflections American Indian Culture and Research Journal 24 1 163 171 Hart E Richard ed Zuni and the Courts A Struggle for Sovereign Land Rights Lawrence University Press of Kansas 1995 ISBN 978 0 7006 0705 1 Kroeber Alfred L 1984 Zuni kin and clan AMS Press ISBN 0 404 15618 5 Newman Stanley S Zuni Dictionary Indiana University Research Center Publication Six Bloomington Indiana University 1967 ASIN B0007F3L0Y Roberts John The Zuni In Variations in Value Orientations Ed by F R Kluckhorn and F L Strodbeck pp 285 316 Evanston IL and Elmsford NY Row Peterson 1961 Smith Watson and John Roberts Zuni Law A Field of Values Papers of the Peabody Museum of the American Archaeology and Ethnology Vol 43 Cambridge MA Peabody Museum 1954 Tedlock Barbara The Beautiful and the Dangerous Dialogues with the Zuni Indians New York Penguin Books 1992 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zuni nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Zuni Pueblo of Zuni official website A shiwi A wan Museum and Heritage Center at Zuni Pueblo of Zuni official Artist s Art Walk website The Zuni Worldview Archived June 4 2013 at the Wayback Machine Zuni Indian Tribe History Access Genealogy The Religious Life of the Zuni Child by Mrs Tilly E Matilda Coxe EStevenson from Project Gutenberg Pueblo tribe Zuni is Pueblo Collection of Historical Photographs of Zunis Quand les Katchinas dansent a Cibola Mythologie et rites des indiens Zunis 15 July 2008 Zuni Breadstuff by Frank Hamilton Cushing from Michigan State University Libraries The Historic American Cookbook Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zuni people amp oldid 1223406642, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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