Mission establishments in Alta California and elsewhere were home to complex, pluralistic communities in which native peoples actively but differentially negotiated aspects of colonialism through daily practice and the reinterpretation of identity. To explore these issues, we compare the archaeological evidence from two different indigenous dwellings at California’s Mission Santa Clara de Asís: an adobe barracks and a native-style thatched house. In particular, we consider possible differences between the dwellings’ inhabitants in terms of relative status, ethnolinguistic affiliation, and re-articulation of indigenous traditions
Scholarship on California Indians prior to and during the Spanish colonial period suffers from a lac...
Spanish missions were established in the San Francisco Bay Area beginning in A.D. 1776 with the foun...
Spanish missions in North America were once viewed as confining and stagnant communities, with nativ...
The California Department of Parks and Recreation excavated Native American living quarters at Missi...
Mission Santa Catalina was founded on the margins of the Spanish colonial frontier in northern Baja ...
Rather than simply an arena for Euroamerican domination, recent archaeological research on Spanish m...
Mission Santa Clara de Asís, a Franciscan mission in Alta California, was home to Ohlone/Costanoan, ...
Indigenous negotiations of European colonialism in North America are more complex than models of dom...
This dissertation aims to place California Indian agency and artistry at the forefront of California...
Archaeological investigations at Mission San José in Fremont, California, have revealed large areas ...
Mission Santa Catalina was founded on the margins of the Spanish colonial frontier in northern Baja ...
The cultural interaction between indigenous groups and Spanish Colonial settlers was investigated th...
The Roman Catholic missions of New Spain were an essential component of the Spanish colonial enterpr...
Archaeological and historical data on coastal California foodways illustrate the complex interaction...
Indigenous peoples from diverse tribelets lived within the Indian village at Mission San Carlos Borr...
Scholarship on California Indians prior to and during the Spanish colonial period suffers from a lac...
Spanish missions were established in the San Francisco Bay Area beginning in A.D. 1776 with the foun...
Spanish missions in North America were once viewed as confining and stagnant communities, with nativ...
The California Department of Parks and Recreation excavated Native American living quarters at Missi...
Mission Santa Catalina was founded on the margins of the Spanish colonial frontier in northern Baja ...
Rather than simply an arena for Euroamerican domination, recent archaeological research on Spanish m...
Mission Santa Clara de Asís, a Franciscan mission in Alta California, was home to Ohlone/Costanoan, ...
Indigenous negotiations of European colonialism in North America are more complex than models of dom...
This dissertation aims to place California Indian agency and artistry at the forefront of California...
Archaeological investigations at Mission San José in Fremont, California, have revealed large areas ...
Mission Santa Catalina was founded on the margins of the Spanish colonial frontier in northern Baja ...
The cultural interaction between indigenous groups and Spanish Colonial settlers was investigated th...
The Roman Catholic missions of New Spain were an essential component of the Spanish colonial enterpr...
Archaeological and historical data on coastal California foodways illustrate the complex interaction...
Indigenous peoples from diverse tribelets lived within the Indian village at Mission San Carlos Borr...
Scholarship on California Indians prior to and during the Spanish colonial period suffers from a lac...
Spanish missions were established in the San Francisco Bay Area beginning in A.D. 1776 with the foun...
Spanish missions in North America were once viewed as confining and stagnant communities, with nativ...