Among the oldest buildings in the United States, the churches of Spanish New Mexico - made of earth, of stone, of wood - are the surprisingly fragile reminders of a unique amalgam of Spanish architectural ideas and native American Pueblo culture. This book surveys the land and rivers, the people and ideas, that led to this compelling religious architecture; it is also a guide to visiting these churches today.In the ninth century the Anasazi, progenitors of the Pueblo peoples, constructed refined architectural complexes at Mesa Verde and Chaco Canyon. Contact with the Spanish in the late 1500s transformed the world of these indigenous peoples, changing their agricultural and living patterns - as well as religious practices. These changes wer...
This dissertation provides the most comprehensive study to date of the eighteenth-century Templo de ...
© 2015 Dr. Luis Fernando Zapata MontalvoThe Papaloapan River in eastern Mexico is a rich region hist...
Photograph of Pueblo De Taos as seen from the Sacred Grove, Taos, New Mexico, ca.1880. "A creek in t...
Photograph of the exterior view of San Miguel Mission in Santa Fe, New Mexico, ca.1875. It is regard...
Photograph of a view of a pueblo in Taos, "showing the old church", New Mexico, ca.1895. Just beyond...
Photograph of the San Miguel Mission in Santa Fe, New Mexico, ca.1895. A large plain cross is perche...
Ruins of old church (built 17th century, destroyed 1847); An ancient pueblo belonging to a Tiwa-spea...
Wooden beams and planks from the Spanish Colonial church and other structures in Las Trampas, north-...
Dominican friars founded numerous churches and monasteries to evangelize the indigenous populations ...
Chaco Canyon, the great Ancestral Pueblo site of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, remains a centr...
This article was published in the Proceedings of the International Conference on Preservation, Maint...
Photograph of the Sacred Grove Pueblo de Taos, ca.1900. Several people stand near the mouth of what ...
The lights that I report here exist because windows were designed by architects to project light int...
Mudejar Art, the architectural style that emerged in Spain during the Reconquista, is relatively com...
During the 18th century, in the current metropolitan area of San Antonio, Texas, five Franciscan mis...
This dissertation provides the most comprehensive study to date of the eighteenth-century Templo de ...
© 2015 Dr. Luis Fernando Zapata MontalvoThe Papaloapan River in eastern Mexico is a rich region hist...
Photograph of Pueblo De Taos as seen from the Sacred Grove, Taos, New Mexico, ca.1880. "A creek in t...
Photograph of the exterior view of San Miguel Mission in Santa Fe, New Mexico, ca.1875. It is regard...
Photograph of a view of a pueblo in Taos, "showing the old church", New Mexico, ca.1895. Just beyond...
Photograph of the San Miguel Mission in Santa Fe, New Mexico, ca.1895. A large plain cross is perche...
Ruins of old church (built 17th century, destroyed 1847); An ancient pueblo belonging to a Tiwa-spea...
Wooden beams and planks from the Spanish Colonial church and other structures in Las Trampas, north-...
Dominican friars founded numerous churches and monasteries to evangelize the indigenous populations ...
Chaco Canyon, the great Ancestral Pueblo site of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, remains a centr...
This article was published in the Proceedings of the International Conference on Preservation, Maint...
Photograph of the Sacred Grove Pueblo de Taos, ca.1900. Several people stand near the mouth of what ...
The lights that I report here exist because windows were designed by architects to project light int...
Mudejar Art, the architectural style that emerged in Spain during the Reconquista, is relatively com...
During the 18th century, in the current metropolitan area of San Antonio, Texas, five Franciscan mis...
This dissertation provides the most comprehensive study to date of the eighteenth-century Templo de ...
© 2015 Dr. Luis Fernando Zapata MontalvoThe Papaloapan River in eastern Mexico is a rich region hist...
Photograph of Pueblo De Taos as seen from the Sacred Grove, Taos, New Mexico, ca.1880. "A creek in t...