This study examines the evolution of a hierocratic system among the ancestral Northern Tiwa peoples of New Mexico. Building from a reanalysis of the social organization of Taos Pueblo (drawn largely from the unpublished ethnographic notes of Matilda Cox Stevenson), Northern Tiwa hierocracy is defined as a system of governance in which a corporation of priests dominated the structures of group decision-making and prestige by virtue of their control of the ritual labor upon which the community was dependent. It is argued that this system emerged at the large village of T'aitona (Pot Creek Pueblo) at the close of the 13th century AD following, and largely in response to, a period of immigration and ethnic conflict. To this end, I present th...
Feasting and the circulation of valuables are two domains of activity typically linked to prestige i...
Pueblo peoples and their ancestors have farmed the rugged landscapes of the southwestern United Stat...
Archaeologists are increasingly recognizing the early Pueblo period as a major social and demographi...
This study examines the evolution of a hierocratic system among the ancestral Northern Tiwa peoples ...
Cosmology -- the theory, origin, and structure of the universe -- underlies and informs thought and ...
This study analyzes the vernacular architecture of ancestral Pueblo kivas dating from the Pueblo II ...
Teotihuacan was a sprawling urban center that came to rule an eponymous expansive polity in the cent...
This study addresses the transition from egalitarian, tribal societies with achieved status distinct...
For over a thousand years, textiles have played a vital role in Pueblo ritual and social identity, l...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...
Thomas R. RocekThis study examines the development of village life amongst Native American populati...
Previous characterizations of Plains-Pueblo interaction highlight the important role that Apaches pl...
This dissertation uses multiple lines of ceramic evidence to examine continuity in the economic orga...
Chaco Canyon is a key area where clear indications of social differentiation in the Pueblo world fir...
This dissertation investigates how people in the northern US Southwest used clothing and representat...
Feasting and the circulation of valuables are two domains of activity typically linked to prestige i...
Pueblo peoples and their ancestors have farmed the rugged landscapes of the southwestern United Stat...
Archaeologists are increasingly recognizing the early Pueblo period as a major social and demographi...
This study examines the evolution of a hierocratic system among the ancestral Northern Tiwa peoples ...
Cosmology -- the theory, origin, and structure of the universe -- underlies and informs thought and ...
This study analyzes the vernacular architecture of ancestral Pueblo kivas dating from the Pueblo II ...
Teotihuacan was a sprawling urban center that came to rule an eponymous expansive polity in the cent...
This study addresses the transition from egalitarian, tribal societies with achieved status distinct...
For over a thousand years, textiles have played a vital role in Pueblo ritual and social identity, l...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...
Thomas R. RocekThis study examines the development of village life amongst Native American populati...
Previous characterizations of Plains-Pueblo interaction highlight the important role that Apaches pl...
This dissertation uses multiple lines of ceramic evidence to examine continuity in the economic orga...
Chaco Canyon is a key area where clear indications of social differentiation in the Pueblo world fir...
This dissertation investigates how people in the northern US Southwest used clothing and representat...
Feasting and the circulation of valuables are two domains of activity typically linked to prestige i...
Pueblo peoples and their ancestors have farmed the rugged landscapes of the southwestern United Stat...
Archaeologists are increasingly recognizing the early Pueblo period as a major social and demographi...