The word pueblo means build

3 Read the article again. Find a factual
mistake in each sentence below.
1 The Mesa Verde National Park is in
Mexico.
2 The Pueblo people lived there for nearly
700 years.
3 The word pueblo means build.
4 The Balcony House is made up of 10
rooms.
5 The only door is at the end of a tunnel.
6 The Pueblo people used ladders and ropes
because they enjoyed climbing.
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This article is about the communities of apartment-like structures in the Southwestern United States of America. For the people who live in these communities, see Pueblo People.

Acoma Pueblo, known as «Sky City»

Pueblo is a term used to describe modern (and ancient) communities of Native Americans in the Southwestern part of what is now the United States of America. The first Spanish explorers of the Southwest used this term to describe communities that consisted of apartment-like structures made from stone, adobe mud, and other local material, which provided excellent insulation from cold in winter and heat in summer. They were usually multi-storeyed buildings surrounding an open plaza and were occupied by hundreds to thousands of Pueblo People. Designed for defense as well as shelter, pueblos were often built atop steep mesas. Another defensive aspect was a lack of doors on the ground level, requiring entry from the roof top reached by ladders that were withdrawn in times of danger. Today, pueblos have doors on the ground level. Pueblo People still inhabit a number of these villages, which date back a thousand years making them the oldest continuously occupied dwellings in North America.

In the early twentieth century, Pueblo Revival Style, an architectural style that seeks to imitate the appearance of traditional adobe construction, became popular and remains so to this day. Buildings in this style range from single homes to larger structures designed as hotels, libraries, and university buildings.

Etymology and usage

The Spanish word pueblo, evolved from the Latin word populus (people), meaning «town.» The Spanish explorers discovered Native Americans living in these clusters of dwellings when they reached the Southwest in the sixteenth century:

On the central Spanish meseta the unit of settlement was and is the pueblo; that is to say, the large nucleated village surrounded by its own fields, with no outlying farms, separated from its neighbours by some considerable distance, sometimes as much as ten miles or so. The demands of agrarian routine and the need for defence, the simple desire for human society in the vast solitude of the plains, dictated that it should be so. Nowadays the pueblo might have a population running into thousands. Doubtless they were smaller in the early middle ages, but we should probably not be far wrong if we think of them as having had populations of some hundreds.[1]

In the local language of the inhabitants, the pueblo is referred to as «the village.»

Historical Pueblos

Zuni Pueblo, 1850 illustration

Pre-Columbian towns and villages in the Southwest were located in defensive positions, for example, on high steep mesas such as Acoma. Their large, multi-family houses were called pueblos by the Spanish when they arrived in the sixteenth century. These early residents of the area are often referred to as puebloan cultures: «The Late Puebloan cultures built the large, integrated villages found by the Spaniards when they began to move into the area.»[2]

In fact, both Native Americans and Spaniards shared the same architectural answers to the problems met when living in areas with low rates of rainfall and a wide variation in temperature, namely the construction of houses with clay or stone walls and flat, beam supported, earth-covered roofs.[2] The differences between the two architectures lay not in the method, but in the design:

The Pueblo Indians constructed a house incorporating their own standards of room size and proportions, squareness, wall thickness, overall height, the relationship between rooms, and the size, shape, location, and design of doors and windows. All of these differed from the standards a Spaniard would have employed in building a house. Spanish and Pueblo Indian builders in New Mexico used the same methods to roof a room or make a beam over a doorway, but these methods had to serve different cultural needs, and, therefore, differed in many details.[2]

The buildings in these pueblos were designed to provide defense. Thus, many were built atop mesas. The design of the buildings appears to be modeled after the Ancestral Pueblo culture (Anasazi) cliff dwellings, houses built in shallow caves and under rock overhangs along the canyon walls. The structures contained within these alcoves were mostly blocks of hard sandstone, held together and plastered with adobe mortar.

Did you know?

Pueblos are among the oldest continuously inhabited settlements in the US

The walls of pueblo buildings are made of limestone blocks or large adobe bricks made from clay and water. These walls were often several feet thick, as a defensive measure as well as providing excellent insulation, keeping the rooms inside warm in winter and cool in summer. Buildings were as much as five or six stories tall, with each higher floor set back from the floor below it resulting in a step pyramid type design. Access to the rooms on lower floors was by ladders on the outside to the roof, and then down an inside ladder. In case of an attack, the outside ladders could be pulled up easily.

In addition to living space, pueblos also include kivas, or ceremonial rooms, as well as a central courtyard.

Contemporary Pueblos

Taos Pueblo residential complex

San Geronimo Church at Taos Pueblo

The people of some pueblos still inhabit centuries-old adobe pueblo buildings.[3] Acoma Pueblo, also known as «Sky City,» was built on top of a 367-foot (112 m) sandstone mesa in New Mexico. Settled around 1100, it is one of the oldest continuously inhabited communities in the United States.

Taos Pueblo is another ancient pueblo, approximately 1000 years old. The church at Taos Pueblo is the newest building in the pueblo having been built in 1850 to replace the original pueblo church which was destroyed by the US army in 1847.

There are 21 federally recognized Pueblos[4] that are home to Pueblo people:

  • Hopi Tribe of Arizona
  • Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo (formerly Pueblo of San Juan), New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Acoma, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Cochiti, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Jemez, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Isleta, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Laguna, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Nambe, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Picuris, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Pojoaque, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of San Felipe, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of San Ildefonso, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Sandia, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Santa Ana, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Santa Clara, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Santo Domingo, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Taos, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Tesuque, New Mexico
  • Pueblo of Zia, New Mexico
  • Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo of Texas
  • Zuni Tribe of the Zuni Reservation, New Mexico

Pueblo Revival Style Architecture

Painted Desert Inn, a National Historic Landmark in Arizona

Pueblo Revival corbel, hand-carved from ponderosa pine, at the Bandelier National Monument Visitor Center

The Pueblo Revival Style is a regional architectural style of the Southwestern United States which draws its inspiration from the Pueblos and the Spanish missions in New Mexico. The style developed at the turn of the twentieth century and reached its greatest popularity in the 1920s and 1930s, though it is still commonly used for new buildings. Pueblo style architecture is most prevalent in the state of New Mexico.

History

Although the regional architecture from which the Pueblo Style draws its inspiration is confined to New Mexico and parts of Arizona, the style first appeared in California. Boston architect A. C. Schweinfurth used it for a number of his buildings in California, beginning with a hotel in Ventura which was completed in 1894.[5]

The Pueblo Revival Style made its first appearance in New Mexico at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, where it was adopted by president William G. Tight for a number of projects completed during his tenure. The best-known of these was his 1908 remodeling of Hodgin Hall, though a new heating plant and the Estufa, a fraternity house, were completed earlier. Nearly all subsequent university buildings have also employed the Pueblo style, albeit in increasingly loose interpretations.[6]

The other stronghold of Pueblo style architecture is Santa Fe, where it was popularized in the 1920s and 1930s by a group of artists and architects seeking to establish a unique regional identity, and in particular to distinguish themselves from the spreading image of Southern California. Such was its popularity that it is often referred to as the «Santa Fe Style.»[7] In 1957 a committee led by architect John Gaw Meem drafted the Historical Zoning Ordinance, which mandated the use of the Pueblo Style or Territorial Style on all new buildings in central Santa Fe. This ordinance remains in effect, meaning the Pueblo Style continues to predominate.[8]

Pueblo style houses are still frequently constructed in Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and elsewhere. Updated versions of the style have also been used for newer commercial and public buildings such as the Albuquerque International Sunport terminal (1966) and the newer University of New Mexico buildings.

Aviation pioneer, Glenn Curtiss brought the Pueblo Revival style to Florida when he had his house in Miami Springs built in 1925. Designed by prominent Miami architect, Martin Luther Hampton, the house is constructed of hollow clay tile with a rough textured stucco exterior. The roof is flat with very irregular parapet walls embellished by projecting waterspouts and irregular shaped openings. The main entrance is set within a deeply recessed T-shaped opening and marked by a flat-roofed porte cochere.

Features

Pueblo style architecture seeks to imitate the appearance of traditional adobe construction, though more modern materials such as brick or concrete are often substituted. If adobe is not used, rounded corners, irregular parapets with rainwater spouts, and thick, battered walls are used to simulate it. Walls are usually stuccoed and painted in earth tones. The door and window openings are deep and the windows simple. The floors are made of brick, wood, or sandstone.

Multistory buildings usually employ stepped massing similar to that seen at Taos Pueblo. Roofs are always flat. A common feature is the use of projecting wooden roof beams (vigas).[5] Latillas, peeled sticks used as a traditional ceiling material, are often placed in an angled pattern above the vigas.

Pueblo revival style may also incorporate several features due to Spanish influence, such as elaborate corbels, porches held up with zapatas, and enclosed patios.

«Contemporary Pueblo» style is simpler and less ornamented, without posts, beams, or vigas.

Notable buildings

  • Estufa, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico (1906)
  • Hodgin Hall, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico (1908)
  • Franciscan Hotel, Albuquerque (1922, demolished)
  • La Fonda Hotel, Santa Fe, New Mexico (1922, remodeled 1929)
  • Laboratory of Anthropology, Santa Fe (1930)
  • Bandelier CCC Historic District, Bandelier National Monument (1930s)
  • Scholes Hall, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico (1934)
  • Zimmerman Library, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico (1938)
  • Old Airport Terminal, Albuquerque (1939)
  • Painted Desert Inn, Petrified Forest National Park (1940)

Notes

  1. Richard A. Fletcher, Saint James’s Catapult: The Life and Times of Diego Gelmírez of Santiago de Compostela, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984, ISBN 0198225814). on-line text, ch. 1 Retrieved June 10, 2011.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 James E. Ivey, In the Midst of a Loneliness: The Architectural History of the Salinas Missions (University of Michigan Library, 1988).
  3. Daniel Gibson, Pueblos of the Rio Grande: A Visitor’s Guide (Tucson, AZ: Rio Nuevo Publishers, 2001, ISBN 1887896260), 78.
  4. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, «Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs; Notice» Federal Register December 5, 2003, Part III. Retrieved June 10, 2011.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Marcus Whiffen, American Architecture Since 1780 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1969, ISBN 0262230348), 229-233.
  6. Van Dorn Hooker, Only in New Mexico: An Architectural History of the University of New Mexico, the First Century 1889-1989 Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 2000, ISBN 0826321356).
  7. Thomas W. Paradis, Pueblo Revival (1912-current) Architectural Styles of America. Retrieved June 10, 2011.
  8. Richard Harris, National Trust Guide: Santa Fe (New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 1997, ISBN 0471174432), 3-6.

References

ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Fletcher, Richard A. Saint James’s Catapult: The Life and Times of Diego Gelmírez of Santiago de Compostela. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984. ISBN 0198225814
  • Gibson, Daniel. Pueblos of the Rio Grande: A Visitor’s Guide. Tucson, AZ: Rio Nuevo Publishers, 2001. ISBN 1887896260
  • Harris, Richard. National Trust Guide: Santa Fe. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997. ISBN 0471174432
  • Hooker, Van Dorn. Only in New Mexico: An Architectural History of the University of New Mexico, the First Century 1889-1989. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 2000. ISBN 0826321356
  • Ivey, James E. In the Midst of a Loneliness: The Architectural History of the Salinas Missions. Southwest Cultural Resources Center, 1988. ASIN B002CF01EG
  • Whiffen, Marcus. American Architecture Since 1780. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1969. ISBN 0262230348

External links

All links retrieved December 2, 2022.

  • SMU-in-Taos Research Publications Digital collection contains nine anthropological and archaeological monographs and edited volumes representing the past several decades of research, primarily on Pueblo Indian ruins and excavations, at the SMU-in-Taos (Fort Burgwin) campus near Taos, New Mexico.
  • Taos Pueblo
  • Mesa Verde National Park Service
  • The University of New Mexico
  • Bandelier National Monument National Park Service
  • Glenn Curtiss House
Native American Housing

Chickee · Cliff dwelling · Earth lodge · Hogan · Igloo · Longhouse · Pueblo · Quinzhee · Tipi · Wigwam ·

Prehistoric technology
Architectural
Ceremonial structures Earliest religious structure • Kiva • Pyramid • Temple
Dwellings Neolithic architecture • Burdei • Cave • Cliff dwelling • Dugout • Earth lodge • Great house • Hut • Jacal • Lean-to • Longhouse • Pit-house • Pueblitos • Pueblo • Rock shelter • Roundhouse • Stilt house • Tent
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Tools
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Toolmaking Earliest toolmaking • Biface • Cupstone • Hafting • Hand axe • Lithic core • Lithic reduction • Prepared-core technique • Striking platform • Tool stone
Other tools Adze • Awl • Axe • Blade • Bone tool • Bow drill • Burin • Chopper • Cleaver • Denticulate tool • Fire plough • Fire-saw • Hammerstone • Hand axe • Knife • Quern-stone • Rope • Scraper • Stone tool • Weapons • Wheel • Ancient maritime history
Arts and culture
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Pueb·lo 1

 (pwĕb′lō)

n. pl. Pueblo or Pueb·los

1.

a. Any of some 25 Native American peoples, including the Hopi, Zuni, and Taos, living in established villages in northern and western New Mexico and northeast Arizona. The Pueblo are considered to be descendants of the cliff dwellers and are noted for their skilled craft in pottery, basketry, weaving, and metalworking.

b. A member of any of these peoples.

2. pueblo pl. pueb·los A village or community of any of the Pueblo peoples, traditionally consisting of multilevel adobe or stone apartment dwellings of terraced design clustered around a central plaza.


[American Spanish, from Spanish, people, pueblo, from Latin populus, people; see public.]

Word History: The word pueblo ultimately comes from the Latin word meaning «people,» populus, also the source of other English words like population and even people itself, by way of Old French pueple. As the spoken Latin of Spain developed into the Spanish language, Latin populus became Spanish pueblo, meaning «town, village,» as well as «nation, people.» The 16th-century Spanish explorers who visited the area naturally used this word to refer to the distinctive adobe and stone villages of the Pueblo peoples, in which some buildings rose as high as five stories. Pueblo first appears in English as a word for the distinctive villages of the Pueblo peoples, and it later came to be used to refer to the peoples living in the villages.


Pueb·lo 2

 (pwĕb′lō)

A city of southeast-central Colorado south of Colorado Springs on the Arkansas River. It was founded in the mid-1800s and grew as a coal-mining center.

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

pueblo

(ˈpwɛbləʊ; Spanish ˈpweβlo)

n, pl -los (-ləʊz; Spanish -los)

1. (Anthropology & Ethnology) a communal village, built by certain Indians of the southwestern US and parts of Latin America, consisting of one or more flat-roofed stone or adobe houses

2. (Human Geography) a communal village, built by certain Indians of the southwestern US and parts of Latin America, consisting of one or more flat-roofed stone or adobe houses

3. (Human Geography) (in Spanish America) a village or town

4. (Human Geography) (in the Philippines) a town or township

[C19: from Spanish: people, from Latin populus]


Pueblo

(ˈpwɛbləʊ)

n, pl -lo or -los

1. (Anthropology & Ethnology) a member of any of the North American Indian peoples who live in pueblos, including the Tanoans, Zuñi, and Hopi

2. (Peoples) a member of any of the North American Indian peoples who live in pueblos, including the Tanoans, Zuñi, and Hopi


Pueblo

(ˈpwɛbləʊ)

n

(Placename) a city in Colorado: a centre of the steel industry. Pop: 103 648 (2003 est)

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

pueb•lo

(ˈpwɛb loʊ)

n., pl. -los,
adj. n.

1. a communal dwelling of certain agricultural Indians of the southwestern U.S., consisting of a number of adjoining houses of stone or adobe, typically flat-roofed, multistoried, and terraced, with access provided by ladder.

3. any Indian village in the southwestern U.S.

4. (in Spanish America) a town or village.

5. (in the Philippines) a town or a township.

adj.

6. of or pertaining to the Pueblo Indians.

[1800–10, Amer.; < American Spanish; Sp: town, people < Latin populus people]

Pueb•lo

(ˈpwɛb loʊ)

n.

a city in central Colorado. 101,070.

Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

  • Defenition of the word pueblo

    • a communal village built by Indians in the southwestern U.S.
    • a communal village built by Indians in the southwestern United States
    • a city in Colorado south of Colorado Springs
    • a member of any of about two dozen Native American peoples called pueblos by the Spanish because they live in villages built of adobe and rock
    • a city in Colorado to the south of Colorado Springs
    • a member of any of about two dozen Native American peoples called `Pueblos’ by the Spanish because they live in pueblos (villages built of adobe and rock)

Meronymys for the word pueblo

    • Centennial State
    • CO
    • Colorado

Hyponyms for the word pueblo

    • Hopi
    • Taos
    • Zuni

Hypernyms for the word pueblo

    • American Indian
    • city
    • hamlet
    • Indian
    • metropolis
    • North American Indian
    • Red Indian
    • urban center
    • village

See other words

    • What is concepto
    • The definition of praseodimio
    • The interpretation of the word porro
    • What is meant by polla
    • The lexical meaning poema
    • The dictionary meaning of the word poder
    • The grammatical meaning of the word poco
    • Meaning of the word plomo
    • Literal and figurative meaning of the word platillo
    • The origin of the word puerta
    • Synonym for the word pulla
    • Antonyms for the word pulpo
    • Homonyms for the word punta
    • Hyponyms for the word concordia
    • Holonyms for the word puta
    • Hypernyms for the word puto
    • Proverbs and sayings for the word conejo
    • Translation of the word in other languages confianza

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