this post was submitted on 09 Aug 2024
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The Great Pueblo Revolt, or Pueblo Revolt (1680–1696), was a 16-year period in the history of the American southwest when the Pueblo people overthrew the Spanish conquistadors and began to rebuild their communities. The events of that period have been viewed over the years as a failed attempt to permanently expel Europeans from the pueblos, a temporary setback to Spanish colonization, a glorious moment of independence for the Pueblo people of the American southwest, or part of a larger movement to purge the Pueblo world of foreign influence and return to traditional ways of life. It was no doubt a bit of all four.

The Spanish first entered the northern Rio Grande region in 1539 and its control was cemented in place by the 1599 siege of Acoma pueblo by Don Vicente de Zaldivar and a few score of soldier colonists from the expedition of Don Juan de Oñate. At Acoma's Sky City, Oñate's forces killed 800 people and captured 500 women and children and 80 men. After a "trial," everyone over the age of 12 was enslaved; all men over 25 had a foot amputated. Roughly 80 years later, a combination of religious persecution and economic oppression led to a violent uprising in Santa Fe and other communities of what is today northern New Mexico. It was one of the few successful—if temporary—forceful stoppages of the Spanish colonial juggernaut in the New World.

Life Under the Spanish

As they had done in other parts of the Americas, the Spanish installed a combination of military and ecclesiastical leadership in New Mexico. The Spanish established missions of Franciscan friars in several pueblos to specifically break up the Indigenous religious and secular communities, stamp out religious practices and replace them with Christianity. Active efforts to convert the Pueblo people to Christianity involved destroying kivas and other structures, burning ceremonial paraphernalia in public plazas, and using accusations of witchcraft to imprison and execute traditional ceremonial leaders.

The government also established an encomienda system, allowing up to 35 leading Spanish colonists to collect tribute from the households of a particular pueblo. Hopi oral histories report that the reality of the Spanish rule included forced labor, the seduction of Hopi women, raiding of kivas and sacred ceremonies, harsh punishment for failing to attend mass, and several rounds of drought and famine.

Growing Unrest

While the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 was the event that (temporarily) removed the Spanish from the southwest, it was not the first attempt. The Pueblo people had offered resistance throughout the 80-year period following the conquest. Public conversions didn't (always) lead to people giving up their traditions but rather drove the ceremonies underground. The Jemez (1623), Zuni (1639) and Taos (1639) communities each separately (and unsuccessfully) revolted. There also were multi-village revolts that took place in the 1650s and 1660s, but in each case, the planned revolts were discovered and the leaders executed.

The Pueblos were independent societies before Spanish rule, and fiercely so. What led to the successful revolt was the ability to overcome that independence and coalesce. Some scholars think it was a millenarian movement, and have pointed to a population collapse in the 1670s resulting from a devastating epidemic that killed off an estimated 80% of the Indigenous population, and it became clear that the Spanish were unable to explain or prevent epidemic diseases or calamitous droughts. In some respects, the battle was one of whose god was on whose side: both Pueblo and Spanish sides identified the mythical character of certain events, and both sides believed the events involved supernatural intervention.

Nonetheless, the suppression of Indigenous practices became particularly intense between 1660 and 1680, and one of the main reasons for the successful revolt appears to have occurred in 1675 when then-governor Juan Francisco de Trevino arrested 47 "sorcerers," one of whom was Po'pay of San Juan Pueblo.

Leadership

Po'Pay (or Popé) was a Tewa religious leader, and he was to become a key leader and perhaps primary organizer of the rebellion. Po'Pay may have been key, but there were plenty of other leaders in the rebellion. Domingo Naranjo, a man of African and Indigeneous heritage, is often cited, and so are El Saca and El Chato of Taos, El Taque of San Juan, Francisco Tanjete of San Ildefonso, and Alonzo Catiti of Santo Domingo.

Under the rule of colonial New Mexico, the Spanish deployed ethnic categories ascribing "Pueblo" to lump linguistically and culturally diverse people into a single group, establishing dual and asymmetric social and economic relationships between the Spanish and Pueblo people. Po'pay and the other leaders appropriated this to mobilize the disparate and decimated villages against their colonizers.

August 10–19, 1680

After eight decades of living under foreign rule, Pueblo leaders fashioned a military alliance that transcended longstanding rivalries. For nine days, together they besieged the capital of Santa Fe and other pueblos. In this initial battle, over 400 Spanish military personnel and colonists and 21 Franciscan missionaries lost their lives: the number of Pueblo people who died is unknown. Governor Antonio de Otermin and his remaining colonists retreated in ignominy to El Paso del Norte (what is today Cuidad Juarez in Mexico).

Witnesses said that during the revolt and afterward, Po'Pay toured the pueblos, preaching a message of nativism and revivalism. He ordered the Pueblo people to break up and burn the images of Christ, the Virgin Mary, and other saints, to burn the temples, smash the bells, and separate from the wives the Christian church had given them.

Revitalization and Reconstruction

Between 1680 and 1692, despite the efforts of the Spanish to recapture the region, the Pueblo people rebuilt their kivas, revived their ceremonies and reconsecrated their shrines. People left their mission pueblos at Cochiti, Santo Domingo and Jemez and built new villages, such as Patokwa (established in 1860 and made up of Jemez, Apache/Navajos and Santo Domingo pueblo people), Kotyiti (1681, Cochiti, San Felipe and San Marcos pueblos), Boletsakwa (1680–1683, Jemez and Santo Domingo), Cerro Colorado (1689, Zia, Santa Ana, Santo Domingo) There were many others.

The architecture and settlement planning at these new villages was a new compact, dual-plaza form, a departure from the scattered layouts of mission villages. Liebmann and Pruecel have argued that this new format is what the builders considered a "traditional" village, based on clan moieties. Some potters worked on reviving traditional motifs on their glaze-ware ceramics, such as the doubled-headed key motif, which originated fro, 1400–1450.

New social identities were created, blurring the traditional linguistic-ethnic boundaries that defined Pueblo villages during the first eight decades of colonization. Inter-Pueblo trade and other ties between Pueblo people were established, such as new trade relationships between Jemez and Tewa people which became stronger during the revolt era than they had been in the 300 years before 1680.

Reconquest Attempts by the Spanish to reconquer the Rio Grande region began as early as 1681 when the former governor Otermin attempted to take back Santa Fe. Others included Pedro Romeros de Posada in 1688 and Domingo Jironza Petris de Cruzate in 1689—Cruzate's reconquest was particularly bloody, his group destroyed Zia pueblo, killing hundreds of residents. But the uneasy coalition of independent pueblos wasn't perfect: without a common enemy, the confederation broke into two factions: the Keres, Jemez, Taos and Pecos against the Tewa, Tanos, and Picuris.

The Spanish capitalized on the discord to make several reconquest attempts, and in August of 1692, the new governor of New Mexico Diego de Vargas, initiated his own reconquest, and this time was able to reach Santa Fe and on August 14 proclaimed the "Bloodless Reconquest of New Mexico." A second abortive revolt occurred in 1696, but after it failed, the Spanish remained in power until 1821 when Mexico declared independence from Spain.

Ysleta del Sur Pueblo

The Tribal community known as "Tigua" established Ysleta del Sur in 1682. After leaving the homelands of Quarai Pueblo due to drought, the Tigua sought refuge at Isleta Pueblo and were later captured by the Spanish during the 1680 Pueblo Revolt and forced to walk south for over 400 miles. The Tigua settled and built the Ysleta del Sur Pueblo and, soon after, the acequia (canal) system that sustained a thriving agricultural-based community.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PUEBLO REVOLT

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[–] LanyrdSkynrd@hexbear.net 13 points 11 months ago (4 children)

I can't stop thinking about this story I read on a hiking blog:

spoiler CW: brief mention of suicideA feeling of peace washed over me as soon as my boots hit the dirt. At the base of Mt. Washington’s Jewell Trail, the October sun felt warm on my bare arms. But having grown up exploring New Hampshire’s White Mountains, I knew the conditions up high would be nothing like in the valley. In preparation for a late-season ascent of the 6,288-foot peak known as “home of the world’s worst weather,” I’d loaded my pack with extra layers and a pair of snow goggles.

I’d been volunteering with the Pemigewasset Valley Search and Rescue Team for five years, and these mountains were both my playground and my office. I was heading out to train with a heavy pack, and to enjoy a few hours in my favorite area.

Mt. Washington, with its unpredictable climate, has claimed over 150 lives over the past 150 years, making it one of the deadliest mountains in the country. I felt strong that day, but could see thick clouds shrouding the top half of the peak. At 5,000 feet, about 3 miles in, the wind began to pick up around me. I stopped to add a layer.

Snow was blowing in my face as I continued upward, but I could follow this trail with my eyes closed. Above treeline, gusts raged and the temperature dropped. I told myself if the weather worsened further I’d turn back; returning to my car was more important than making the summit.

Around 5,500 feet, I reached the junction with the Gulfside Trail. That’s when I noticed fresh footprints in the snow that sent shivers up my spine.

It was clear that these tracks hadn’t been made by sturdy hiking boots, but by sneakers. Street shoes in this weather? I knew someone was in trouble.

I turned to follow the prints. A few steps later I saw him—a man slumped on the ground with his back against a boulder. A layer of snow covered his clothing. I called out and was answered only by silence.

Crouching beside the man, I looked at his thin jacket, T-shirt, and soaked pants. How could someone hike up here so unprepared? He was breathing, but his skin looked like porcelain and he wore a vacant expression. This was bad.

I grabbed my extra layers and changed the man out of his wet clothes. Then, I tucked hand warmers inside his shirt and fed him from my thermos of hot chocolate. He sat passive and slack, hardly acknowledging my presence. It felt strange to treat a patient without knowing his name, so I decided to call him John.

The wind was picking up, creating a swirl of blowing snow behind the boulder where we’d taken shelter. We needed to get moving. John had revived somewhat and could walk behind me on the hardpack. My tracks from the way up had disappeared, but I could just make out the depressions from my trekking poles, and I followed them like breadcrumbs.

We descended slowly. The footing was slippery and laden with precarious boulders; I worried about John’s flat sneakers. I sang ‘60s hits to remind him that I was there and to keep my own morale up. Periodically I’d ask a question, but at most John would only grunt. I couldn’t understand why he’d ventured up high on a day like today, dressed as he was. Once, he sat down in the snow, appearing to give up. “We’re in this together,” I scolded him.

After six hours of descending we reached the parking lot. It was dark, and later than I’d planned to be home. I warmed John’s clothes on my car’s heater, traded them for the layers I’d lent him and then, with hardly a word, he drove off. Bewildered, I stood in the parking lot, glancing back at the howling mountains. What had just happened?

At home, I wrote an email to my SAR teammates recounting the rescue. We debriefed, examining our protocols and speculating about the events that could have led John into such distress, but there were still so many questions. Answers wouldn’t come for a few days when a letter arrived at the SAR headquarters.

“I hope this reaches the right group of rescuers,” it read. “I was called John. On Sunday, October 17th I went up my favorite trail, Jewell, to end my life. Weather was to be bad.” I paused and started again. It took a few tries to get through the whole letter.

“Next thing I knew this lady was talking to me,” he wrote. “I said to leave me and get going but she wouldn’t.” He had considered running off but thought I might follow and didn’t want to harm anyone else.

“With all that has been going wrong in my life, I didn’t matter to me. But I did to Pam.” Inside he had tucked a small donation. “If she’s an example of your organization and professionalism, you must be the best group around . . . I have a new direction thanks to wonderful people like yourselves.” The letter was signed “John.”

I never found out exactly who I helped that day. But I like to think he is out there somewhere, enjoying his second chance.

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[–] Philosophosphorous@hexbear.net 13 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (1 children)

i thought i was just a pathetic loser incel but it turns out not being able to trust others and form relationships is one of the symptoms of PTSD, so i'm actually a mentally ill pathetic loser incel

socially isolated by mental health gang gang i have not talked in person to someone i don't live with/am not related to in several months

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[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (13 children)

I fucked up trimming my beard and was like well I guess I gotta shave. Now I keep trying to play with my beard or moustache and hitting nothing but worthless skin and stubble.

boohoo

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[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago

Imane Khelif won gold! sore-loser

[–] GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (1 children)

The first thing that happens after you die is your soul gets to watch the porn parody of your life.

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[–] oscardejarjayes@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago

orgs can be lets-fucking-go but they are as often cringe or marx-doomer or agony-consuming.

Often, they end up being some combination of all four.

[–] Zrc@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (1 children)

gambling should be an olympic sport

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[–] Blockocheese@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (6 children)

Pokemon go drains my incredibly old phones battery so bad and my powerbank doesn't charge it faster than it drains most of the time

I kinda wanna to go more into the city to play but don't want to end up with a dead, overheating phone thinking-about-it

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[–] Dolores@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (2 children)

🫃🫃🫃🫃🫃 fried eggplant

what a fantastic delicious sandwich i made, tomato, aioli, lettuce, and a lil aubergine cutlet

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[–] gueybana@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (1 children)

You dumbfucks introduced Michael Jackson’s Beat it with Beanis instead and now all I hear in my head is

You wanna be tough, better do what you can

So beanis, but you wanna be bad

Just beanis (beanis), beanis (beanis)

No one wants to be defeated

Showin' how funky and strong is your fight

It doesn't matter who's wrong or right

Just beanis (beanis)

Just beanis (beanis)

Just beanis (beanis)

Just beanis (beanis, uh)

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[–] GeorgeZBush@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (1 children)
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[–] vertexarray@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago

had to use my brain on a saturday, tragic

[–] RNAi@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (3 children)
[–] CDommunist@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Focus less on locking the thread and focus more on #LockingInTheBread soviet-huff gangster-spongebob #RiseAndGrind

[–] Dolores@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago

i can't stomach this oppression of freeze-peach on this webzone ooooooooooooooh

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[–] Egon@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (4 children)

I hate how "sweet summer child" and "bend the knee" have just become common language. Bend the knee we can at least pretend didn't enter standard due to gambo, but sweet summer child is just gambo and people are now pretending like they always said it.

[–] Black_Mald_Futures@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Oh my sweet summer child, slang is gonna get so much more cringe

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[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago

You know how fake tv shows and music inside of tv shows is clearly fake? That's what rando chud streamers that beef with hasan feel like. It's like a writer's dept went with idk this is a 1 episode thing anyway call him Konvy or Adin Ross or some shit.

[–] wombat@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago

it is august 9 and stalin saved the world from fascism

[–] WhyEssEff@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (2 children)

the 'AI crowd' post got sniped before I finished my dunk on it so I'm posting it here maddened

dunkthe one thing I know about AI images is that they are very anatomically-consistent when generating crowds of people. they do not decouple into no-mouth-must-scream flesh beasts. they are all very normal, extremely physical, non-duplicative, and are not the first thing you would look towards to see if an image of a zoomed-out crowd of people was AI-generated.

In fact, it's perfectly intuitive that a lossy parrot would be able to consistently draw the photorealistic anatomy of a human 100+ times in the same photo at a minuscule scale and would not, in fact, have any noticeable blips at a scale of single-digit pixels. Or, given downscaling, low double-digits at most.

It would also perfectly generate and perspective-warp the text to the bent signs with a campaign logo that was unveiled less than a week ago, which is enough time for the best and most-consistent models to already have integrated it into their dataset.

It is also very consistent with regards to physicality and would

generate

the

background

consistently

at

different

angles

and of course, the one thing I know to trust my posting peers on the internet to know is how mirrors work. 100% track record. 100% consistency. It's the one thing everyone truly understands. Entirely intuitive. Something they don't even offer college courses on because even elementary schoolers fully understand exactly how reflection works. Yep. mhm.

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[–] Dolores@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (2 children)

im going to stop playing hoi4 in the evening/while drinking, the combination of engagement and bopping music makes me want to keep up the energy and i drink way too much and stay up too late

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[–] Inui@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (5 children)

Finally caught Covid. Had to fly to take care of a family member who had not-covid and caught it for the first time on my way home. Even though I've been pretty recently boosted. All the stuff about long covid is scary. First, I had lots of chills, then I woke up one night feeling the need to puke, and today the cough is significantly worse. Pick a lane!

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[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago (1 children)
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[–] EstraDoll@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (3 children)

get drunk off sake

face is completely red, very obvious alcohol flush reaction

i'm white as fuck and have never experienced this before

wtf?????

[–] wtypstanaccount04@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago

Sake turns you into a blushing anime girl like Japan intended

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[–] stigsbandit34z@hexbear.net 12 points 11 months ago

Prediction: YouTube is extremely libbified atm with a ton of PETE BUTTIGIEG DESTROYS DONALD TRUMP” esque content showing up while logged out which kinda reminds me of the shit I saw when Obama was running in 08

Seems like people are tired of Trump, I’m probably pointing out the obvious but not sure Kamala can do anything to fuck this up (hope she does though it would be really really funny)

[–] allthetimesivedied@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (1 children)

CW/TW drugs, depression, everything basicallyI haven’t really posted in a while. I kinda feel like my life is falling apart.

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[–] Grownbravy@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (10 children)

watching the first mad max rn.

How does this tie into the other movies?

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[–] Frogmanfromlake@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago

You know there’s this unspoken stereotype in Guatemala that our women have big foreheads. I was curious about this and yeah….it’s true lmao.

For some reason it’s pretty common to see Guatemalan women with hairlines that go a little further back, exposing more of their foreheads than they’d probably like. It’s usually the ones with stronger European descent that have this trait. The indigenous women or mestizos with stronger indigenous ancestry don’t have this problem as much.

[–] thelastaxolotl@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago

Good morning nerds meow-coffee

Currently waiting to buy a ticket to a museum about a kids show i used to watch

[–] GeorgeZBush@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (5 children)

family comes over

everyone watching Newsmax and talking about Trump

I fucking hate my life

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[–] Moss@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago

I work in a bar doing late nights which I don't like for many reasons, but one kinda good thing is that I don't drink alcohol at all now. Which, on the one hand, I do miss, I liked drinking with my friends and family. But also I was drinking multiple times a week sometimes and spending a lot of money on alcohol, so I'm saving money and also my body I guess

[–] GunslingerSky@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (7 children)

Planning to watch the Matrix again soon, but do I just watch the original or are any of the sequels good?

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[–] Azarova@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (3 children)

how much longer must time march on until we are finally free from micro usb?

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[–] EstraDoll@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (1 children)

"the left is acting like you're compromising your morals if you vote" i'm not asking you to compromise your morals, i'm asking you to have literally any

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[–] ButtBidet@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (4 children)

I went to a random book Meetup to support a lib friend. It was just people talking about their holidays, times living overseas, no of times they got covid, etc. Just utterly boring and pointless.

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[–] Black_Mald_Futures@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (4 children)

I really couldn't give less of a fuck about tracking links, like the CIA is gonna blat me because i posted a youtube link to making ricotta cheese and not the lifetime of other shit i've posted

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[–] EstraDoll@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago

i wish every "we need to vote blue to protect democracy" individual a very "30 minutes locked in a room with 50 poor people with baseball bats from the global south"

[–] Taster_Of_Treats@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Cat sitting soon for my friend who is getting their top surgery.

4 of them are indoor cats which I already knew about, but apparently I'll also be in charge of feeding about 5 semi feral outdoor cats?

For $50 a day, I'm abandoning my revolutionary anti-outdoor-cat principles.

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[–] GeorgeZBush@hexbear.net 11 points 11 months ago (1 children)

ATTENTION: All video essays will be removed from Youtube on January 1, 2025. No more video essays. If you try to make more, you will be sent away.

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