The Sia / (1894 N 11 / 1889-1890 (pages 3-158)) - Matilda Coxe Stevenson - Book

The Sia / (1894 N 11 / 1889-1890 (pages 3-158))

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—BUREAU OF ETHNOLOGY.
BY MATILDA COXE STEVENSON.
Bureau of Ethnology.
Eleventh Annual Report. Plate. I
A VIEW OF SIA, SHOWING A PORTION OF VILLAGE IN RUINS.
THE SIA.
The cosmogony and myths of the Sia point to the present site as their home before resorting to the mesa, which was not, however, their first mesa home; their legends refer to numerous villages on mountain tops in their journeying from the north to the center of the earth.
The population of this village was originally very large, but from its situation it became a target during intertribal feuds. A time came, however, when intertribal strife ceased, and the pueblo tribes united their strength to oppose a common foe, an adversary who struck terror to the heart of the Indian, inasmuch as he not only took possession of their villages and homes, but was bent upon uprooting the ancestral religion to plant in its stead the Roman Catholic faith. To avoid this result the Sia fled to the mesa and built a village, but the foe was not to be thus easily baffled and the mesa village was brought under subjection. That these people again struggled for their freedom is evident from the report of Vargas of his visit there in 1692:
And the Sia were again under Spanish thraldom; but though they made this outward show of submitting to the new faith, neither then nor since have they wavered in their devotion to their aboriginal religion.
The distance from the water and the field induced the Sia to return to their old home, but wars, pestilence, and oppression seem to have been their heritage. When not contending with the marauding nomad and Mexican, they were suffering the effects of disease, and between murder and epidemic these people have been reduced to small numbers. The Sia declare that this condition of affairs continued, to a greater or less degree, with but short periods of respite, until the murders were arrested by the intervention of our Government. For this they are profoundly grateful, and they are willing to attest their gratitude in every possible way.

Matilda Coxe Stevenson
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2020-09-10

Темы

Zia Indians

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