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275 Index Note: Illustrations and tables are indicated by f and t, respectively, following the page numbers. Abó Pueblo, 36, 230n31 abuse, physical: by priests, 36–37 Acoma Pueblo, 36, 59, 169, 182–83, 205 agglomerative construction, 90–91, 173 Althusser, Louis, 29 Amoxiumqua Pueblo, layout, 119f Analco, 64 Anaya, Francisco de, 62 anthropological history, 9–11 anthropological perspectives, 7; charismatic leaders, 14; comparative, 7; Lévi-Strauss on, 10–11; normalizing the exotic, 209–10; social memory, 25; theory, 11 anticolonial liberation movements, 10 anticolonial rebellions considered, 4, 5–6 anticolonial resistance, 10 Apaches: as “Faraones,” 42; incursions by, 42–43, 95, 169; introduction of horse, 42; plan for earlier rebellion , 47; raids in 1669, 44–45; reconquest era, 182, 183, 185, 187; uneasy peace with, 42; use of term, 95–96 Apaches de Navajo, 96 apostasy, 4, 64 appropriations post-Revolt: decolonizing amnesia, 211; hybridization, 211; religious elements, 137–42, 158; secular elements, 142–44, 158; Spanish buildings, 144–46 archaeology: of colonialism, 17; inscribed and incorporated memories, 110; on Pueblo Revolt, 7; revitalization movements, 16; surface, 22–24 architecture: ancestral lifeways related, 110; Spanish buildings adapted, 144–46; traditional, revived, 110–11 armed resistance, viability of, 48 Ashiwi Polychrome vessels, 129 Astialakwa: architectural units, 196f; battle, 1–3, 200–206; construction, 191–93, 192f; defensive ramparts, 202; life at, 198–200; mapping, 193–98; population of, 198; ritual dance, 1; as single-component site, 235n32; spoils of war, 205; three main units, 197; vigas used at, 226n10, 235n31 Athapaskan-speaking peoples, Pueblo interactions with, 42, 169. See also nomadic peoples Awat’ovi Pueblo: attack on mission, 59, 146; destruction, 223n35; friar’s sexual abuse, 37, 38; kiva destruction , 36; mission facilities, 144 Index 276 balance and dualism, 121 baptismal names revoked, 72, 143 battles: Astialakwa, 1–3, 200–206; pincer strategy, 2; siege of Santa Fe, 65, 66; Zia Pueblo, 166–68, 172 battle tactics, 31, 201, 202 bells, 75–76 bioarchaeological studies, 33 bison meat, 42 Bloodless Reconquest of 1692, 25, 187 Boas, Franz, 91 Boletsakwa, 25, 100–103; balanced dualism , 121–22; ceramics, 150, 151t, 152; creation of tradition, 124–27; defensibility, 114; dual organization, 124; earlier settlement at, 101; ethnic diversity, 149; Keres-speaking refugees, 108; layout, 118, 119f, 120f; mapping, 103–5; mesa-top location, 111; multiple groups at, 124; open-cornered layout, 121; population, 107–8; pre-Hispanic remains at, 113, 113f; previous excavations , 104; radical shift in pottery, 130–34; reference to the past, 116; as rejection of grid, 118; rooms, 105–7, 107f, 228n39; spatial and temporal components, 101; surface map and reconstruction, 102f; treering records, 101, 103t Bolsas, Antonio, 54 Bourdieu, Pierre, 16 British Marxist historians, 12 Bua, Nicolas, 56 Canjilon Pueblo, 165, 165f cap step/sacred mountain design, 154f, 155–56 Cargo Cults, 14 Casañas, Francisco de Jesús María, 215, 216, 217, 218f, 219, 236n18 casualties: Astialakwa battle, 2; overview, 30; Pueblo Revolt’s first, 58 catachresis, 25, 138, 185, 204, 212–13 Catití, Alonso: background, 55; calling all warriors, 81; Catholic items confiscated , 72; colonial sympathizers and, 77–78; death of, 163–64; interpreter for Franciscans, 55; mocking Spanish, 72–73, 142; planning the rebellion, 54; plan of feigned peace, 81, 162; Tupatú’s right-hand man, 79 Catua, Nicolas, 57–58, 224n21 cavate: location described, 139; use of term, 229n1 ceramic production: double-headed key motif, 128–29; glaze-paint, 128; hooked triangle motif, 129; mattepainted , 128, 158, 177; pan-Pueblo designs, 153–56; trade, 156–58; traditions, 127–34 ceremonial dances, restored, 72 ceremonial objects: destroyed by friars, 36, 45; restored, 76–77 Cerro Colorado, 169–72, 171f; ceramics, 177–78, 177f; earlier Revolt-era pueblos compared, 174–77; reconquest era, 184, 234n36; rooms, 175, 176f; Vargas at, 189 Certeau, Michel de, 148 Chaco Phenomenon, 229–30n16 charisma, 16 charismatic leaders, 14, 15–16; disciples, 54 chief’s house, 92 Christian instruction: colonization, 32, 33; Holy Trinity as asymmetrical, 122; per papal bulls, 35 Christian sacred objects: destroyed, 74–77, 217–18; Jemez, 84; persistence of Christian imagery, 212; Po’pay’s orders, 110; preserved, 142 churches destroyed, 74, 84 church records destroyed, 39 citation, 110, 111, 116 Clemente, Esteban, 47–48, 55 [35.173.254.36] Project MUSE (2024-03-29 17:03 GMT) Index 277 clergy, as gatekeepers of storehouses, 34 climatic stress, 4, 44, 48–49 Cochiti Pueblo: Jemez-Athapaskan murder of Indian, 96; Otermín 1681 reconquest, 80–82; research on Kotyiti, 21; Vargas at, 182 collaborative archaeology...