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Navaho Indian Tribe History
Navaho ( pron. Na'-va-ho, from Tewa
Navahú, the name referring to a
large area of cultivated lands; applied to a former Tewa pueblo, and, by
extension, to the Navaho, known to the Spaniards of the 17th century as
Apaches de Navajo, who intruded on the Tewa domain or who lived in the vicinity, to distinguish them front other "Apache"
bands.—Hewett in Am. Anthrop., viii,193,1906. Fray Alonso Benavides, in
his Memorial of 1630, gives the earliest translation of the tribal name,
in the form Nauajó, 'sementeras grandes'—'great seed-sowings', or
'great fields'. The Navaho themselves do not use this name, except when
trying to speak English. All do not know it, and none of the older
generation pronounce It correctly, as v is a sound unknown in their language.
They call themselves Dǐné‘, which means
simply 'peaople'. This word,
in various forms, is used as a tribal name by nearly every people of the
Athapascan stock).
An important Athapascan tribe occupying a
reservation of 9,503,763 acres in north east Arizona, north west New
Mexico, and south east Utah. Here they are
supposed to remain, but many isolated families live beyond the
reservation boundaries in all directions. Their land has an average
elevation of about 6,000 ft above sea level. The highest point in it is Pastora peak, in the Carrizo
Mountains, 9,420 ft high. It is in arid region
and not well adapted to agriculture, but it affords fair pasturage. For
this reason the Navaho have devoted their attention less to agriculture
than to stock raising. There were formerly few places on the reservation, away from the borders of the Rio
San Juan, where the soil could be irrigated, but there were many spots,
apparently desert, where water gathered close to the surface and where by
deep planting crops of corn, beans, squashes, and melons were raised.
Within the last few years the Government has built storage reservoirs on
the reservation and increased the facilities for irrigation.
It may be that under the loosely applied name Apache there is a record of
the Navaho by Oñate as early as 1598, but the first to mention them by
name was Zarate-Salmeron, about 1629. They had Christian missionaries
among them in the middle of the 18th century,
but their teachings did not prevail against paganism. For many years
previous to the occupancy of their country by the United States they kept
up an almost constant predatory war with the Pueblos and the white
settlers of New Mexico, in which they were usually the victors. When the
United States took possession of New Mexico in 1849 these depredations
were at their height. The first military expedition into their country was
that of Col. Alex. W. Doniphan, of the First Missouri Volunteers, in the
fall of 1846. On behalf of the United States, Doniphan made the first
treaty of peace with the Navaho Nov. 22 of that year, but the peace was
not lasting. In 1849, another military force, under the command of Col.
John M. Washington, penetrated the Navaho land as far as Cheldy canyon,
and made another treaty of peace on Sept. 9, but this treaty was also soon
broken. To put a stop to their wars, Col. "Kit" Carson invaded their
territory in 1863, killed so many of their sheep as to leave them without
means of support, and took the greater part of the tribe prisoners to Ft
Sunnier at the Bosgite Redondo on the Rio Pecocs, New Mexico. Here they
were kept in captivity until 1867, when they were restored to their
original country and given a new supply of sheep. Since that time they
have remained
at peace and greatly prospered.
There is no doubt that the Navaho have increased in number since they
first became known to the United States, and are still increasing. In
1867, while they were still prisoners and could be counted accurately,
7,300 of their were held in captivity at one time; but, owing to escapes
and additional surrenders, the number varied. All were not captured by
Carson. Perhaps the must accurate census was taken in 1869, when the Government
called there to receive a gift of 30,000 sheep and 2,000 goats. The
Indians were put, in a large corral and counted as they went in; only a
few herders were absent. The result showed that there were somewhat fewer
than 9,000, making due allowance for absentees. According to the census of
1890, which was taken on a faulty system, the tribe numbered 17,204. The
census of 1900 places the population at more than 20,000, and in 1906 they
were roughly estimated by the Indian Office to number 28,500.
According to the best recorded version of their origin legend, the first
or nuclear clan of the Navaho was created by the gods in Arizona or Utah
about 500 years ago. People had lived on the earth before this, but most
of them had been destroyed by giants or demons. When the myth says that
the gods created the first pair of this clan, it is equivalent to saying
that they knew not whence they came and had no antecedent tradition of
themselves. It is thus with
many other Navaho clans. The story gives the impression that these Indians
wandered into New Mexico and Arizona in small groups, probably in single
families. In the course of time other groups joined there until, in the
17th century, they felt strong enough to go to war. Some of the accessions
were evidently of Athapascan origin, as is most of the tribe, but others
were derived from different stocks, including
Keresan,
Shoshonean, Tanoan,
Yuman, and
Aryan; consequently, the Navaho are a very composite people. A notable
accession was made to their numbers, probably in the 16th century, when
the Thkhapaha-dinnay joined them. These were a people of another
linguistic stock—Hodge says "doubtless Tanoan"—for they wrought a change
in the Navaho language. A later very numerous accession of several clans
came from the Pacific
coast; these were Athapascan. Some of the various clans joined the Navaho
willingly, others are the descendants of captives. Hodge has shown that
this Navaho origin legend, omitting a few obviously mythic elements, can
be substantiated by recorded history, but he places the beginning at less
than 500 years.
The Navaho are classed us belonging to the widespread Athapascan
linguistic
family, and a vocabulary of their language shows that the majority of
their words have counterparts in dialects of Alaska, British America, and
California. The grammatical structure is like that of Athapascan tongues
in general, but many words have been inherited from other sources. The
grammar is intricate and the vocabulary copious, abounding especially in
local names.
The appearance of the Navaho strengthens the traditional evidence of their very
composite origin. It is impossible to describe a prevailing type; they vary
in size from stalwart men of 6 feet or more to some who are diminutive in stature. In feature they
vary from the strong faces with aquiline noses and prominent chins common
with the Dakota and other northern
tribes to the subdued features of the
Pueblos. Their faces are a little more hirsute than those of Indians
farther east. Many have occiputs so flattened that the skulls are
brachycephalic or hyperbrachycephalic, a feature resulting from the hard
cradle-board on which the head rests in infancy. According to Hrdlicka
(Am. Anthrop., it, 339, 1900) they approach the Pueblos
physically much
more closely than the Apache, notwithstanding their linguistic connection
with the latter. In general their faces are intelligent and pleasing.
Hughes (Doniphan's Exped.,
1846) says of them: "They are celebrated for intelligence and good
order, the noblest of American aborigines." There is nothing somber or
stoic in their character. Among themselves they are merry and jovial, much
given to jest and banter. They are very industrious, and the proudest among there
scorn no remunerative labor. They do not bear pain with the fortitude
displayed among the militant tribes of the north, nor do they inflict upon
themselves equal tortures. They are, on the whole, a progressive people.
The ordinary Navaho dwelling, or hogán, is a very simple structure,
although erected with much ceremony (see Mindeleff nt 17th Rep. B. A. 1898). It is usually conical in form,
built of sticks set on end,
covered with branches, grass, and earth, and often so low that a man of
ordinary stature can not stand erect in it. One must stoop to enter the doorway, which is usually provided with a short
passage or storm door. There is no chimney; a hole in the apex lets out
the smoke. Some hogáns are rude polygonal structures of logs laid
horizontally; others are partly of stone. In summer, "lean-to" sheds and
small inclosures of branches are often used for habitations. Sweat houses
are small, conical hogáns without the hole in the apex, for fires are not
lighted in them; temperature is increased by means of stones heated in
fires outside. Medicine lodges, when built in localities where trees of
sufficient size grow, are conical structures like the ordinary hogáns, but
much larger. When built in regions of low-sized trees, they have flat
roofs. Of late, substantial stone structures with doors, windows, and
chimneys are replacing the rude hogáns. One reason they built such houses
was that custom and superstition constrained them to destroy or desert a
house in which death had occurred. Such a place was called chindi-hogan,
meaning 'devil-house'. Those who now occupy good stone houses carry out
the dying and let them expire outside, thus saving their dwellings, and
indeed the saint, custom is sometimes practiced in connection with the
hogán. No people have greater dread of ghosts and mortuary remains.
The most important art of the Navaho is that of weaving. They are
especially celebrated for their blankets, which are in high demand among
the white people on account of their beauty and utility; but they also
weave belts, garters, and saddle girths—all with rude, simple looms. Their
legends declare that in the early days they knew not the art of weaving by
means of a loons. The use of the loom was probably taught to theta by
the Pueblo women who were incorporated into the tribe. They dressed in
skins and rude teats constructed by hand, of cedar bark and other vegetal
fibers. The few basket makers among them are said to be
Ute or
Paiute
girls or their descendants, and these do not do much work. What they make,
though of excellent quality, is confined almost exclusively to two
forms required for ceremonial purposes. The Navaho make very little
pottery, and this of a very ordinary variety, being designed merely for
cooking purposes; but formerly they made a fine red ware decorated in
black with characteristic designs. They grind corn and other grains by
hand on the metate. For ceremonial purposes they still bake food in the
ground and in other aboriginal ways. For many years they have had among
them silversmiths who fabricate handsome ornaments with very rude
appliances, and who undoubtedly learned their art from the Mexicans,
adapting it to their own environment. Of late years many
of those who have been taught in training schools have learned civilized
trades and civilized methods of cooking.
Investigations conducted within the last 25 years show that the Navaho,
contrary to early published beliefs, are a highly religious people having
many well-defined divinities (nature gods, animal gods, and local gods),
a vast mythic and legendary lore, and thousands of significant formulated
songs and prayers which must be learned and repeated in the most exact
manner. They also have hundreds of musical compositions which experts have
succeeded in noting and have pronounced similar to our own music. The
so called dances are ceremonies which last for 9 nights and parts of 10
days, and the medicine-men spend many years of study in learning to
conduct a single one properly. One important feature of these ceremonies
Is the pictures painted in dry powders on the floor of the medicine lodge. All this cult's is of doubted antiquity.
The meat revered of their many deities is a goddess named Estsánatlehi,
or a 'Woman Who Changes', 'Woman Who Rejuvenates Herself', because
she is said never to stay in one condition, but to grow old and become
young again at will. She is probably Mother Nature, an apotheosis of the
changing year.
By treaty of
Canyon de Chelly, Ariz., Sept. 9, 1849, the Navaho
acknowledged the sovereignty of the United States. By treaty of
Fort
Sumner, New Mexico, June 1, 1868, a reservation was set apart for them in
Arizona and New Mexico, and they ceded to the United States their claim to
other lands. Their reservation has been modified by subsequent Executive
orders.
The books presented are for their
historical value only and are not the
opinions of the Webmasters of the site.
Handbook
of American Indians, 1906
Index of Tribes or Nations
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