Taos Pueblo

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cid_1847013.150.jpg Taos Pueblo
Designer collective
Location New Mexico, [[:]]
Date 1500 's and later
Building Type multifamily housing
Climate hot dry desert
Context rural
Architectural Style Southwest Vernacular
Street Address Camino del Pueblo
Notes Blocky masses of earthen material, harmonious with landscape.
At Great Buildings http://www.GreatBuildings.com/buildings/Taos_Pueblo.html

Contents



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[edit] Discussion

UNESCO World Heritage Sites
Name Pueblo de Taos
Region Europe and North America
Type Cultural
Criteria iv
UNESCO Site ID 492
Year of Listing 1992




Building Details



Commentary

"Still inhabited, though now modified, is the Taos Pueblo, Taos, New Mexico, begun before the sixteenth century but showing the traditional method of adobe construction. The pueblo consists of two clusters of houses, each built of sun-dried mud brick, with walls ranging from two feet thick at the bottom to about one foot thick at the top. Each year the walls are still refinished with a new coat of adobe plaster as part of a village ceremony. The rooms are stepped back so that the roofs of the lower units form terraces for those above. The units at ground level and some of those above are entered by doors that originally were quite small and low; access to the upper units is by ladders through holes in the roof. The living quarters are on the top and outside, while the rooms deep within the structure were used for storage of grain. The roofs are made of cedar logs, their ends protruding through the walls; on the logs are mats of branches on which are laid grasses covered with a thick layer of mud and a finishing coat of adobe plaster. It is a massive system of construction but one well suited to the rigors of the climate..."

— Leland M. Roth. A Concise History of American Architecture. p6.

Details

Location: 3 miles (4.8 kilometers) north of the town of Taos
Elevation: 7600 feet above sea level
Contact: Taos Pueblo Tourism Office, P.O. Box 1846, Taos, NM 87571, 505-758-1028 vox, 505-758-4604 fax

A UNESCO World Heritage Site.
A U.S. National Historic Landmark.

[edit] Related content from Wikipedia

Taos Pueblo

Taos Pueblo (or Pueblo de Taos) is an ancient pueblo belonging to a Taos (Northern Tiwa) speaking Native American tribe of Pueblo people. It is approximately 1000 years old and lies about 1 mile (1.6 km) north of the modern city of Taos, New Mexico, USA. The Red Willow Creek, or Rio Pueblo, is a small stream which flows through the middle of the pueblo from its source in the Sangre de Cristo Range. A reservation of 95,000 acres (384 km²) is attached to the pueblo, and about 1,900 people live in this areaWho lives in the Pueblo? (scroll down).

Taos Pueblo is a member of the Eight Northern Pueblos. The Taos community is known for being one of the most secretive and conservative pueblos.

Taos Pueblo's most prominent architectural feature is a multi-storied residential complex of reddish-brown adobe divided into two parts by the Rio Pueblo. According to the Pueblo's Web site, it was probably built between 1000 and 1450 A.D. It was designated a National Historic Landmark on October 9, 1960, and in 1992 became a World Heritage Site. As of 2006, about 150 people live in it full-time Who lives in the Pueblo? (scroll down) .

Name

In the Taos language, the pueblo is referred to as "the village" in either ' "in the village" (' "village" + ' "in") or ' "to/toward the village" (' "village" + ' "to, toward"). The proper name of the pueblo is ' "at red willow canyon mouth" (or ' "at the red willows" for short); however, this name is more commonly used in ceremonial contexts and is less common in everyday speech.

The name Taos in English was borrowed from Spanish Taos. Spanish Taos is probably a borrowing of Taos ' "village" which was heard as tao to which the plural -s was added although in the modern language Taos is no longer a plural noun. The idea that Spanish Taos is from tao "cross of the order of San Juan de los Cabelleros" (from Greek tau) is unlikely.Jones, William. (1960). Origin of the place name Taos. Anthropological Linguistics, 2 (3), 2-4; Trager, George L. (1960). The name of Taos, New Mexico. Anthropological Linguistics, 2 (3), 5-6.

Prehistory and history

Most archeologists believe that the Taos Indians along with other Pueblo Indians settled along the Rio Grande migrated from the Four Corners region. The dwellings of that region were inhabited by the Anasazi, and a long drought in the area in the late 1200s, may have caused them to move to the Rio Grande where the water supply was more dependable.

The history of Taos Pueblo include the plotting of the Pueblo Revolt in 1680, a siege by U.S. forces in 1847, and the return by President Nixon in 1970 of the Pueblo's 48,000 acres (194 km²) of mountain land taken by President Theodore Roosevelt and designated as the Carson National Forest early in the twentieth century.Julyan, B: New Mexico's Wilderness Areas: The Complete Guide, page 73. Big Earth Publishing, 1999 Blue Lake, which the people of the Pueblo traditionally consider sacred, was included in this return of Taos land. The Pueblo's web site names the acquisition of the sacred Blue Lake as the most important event in its history due to the spiritual belief that the Taos natives originated from the lake itself. An additional 764 acres south of the ridge between Simpson Peak and Old Mike Peak and west of Blue Lake were transferred back to the Pueblo in 1996.

Structure

The North-Side Pueblo is said to be one of the most photographed and painted buildings in the Western Hemisphere. It is the largest multistoried Pueblo structure still existing. It is made of adobe walls that are often several feet thick. Its primary purpose was for defense. Up to as late as 1900, 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, outside ladders could easily be pulled up.

The homes in this structure usually consist of two rooms, one of which is for general living and sleeping, and the second of which is for cooking, eating, and storage. Each home is self-contained; there are no passageways between the houses. Taos Indians made little use of furniture in the past, but today they have tables, chairs, and beds. In the Pueblo, electricity, running water, and indoor plumbing are prohibited.

The pueblo wall completely encloses the village except at the entrance as a symbol of the village boundaries. Now rather short, the wall used to be much taller for protection against surrounding tribes. The river running through the pueblo serves as the primary source for drinking and cooking water for the residents of the village. In the winter, the river never completely freezes although it does form a heavy layer of ice. Because the river moves so swiftly, the ice can be broken to obtain the fresh water beneath.

Spiritual community

Three religions are represented in the Pueblo: Christianity, the aboriginal religion, and the Native American Church. Most of the Indians are Roman Catholic. Saint Jerome, or San Geronimo, is the patron saint of the pueblo....

The deep feeling of belonging to a community, summed up in their phrase, “we are in one nest,” has held the Taos people together. Both men and women are expected to offer their services or “community duties,” when needed. One should be cooperative and never allow their own desires to be destructive of the community’s interest. One of Taos’s strongest institutions is the family. Descent on both the father and the mother’s side of the family is equally recognized. Each primary family lives in a separate dwelling so when a couple gets married, they move to their own home. With relatives so near by, everyone is available to help care for the children. The elderly teach the young the values and traditions that have been handed down, which protects the integrity of the Taos culture.

Additional images

See also

Notes

References

  • Bodine, John J., Taos Pueblo: A Walk Through Time. Tucson: Rio Nuevo Publishers, 1996.

External links








ca:Taos

da:Taos Pueblo de:Taos (Volk) es:Pueblo de Taos fr:Pueblo de Taos it:Pueblo di Taos he:פואבלו דה טאוס hu:Pueblo de Taos ja:タオス・プエブロ pt:Pueblo de Taos sv:Pueblo de Taos

Above content from Wikipedia available under GFDL retrieved Thu, 04 Dec 2008 20:12:11 -0800


[edit] Maps

[edit] References

Francis D. K. Ching. Architecture: Form, Space, and Order. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1979. ISBN 0-442-21535-5. LC 79-18045. NA2760.C46. eye-level perspective, p84.— A nice graphic introduction to architectural ideas. Updated 1996 edition available at Amazon.com

Howard Davis. Slides from photographer's collection. PCD.2260.1012.1702.092. PCD.2260.1012.1702.099. PCD.2260.1012.1702.098. PCD.2260.1012.1702.097. PCD.2260.1012.1702.096. PCD.2260.1012.1702.095. PCD.2260.1012.1702.093. PCD.2260.1012.1702.094

see also Nabokov, Native American Architecture

Jerome Iowa. Ageless Adobe. Santa Fe: Sunstone Press, 1985. ISBN 0-86534-034-X. LC 84-16337. NA730.N38I59. site plan drawing, p18. 0

George Kubler. The Religious Architecture of New Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1973. LC 72-86823. NA5230.N6K8 1973. site plan drawing in 1846, f3, p20. After Price, in Twitchell, 1912, p. 204. [DP]

Leland M. Roth. A Concise History of American Architecture. New York: Harper and Row, Publishers, 1979. ISBN 0-06-430086-2. NA705.R67 1979. discussion, p6. overview photo, p7.

Sandra Seth and Laurel Seth, illustrations by Valerie Graves. Adobe! Homes and Interiors of Taos, Santa Fe and the Southwest. Stamford, CT: Architectural Book Publishing Co., 1998. ISBN 0-942655-00-1. LC 87-37421. NA7235.N6S48 1998. discussion and photos, p12-15. — Great appreciation and tons of ornamental and how-to details for true southwestern US adobe. Available at Amazon.com

[edit] External Links

Taos Pueblo Environmental Office — with history, photos, and links

<A target="amazon" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/external-search/?keyword=Vernacular+Architecture&mode=books&tag=artificeinc"><IMG src="/images/ama_logo_rgb_20x79.gif" height=20 width=79 valign=middle border=0 alt="Amazon.com"></A><A target="amazon" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/external-search/?keyword=Vernacular+Architecture&mode=books&tag=artificeinc">Find books about Vernacular Architecture</B></A>

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