enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pueblo religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_religion

    Central to Pueblo religion is the concept of the Kachina (also called Katsina), a spirit being in the religious beliefs of the Pueblo people. These beings, once believed to visit Pueblo villages, are now honored through masked dances and rituals in which Pueblo people embody the Kachinas. [ 7 ]

  3. Puebloans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puebloans

    Puebloans have been remarkably adept at preserving their culture and core religious beliefs, including developing syncretic Pueblo Christianity. [5] Exact numbers of Pueblo peoples are unknown but, in the 21st century, some 75,000 Pueblo people live predominantly in New Mexico and Arizona, but also in Texas and elsewhere.

  4. Pueblo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo

    The word pueblo is the Spanish word both for "town" or "village" and for "people". It comes from the Latin root word populus meaning "people". Spanish colonials applied the term to their own civic settlements, but to only those Native American settlements having fixed locations and permanent buildings.

  5. Pueblo, Colorado - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo,_Colorado

    The Pueblo County Courthouse has a large brass top easily seen from Interstate 25 to the east. The Hotel Vail in downtown Pueblo [8]. Pueblo (/ ˈ p w ɛ b l oʊ / PWEB-loh) [9] is a home rule municipality that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Pueblo County, Colorado, United States. [1]

  6. Pueblo clown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_clown

    Anthropologists, most notably Adolf Bandelier in his 1890 book, The Delight Makers, and Elsie Clews Parsons in her Pueblo Indian Religion, have extensively studied the meaning of the Pueblo clowns and clown society in general. Bandelier notes that the Tsuku were somewhat feared by the Hopi as the source of public criticism and censure of non ...

  7. Pueblo County, Colorado - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_County

    Pueblo County (/ ˈ p w ɛ b l oʊ / or / ˈ p j ɛ b l oʊ /) is a county located in the U.S. state of Colorado. As of the 2020 census, the population was 168,162. [2] The county seat is Pueblo. [3] The county was named for the historic city of Pueblo which took its name from the Spanish language word meaning "town" or "village".

  8. Roman Catholic Diocese of Pueblo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Catholic_Diocese_of...

    The Diocese of Pueblo (Latin: Dioecesis Pueblensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory, or diocese, of the Catholic Church in southern Colorado in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Denver. The Diocese of Pueblo was created on November 15, 1941.

  9. Tewa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tewa

    In the Pueblo community, religion is a crucial aspect of their lives. It is a way by which the people aspire to live and encompasses mythology, cosmology, philosophy, and a worldview for the Tewa. Religious sodality leaders know more details of their respective systems of belief, and, to the general population, this is a sensitive aspect of ...