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History: The Hopis are thought to have migrated north out of Mexico around 500 B.C. They were a hunting and gathering group that lived in small bands in pit houses. Almost 1200 years later, the main staple of the Hopi diet switched to the small, blue ears of corn they were able to grow, using runoff from the mesas. Many of the small bands began to come together, and large villages started to grow on top of these mesas. As the population grew agriculture became more and more important. Clans formed within the villages, and each clan had its own field that it was responsible for. Hopi society was matrilineal, which meant that the mother determined field inheritance and social status. Women owned the field, but only the men of their clan worked in them. Each clan was also in charge of certain religious ceremonies throughout the year. A society within each clan would perform the ceremonies, with societies of women taking charge of certain ceremonies as well. The Hopis enjoyed this peaceful way of life, until around 1540, when a group of Spanish explorers led by Coronado first came to this region. Spanish missionaries tried to convert the natives, while the soldiers and explorers looked for any way to exploit them. During this time, the neighboring Navajo tribe began to come under pressure from the Spanish as well, and they began attacking the Spanish as well as the Hopi and other neighboring tribes. The Hopi people were forced to fight for their survival. This long period of fighting lasted until 1824 when Spain recognized Mexico and the Hopi lands were given to the new Mexican government. Although Spain now left them in peace, the Navajo continued to attack and take lands away from the Hopi. In 1870, the U.S. government laid claim to the lands of the Hopi, and they were forced to fight, until finally being forced onto the reservation in Black Mesa, where they live today.
Daily Life: Today, the Hopi continue their struggle to maintain their own unique way of life. They battle the U.S. government as well as the Navajo tribe for the return of their native lands. The Hopi people are trying to teach their children to maintain their traditional way of life as well getting an education.
I don't believe any Hopi could describe the beauty from here, we are just so used to it. It is a part of us, we are a part of it."
—Fred Kabotie, Hopi artist
For over 1,500 years, Hopis and their ancestors have lived at the tips of three long, fingerlike mesas that jut out over the arid Arizona landscape. One Hopi village, Orayvi, is the oldest continuously occupied town in North America. Surrounded on all sides by the Navajo reservation, and 85 miles from the nearest city, Hopis have been buffered somewhat from outside influences. Eighty percent of Hopis still live on the reservation, and most most who work elsewhere return for important ceremonies or to retire.
Hopis have been working silver for over 100 years, but a unique Hopi style did not emerge until the late 1930s, when curators from the Museum of Northern Arizona urged Hopi artists to differentiate themselves from Navajo and Zuni jewelers by using designs from Hopi pottery, baskets and weaving. After World War II, returning veterans were trained in the new style. Hopi jewelry often features overlay, in which designs are cut from a sheet of silver. This sheet is soldered to a second sheet and the exposed areas are oxidized black.
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