The Great White Dawn of the Pueblo: Revolt and Puebloan Worldview in Seventeenth-Century New Mexico
#History: A Journal of Student Research
Volume 1
Article 2
12-2016
The Great White Dawn of the Pueblo: Revolt and
Puebloan Worldview in Seventeenth-Century New
Mexico
Martin Norment
The College at Brockport
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Norment, Martin (2016) "The Great White Dawn of the Pueblo: Revolt and Puebloan Worldview in Seventeenth-Century New
Mexico," #History: A Journal of Student Research: Vol. 1 , Article 2.
Available at: http://digitalcommons.brockport.edu/hashtaghistory/vol1/iss1/2
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THE GREAT WHITE DAWN OF THE PUEBLO: REVOLT AND PUEBLOAN
WORLDVIEW IN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY NEW MEXICO
Martin Norment, The College at Brockport
Abstract
Previous historical scholarship on the origins of the 1680 Pueblo Revolt argues that the rebellion
resulted from either poor environmental conditions, harsh Spanish treatment of the Pueblo
Indians, or a combination of the two. Using Puebloan myths, Spanish documents from colonial
New Mexico, and anthropological studies of various Puebloan groups and religions, this paper
contends that the Pueblo identified the disease, worsening environmental conditions, and harsh
Spanish treatment as an indicator that they had failed to meet their ceremonial obligations to
their ancestors. Therefore, Spanish occupation and prohibition of customary Pueblo religion
acted as a barrier to their restoration of harmony. Thus given a tangible cause for their suffering,
the Pueblo people rebelled to rid themselves of the Spanish in order to practice rituals and secure
their prosperity. [Keywords: Pueblo Indians, New Mexico, Spain, Native American religion]
In 1680 the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico rose in rebellion, quickly regaining their sovereignty
by removing their Spanish overlords. Historians intrigued by the unique, but limited, success of
the Pueblo Revolt have struggled to explain the origins of the Indian insurrection. Scholars such
as Henry Warner Bowden, Ramón A. Gutiérrez, and Jack D. Forbes have cited religious
differences and Spanish suppression of native Puebloan rituals as the chief determinants of the
uprising. Specifically, the authors see the Franciscan missionaries’ violent and despotic
enforcement of decrees prohibiting “idolatry” and traditional native religious practices as the
motivations for Puebloan assault against their colonial oppressors.1 Contrasting the claim that the
revolt was the result of the Indians’ desire for religious self-determination, historian Van
Hastings Garner attributed the revolt to economic and environmental conditions. Garner argues
that increasingly poor crop yields due to drought, fierce outbreaks of disease, and repeated
Navajo and Apache forays against Puebloan settlements demonstrate that the Spanish were not
as powerful as they had initially seemed and could not guarantee prosperity or protection. 2
Similarly, Andrew L. Knaut contends that the proliferation of drought, pestilence, and violence
significantly increased the burden of Spanish demands for tribute. This, he reasons, prompted the
Pueblos to challenge Spanish authority and rise in rebellion.3
Although the aforementioned arguments acknowledge many of the conditions in
seventeenth-century New Mexico that antagonized the Pueblos, they do not adequately account
for the cultural context in which the revolt occurred. The Pueblo Indians possessed a worldview
that connected prosperity with the timely performance of traditional rituals and misfortune with
the failure to appease their ancient gods and grandmothers through the fulfillment of their
Norment, Martin. “The Great White Dawn of the Pueblo: Revolt and Puebloan Worldview in Seventeenth-Century New Mexico,” #History: A
Journal of Student Research, n. 1 (December 2016). Brockport, NY: Department of History, The College at Brockport, S.U.N.Y.: 20-34.
#History: A Journal of Student Research, Number 1
ceremonial duty. 4 The Pueblos’ worldview helps to compensate for the lack of Puebloan
documents describing the rebellion and the surrounding events, subsequently improving the
historical understanding of the revolt.
The Pueblo Indians experienced the Spaniards’ religious repression and the proliferation
of poor environmental conditions within the context of their cultural understanding of the world.
They identified their suffering as the result of a failure to adhere to their ceremonial and ritual
norms, which their myths and oral histories confirmed would guarantee prosperity. Thus, the
Pueblos revolted in order to remove Spanish authority, which prevented them from paying
homage to their ancestors and assured a perpetual decline in security for the indigenous people of
New Mexico.
With the advent of Spanish colonization of New Mexico, two distinct changes to the
Puebloan experience occurred, subsequently challenging the natural order of their world and
motivating the Indians to rebel. First, in 1598 Franciscan missionaries began to destroy all signs
of Puebloan religion in their campaign to convert Indians to Christianity. Later, during the
seventeenth-century, the Spanish colonial government and missionaries instituted an era in New
Mexico where violent repression of native religion was the norm. Then, with the arrival of
Governor Juan Francisco Treviño in 1675, the Spanish commenced a crusade against native
religion and “witchcraft” that resulted in the execution or imprisonment of those accused. In one
instance, “forty-seven medicine men who admitted practicing witchcraft were arrested, flogged,
and sold into slavery.”5
Second, from the onset of Spanish-Puebloan contact, European diseases had decimated
native populations in New Mexico. By 1680, the Puebloan population was reduced to one third
of estimates from 1600. 6 Beginning in the second half of the seventeenth century drought,
famine, and Apache raids further worsened environmental conditions in New Mexico. In the
1660s, the Pueblos suffered a succession of crop failures that led to widespread famine in the
1670s, which prompted starved Athapascan tribes to raid Puebloan settlements in search of
sustenance.7
The changes in seventeenth-century New Mexico prompted Puebloan medicine men and
religious leaders to argue for the revitalization of native religion and the overthrow of the
Spanish in order to restore cosmic order. Popé, a Puebloan religious leader from San Juan and an
instrumental organizer of the revolt, told the Pueblos that, if they killed the “priests and
Spaniards” and returned to their ancient traditions, “they would gather large crops of grain,
maize with large and thick ears, and everything else” they needed.8
The absence of historical documents regarding (...truncated)