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Clans and Tribes

The Ancient peoples of the American Southwest, like most other Earth cultures, started out with the family as the basic unit of societal organization.

In time, they identified with an extended family, or clan. Among Native American Indians in the Southwest, clan ties follow matrilineal blood lines. Later, clans banded together as tribes or nations. Many modern-day Native American Indians still maintain their clan relationships and responsibilities.

Clans are very important to our understanding of the history of the Anasazi. The oral histories of clans, passed from generation to generation, combined with scientific information and archaeological observations, have helped us to discover or confirm who constructed specific Anasazi sites and where their ancestors live now.

The following is a partial list of clans which have existed from ancient times to the present:

 
All Kinds of Beads Elk Red Shell
Ant Fire Sage
Antelope Flute Sand/Earth
Badger Frog Shipewe
Bear Habovu Snake
Bear Strap Hawk Snow
Blue Green Flute Horn Spruce
Buffalo Ivy Squash
Butterfly Kachina Sun
Calabash Squash Kachina Badger Sun Forehead
Cholla Cactus Lizard Tadpole
Cloud Mountain Lion Tansy Mustard
Corn Mountain Sheep Tcaizra
Cottonwood Mouse Tobacco
Coyote Nabovu Turkey
Crow Oak Turkey Buzzard
Dance Kilt Opuntia Cactus Turquoise
Deer Parrot Water
Dove Pinon Yascha
Drab Flute Porcupine Yellow Bird
Eagle Rabbit Yellow Finch
Earth or Sand Rabbitbrush Young Corn

 

The following is a partial list of names of ancient and modern tribal names from the Southwest:

Acoma Jemez San Juan
Agate Basin Kayenta Sandia
Apache Keresans Santa Ana
Archaic Laguna Santa Clara
Athabaskin Mesa Verde / Verdean Santo Domingo
Basketmakers Mogolion Sevier Fremont
Chaco/Chacoan Nambe Shoshone
Cliff Dwellers Navajo Sinagua
Clovis Northern San Juan Tanoans
Cochiti Numic Taos
Cohonia Palute Tesuque
Eastern Hisatsinom Papago Tewa
Eastern San Juan River Pecos Tigua
Fremont Pecuris Tiwa
Hakataya / Hakatayan Pima Towa
Haru Santa Ana Pojoaque Ute
Havasupai Prescott Uto-Aztecan
Hisatsinom Puebloan Walapai
Hohokam River Hohokam Winslow
Hopi Salt-Gila R. Hohokam Yavapai
Hopi Bear Clan San Felipe Zia
Islela San Idlelonso Zuni

 

A tribe is a larger unit made up of clans, which are made up of families. The names we give to ancient and contemporary tribes originated in different ways. Some are Spanish or English phonetic versions or the original native word. For example, Tesuque is a Spanish word that approximates the tribal word which is phonetically spelled Te-Tsu-Geh. Some tribal names are literal translations of a native word. The Spanish word “Pueblo” is used to describe some tribes who call themselves “The People” in their own language. Other tribal names are based on the tribal language, like Tewa, Towa and Tiwa or Keresan. Others are simply Spanish or English names unrelated to words in the native culture, like San Ildefonso, Santa Clara and Fremont.