
People
have used the Four Corners area for about 10 thousand years, although not
much is known about the first 8 thousand years except that the people
hunted locally available animals and gathered wild
plants.
Beginning in about 1 A.D. an identifiable culture developed
over the next 700 years. The Hopi call these people Hisatsinom (People of
Long Ago) although the public and archaeologists refer to them as Anasazi
or San Juan Basketmakers.
By about 500 A.D. the Hisatsinom had
learned to make pottery and developed elaborate pit houses of increasing
size. By 700 A.D. they were cultivating corn, beans and cotton and
settling down to a more sedentary life in small settlements of two to five
pit houses. They occupied a vast territory stretching from the Grand
Canyon to Toko'navi (Navajo Mountain), toward the Lukachukai Mountains
near the New Mexico/Arizona border, and south to the Mogollon
Rim.
At about 700 A.D. the first substantial presence in the Hopi
mesa area was established on Antelope Mesa, east of present-day Keams
Canyon. Masonry walls came into use and aboveground dwellings replaced pit
houses.
From 900 to 1100 A.D. many small masonry villages appeared
in the area but a subsequent drying of the climate over the next 200 years
saw a clustering of the area’s population into larger villages, such as
Oraibi, Awatovi, Wupatki, Betatakin and the villages in Canyon De
Chelly.
In the late 1200’s a massive drought forced 36 of 47
villages on the Hopi mesas to be abandoned. Following the drought, the 11
remaining villages grew in size, and increased population saw three new
villages established.
While Hopi located their villages on mesas
for defensive purposes, the villages were by no means the entirety of Hopi
territory. Land surrounding the mesas was divided between clans and
families while certain areas were held in common for medicinal and
religious purposes. The Hopi established boundary markings hundreds of
miles away from their villages to demarcate their ancestral homeland and
use area, called the tutsqua. It is estimated that the tutsqua once
covered over 18 million acres.
By the 1500’s Hopi culture was
highly developed with an elaborate ceremonial cycle, complex social
organization and advanced agricultural system. They also participated in
an elaborate trade network that extended throughout the Southwest and into
Mexico.
The first outsiders to arrive in Hopi territory were
Spanish explorers in 1540 under the leadership of Don Pedro de Tovar.
However, unable to find the legendary Seven Cities of Gold, the Spanish
returned to New Mexico. They maintained sporadic contact with the Hopi
until 1592 when Catholic priests established a mission at Awatovi. The
priests spent the next nine decades attempting to suppress Hopi religion
and gain Catholic converts.
Contact with the Spanish did have some
positive aspects however. Over this period the Hopi acquired horses,
burros, sheep and cattle, and new fruits and vegetables were introduced
into their diet.
The Spanish and later Europeans also introduced
smallpox, which over the centuries, periodically reduced the populations
on the mesas from thousands to hundreds in devastating
epidemics.
In 1680 the Hopi joined the Puebloans of New Mexcio in
the Pueblo Revolt, which forced the Spanish out of the Southwest. Although
the Spanish were successful in reconquering the pueblos of New Mexico,
they were never able to firmly reestablish a foothold among the
Hopi.
Following on the heels of the Spanish, Navajos began moving
into Hopi territory in the late 1600's. They distributed themselves
throughout the area to graze their livestock and appropriated Hopi
rangeland, farm fields and water resources. Navajos also conducted
frequent raids against Hopi villages.
Hopi fell under Mexican
jurisdiction in 1821 after the Mexican War of Independence. This lasted
until 1848 when the United States and Mexico signed the Treaty of
Guadalupe de Hidalgo. Hopi territory became part of the ever-expanding
United States.
Although whites were exploring Hopi territory before
1848, during the 1850’s and 1860’s contact became more frequent as
numerous government surveyors, investigators, missionaries and Bureau of
Indian Affairs employees began exploring the area. Contact between the
Hopi and the US Government continued sporadically until 1870 when the
first Hopi Indian agent was appointed, followed in 1874 by the
establishment of the Indian Agency in Keams Canyon.
In 1882
President Chester Arthur established a 2.5 million acre Hopi Reservation
through Executive Order. This was followed by many years of effort to
eradicate Hopi culture and religion and take their land. Children were
made to go to school, men and boys were forced to cut their hair, efforts
to try and convert Hopi to Christianity intensified, and attempts were
made to allot their land, even though traditionally no Hopi can own
land.
Tension between those Hopi who accepted white ways and those
who tried to resist them culminated in a devastating split in the village
of Oraibi in 1906.
In 1934, a changing tide of sentiment towards
Native Americans led to the Indian Reorganization Act, which codified the
obligations of the US government to protect and preserve the rights of
Native Americans. Soon after, the Hopi Tribal Council was formed in 1936
in an effort to establish a single representative body of the Hopi with
which the U.S. Government could do business.
While the Tribal
Council represents Hopi people in matters external to the tribe, Hopi
villages maintain quasi-independence. Of the 12 villages, only 3 have
adopted constitutions and established a truly western form of government.
The remaining 9 villages vary in the degree to which they adhere to the
traditional Hopi form of governance. Oraibi remains strictly traditional
in its governing structure and does not accept funds or any other form of
assistance from the Tribal government. Other villages merge traditional
with western governing policies by maintaining a village Kikmongwi (chief
or leader) but also having representatives on Tribal
Council.