Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Mission Indians was a term used to refer to the Indigenous peoples of California who lived or grew up in the Spanish mission system in California. Today the term is ...
of Diegueño Mission Indians; Total population; 15 [1] –16 [2] Regions with significant populations; United States : Languages; Ipai, [3] Kumeyaay, [4] English, Yuman branch of Hokan linguistic group. [5] Religion; Traditional tribal religion, Christianity (Roman Catholicism) [6] Related ethnic groups; other Kumeyaay tribes, Cocopa, Quechan ...
Juaneño Band of Mission Indians, Acjachemen Nation, Santa Ana, CA (Petitioner 84B) [37] [35] Juaneño Band of Mission Indians, Acjachemen Nation (Romero), Santa Ana, CA [35] The Juaneño Band of Mission Indians, Acjachemen Nation (84A), based in San Juan Capistrano elects a tribal council, assisted by tribal elders. They have about 1,800 members.
Each one of these bands included 5 to 15 family groups. Kumeyaay Indians also foraged for flora that they can use and hunt for animals depending on the season. Besides hunting for food, the Kumeyaay also planted trees and fields of grain, squash, beans and corn gathered and grew medicinal herbs and plants, and ate floras like fresh fruits ...
With the help of the soldiers who guarded the mission, the Esselen and Ohlone Indians who lived near the mission were forcibly relocated, conscripted, and trained as plowmen, shepherds, cattle herders, blacksmiths, and carpenters on the mission. Disease, starvation, over work, and torture decimated the tribe.
of Diegueño Mission Indians; Total population; 630 enrolled members [1] Regions with significant populations; United States : Languages; Ipai, [2] [3] English: Religion; Traditional tribal religion, Christianity (Roman Catholicism) Related ethnic groups; other Kumeyaay tribes, Cocopa, Quechan, Paipai, and Kiliwa
In 1875, the tribe, along with the Viejas Group of Capitan Grande Band of Mission Indians, controlled the Capitan Grande Reservation, which consisted of barren, uninhabitable mountain lands. The El Capitan Reservoir , forcibly purchased from the two tribes to provide water for San Diego , submerged what habitable land existed on the reservation.
The Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Mission Indians is a federally recognized tribe of Chumash, an Indigenous people of California, in Santa Barbara. [2] Their name for themselves is Samala . [ 3 ] The locality of Santa Ynez is referred to as ’alaxulapu in Chumashan language .