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The Zuni´s clothes are very unique the men wear breech clothes which were flaps of clothing covering the front and back, these had fringes on the sides, and a tassel on each corner and was tied at the hips. The men occasionally added long robes of feathers and the skins of hare, or cotton blankets. The woman wore mantas, which is a rectangular piece of black cloth wrapped around their upper bodies under there left arm and tied above there right shoulder. A sash went around her waist and they wore boot-like moccasins topped with leggings made of strips of deerskin.
The Pueblo tribe's clothes are similar, men wore a cloth and pants that only cover the legs, woman were a dress that strapped to her shoulder, called a manta. Shortly after that concept, the woman put blouse underneath the manta. Something different about the manta is that on the manta, woman did not where a sash, they wore a blouse underneath
Food
Farming was the big source for the Zuni. They grew corn, squash, and beans. They also fished and hunted. They hunted deer, antelope, rabbits, and many other animals. The pueblos food
Farming was the big source for the Zuni. They grew corn, squash, and beans. They also fished and hunted. They hunted deer, antelope, rabbits, and many other animals. Pueblos grew corn, squash, beans, and sunflower seeds, animals in the region were rabbits, antelopes deer, and raised turkey! They are almost the same!
The Zuni Tribe live in West-Central New Mexico, at the border with Arizona. The pueblo lives in Northeastern Arizona, and Northeastern New Mexico.
Houses
Pueblo houses are made of adobe which is sun-dried clay, they look like huge apartments, with roofs acting as balconies, and were made in cave dwellings, while Zuni houses are made of stone, and mud plaster. They are like houses stacked on top of each other as one.
Pueblo House
Zuni House
Religion
The Zuni are very religious and have a big and complicated ceremonial association. The Gods and spirit-beings they believe in are called kachinas. Shalako is the most important ceremony that they do. This ceremony takes place in November and December. It is there time to give thanks and to pay their respects to the spirit world. The pueblo
The Zuni are very religious and have a big and complicated ceremonial association. The Gods and spirit-beings they believe in are called kachinas. Shalako is the most important ceremony that they do. This ceremony takes place in November and December. It is there time to give thanks and to pay their respects to the spirit world. Pueblos practice katcinian, which is spirits that connected them to god. The two tribes have a religion in common, butZuni developed the Shalako religion, Pueblos did not adopt that religion.
Money
In the mid-1900s the Zuni leaders used US money to pay for electricity, water, paved streets, schools, and other services. The Pueblo used cocoa beans as currency, that is very different!
Work
The woman of the Zuni tribe were in charge of handling the tribe financial issues. The young boys worked in the Kivas which were underground rooms. The Kivas were representation of a door passing through two different worlds. The men also helped the boys. The men were also in charge of tending the farm lands that grew the Three Sisters. The Three Sisters is corn, beans, and squash. The woman also worked in smaller square gardens surrounded by walls. The pueblo
The woman of the Zuni tribe were in charge of handling the tribe financial issues. The young boys worked in the Kivas which were underground rooms. The Kivas were representation of a door passing through two different worlds. The men also helped the boys. The men were also in charge of tending the farm lands that grew the Three Sisters. The Three Sisters is corn, beans, and squash. The woman also worked in smaller square gardens surrounded by walls. The men work on weaving cloth, hunting with their children, dealt with politics, and war, woman were in charge of the house, making pottery, and weaving baskets. The children played games, hunted, and fished. That is very different from the Zuni!
Bibliography
Zuni." Britannica School, Encyclopædia Britannica, 7 May. 2015. school.eb.com/levels/middle/article/Zuni/341146. Accessed 21 Oct. 2018.
A True Book “The Zuni” By Kevin Cunningham and Peter Benoit
Marla Felkins Ryan and Linda Schmittroth. "Zuñi Pueblo: Daily Life." Zuni Pueblo, edited by Marla Felkins Ryan and Linda Schmittroth, Blackbirch Press, 2004. Tribes of Native America. Kids InfoBits, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/KBJUFC140746381/ITKE?u=ncowl&sid=ITKE&xid=7879306b. Accessed 24 Oct. 2018.
Zuni Bibliography
Zuni." Britannica School, Encyclopædia Britannica, 7 May. 2015. school.eb.com/levels/middle/article/Zuni/341146. Accessed 21 Oct. 2018.
A True Book “The Zuni” By Kevin Cunningham and Peter Benoit
Marla Felkins Ryan and Linda Schmittroth. "Zuñi Pueblo: Daily Life." Zuni Pueblo, edited by Marla Felkins Ryan and Linda Schmittroth, Blackbirch Press, 2004. Tribes of Native America. Kids InfoBits, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/KBJUFC140746381/ITKE?u=ncowl&sid=ITKE&xid=7879306b. Accessed 24 Oct. 2018.
"Pueblo Indians." Britannica School, Encyclopædia Britannica, 16 Apr. 2015. school.eb.com/levels/middle/article/Pueblo-Indians/600290. Accessed 12 Nov. 2018.
Koehler, Molly A. Native american project, Molly Koehler, Mrs.Majerksic's class.