The witches of Abiquiu :
by Ebright, Malcolm.
Published by : University of New Mexico Press ; | Gazelle Drake Academic [distributor], (Albuquerque, N.M. : | Lancaster :) Physical details: xvi, 344 p. : ill., map ; 24 cm. ISBN:0826320317 (hbk.).Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
sw 900 - 999 | Book Cart | 978.902 Ebr (Browse shelf) | Available | Book Fund | 87857 |
Includes bibliographical references(p. 323-333) and index.
Abiquiu, the middle ground : the cross and the petroglyph --
The priest : Fray Juan José Toledo --
The governor : Tomás Vélez Cachupín --
The Abiquiu Genízaro land grant : its settlement and early history --
Witchcraft trials in colonial New Mexico and on the northern frontier --
The witchcraft proceedings : el cojo --
The witchcraft proceedings : Joaquinillo, el descubridor --
The devil --
The witchcraft proceedings : the exorcisms --
The witchcraft proceedings : the Inquisition's response and punishment of the Genízaros --
Abiquiu witchcraft : resistance, revitalization, and a clash of beliefs --
New identities at Abiquiu --
List of accused sorcerers --
Abiquiu Genízaro land grant, 1754.
Abiquiu, the middle ground : the cross and the petroglyph --
The priest : Fray Juan José Toledo --
The governor : Tomás Vélez Cachupín --
The Abiquiu Genízaro land grant : its settlement and early history --
Witchcraft trials in colonial New Mexico and on the northern frontier --
The witchcraft proceedings : el cojo --
The witchcraft proceedings : Joaquinillo, el descubridor --
The devil --
The witchcraft proceedings : the exorcisms --
The witchcraft proceedings : the Inquisition's response and punishment of the Genízaros --
Abiquiu witchcraft : resistance, revitalization, and a clash of beliefs --
New identities at Abiquiu --
List of accused sorcerers --
Abiquiu Genízaro land grant, 1754.
"The little-studied witchcraft trail that took place at Abiquiu, New Mexico, between 1756 and 1766 is the centerpiece of this book. The witchcraft outbreak took place less than a century after the Pueblo Revolt and symbolized a resistance by the Genizaros (hispanicized Indians) of Abiquiu to forced Christianization." "The Abiquiu Genizaro land grant where the witchcraft outbreak occurred was the crown jewel of Governor Velez Cachupin's plan to achieve peace for the early New Mexican colonists. They were caught between the Pueblo Indians' resistance to Christianization and raids by nomadic indio barbaros who threatened the existence of the colony. Thanks mainly to the governor's strategy, peace was achieved with the Comanches and Utes, the Pueblo Indians retained their religious ceremonies, and the Abiquiu Pueblo land grant survived and flourished." "The Witches of Abiquiu is the story of a polarizing event in New Mexico history equal in importance to the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692."--BOOK JACKET.
87857