Hopi Tours 2009 Video Clip.mpg
Authentic Hopi Tours of Second Mesa, Arizona ~ Hopi-Owned & Operated
Hopi Cultural Center
Take a quick tour of the Hopi Cultural Center, located in Second Mesa, AZ. We look forward to seeing you soon!
Hopi Reservation, Arizona
A drive through and to the Hopi Indian Reservation in Arizona north of Winslow. The reservation is located on a mesa, the Second Mesa.
The reservation is located within the Navajo Reservation
Travelling To the Hopi Mesas
Quoted from the Hopi Tribe Official website:
“The Hopi Tribe is a sovereign nation located in northeastern Arizona. The reservation occupies part of Coconino and Navajo counties, encompasses more than 1.5 million acres, and is made up of 12 villages on three mesas.
Since time immemorial the Hopi people have lived in Hopitutskwa and have maintained our sacred covenant with Maasaw, the ancient caretaker of the earth, to live as peaceful and humble farmers respectful of the land and its resources. Over the centuries we have survived as a tribe, and to this day have managed to retain our culture, language and religion despite influences from the outside world.
We invite and encourage you to visit our Hopi lands. However, please be respectful of our laws, culture and way of life”
In this video clip, Sian introduces LTBM’s playlist that describes the journey she and David took to visit with the Hopi people in North Eastern Arizona.
The Hopi people are famous for the complexity and richness of their creative and spiritual life, and their strong emphasis on peaceful co-existence as a key cultural value.
Sian muses on her anxiety about the trip - despite having travelled extensively in the American South West, she’s purposely never gone up to the Hopi mesas before. This is because she has been reluctant to simply ‘gawk’ at the lives of those on the mesas.
On this trip, however, they are travelling with companions who have been visiting the Hopi for many years, and who have strong ties within the communities on the first and second mesas.
Tagging along with their friends puts Sian and Dave more at ease about their visit, though some anxiety remains.
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Hopi of Old Oraibi, LA Hopi visits his families village, Old Oraibi, Hopi Land
A preview of the feature documentary Hopi Blues, about the history, culture, the kachinas, the carvers, the dancers, the prophecy rock , and much more. Directed and shot by the Hopi of Old Oraibi, to tell our story and help heal the earth.
Polequaptewa Hopi Dance Group
Hopi Cultural Center 2016
Second Mesa, AZ
Scenic lookout between Shongopovi and Kykotsmovi (two villages in Second Mesa) on the Hopi reservation.
THE HOPI VIDEO
THE HOPI VIDEO FEATURING HOPI FROM THE PAUL AND GEORGIA ALBUM, FEATURING RAY MANZARAK, ROBBY KRIEGER AND JOHN DENSMORE FROM THE DOORS.
Navajo Four Corners Dance Hopi House, Grand Canyon Village
Kivas
A sipapu is a small hole in the floor that symbolizes the opening in the ceiling of the Third World through which the people emerged into the present Fourth World, according to Hopi legend.
The kivas at Mesa Verde were underground chambers that may be compared to churches of later times. Based upon modern Pueblo practice, Ancestral Puebloans may have used these rooms to conduct healing rites or to pray for rain, luck in hunting, or good crops. (Ancient Puebloan churches.)
However, the kachina belief system appears to have emerged in the Southwest at approximately AD 1250, while kiva like structures occurred much earlier. This suggests that the room's older functions may have been changed or adapted to suit the new religious practice.
Some kivas are just the last manifestation of the long tradition of pit houses.
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From about A.D. 500, as pithouse design and construction evolved, the shallow pits grew deeper — more like three to five feet deep. Often, the sides of the pit were plastered with clay or lined with stone — either large slabs wedged upright in the soil or courses of smaller stones laid around the inside perimeter. Generally, pithouses were round, and between nine and twenty-five feet in diameter. Later, around A.D. 700, many new pithouses were square, rectangular or shaped like the letter D.
Usually, four posts were positioned upright in the pit, joined at the top by four horizontal beams and crossed with ceiling joists. The outer skin of the pithouse was made of branches, brush and grass or a matting of tree bark. Construction was completed with a layer of mud on the outside of the roof and walls for protection from the weather. Inside was a central fireplace, used for heating and cooking. Side vents and a hole in the roof provided fresh air and evacuated smoke.
Today, there are almost no remaining pithouses in the open. The elements have obliterated them. Many of the existing examples have been discovered through excavation. There are pithouse reproductions at places like Mesa Verde and in the Museum at the Manitou Cliff Dwellings.
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Ancient Pueblo People or Ancestral Puebloans were an ancient Native American culture centered on the present-day Four Corners area of the United States, comprising southern Utah, northern Arizona, northwest New Mexico, and a lesser section of Colorado. (The Navajo Nation covers three of the four state corners)
The cultural group has often been referred to in archaeology as the Anasazi, although the term is not preferred by the modern Puebloan peoples. The word Anasazi is Navajo for Ancient Ones or Ancient Enemy.
Archaeologists still debate when this distinct culture emerged, but the current consensus, based on terminology defined by the Pecos Classification, suggests their emergence around 1200 BC. Beginning with the earliest explorations and excavations, researchers have believed that the Ancient Puebloans are ancestors of the modern Pueblo peoples.
For unknown ages they were led by war chiefs guided by the Spirits across North America. They settled first in the Ancient Pueblo areas for a few hundred years, then migrated to their current location.
It is not entirely clear why the Ancestral Puebloans migrated from their established homes in the 12th and 13th centuries. Factors examined and discussed include global or regional climate change (cf. Little Ice Age), prolonged periods of drought, cyclical periods of topsoil erosion, environmental degradation, de-forestation, hostility from new arrivals, religious or cultural change, and even influence from Mesoamerican cultures. Many of these possibilities are supported by archaeological evidence.
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Hopi Trip pt.3
Various clips from 5 june 10
Kachina Carving
Kachina is a culture which can best represent the Native Americans in Southwestern United States. The Kachina is a symbol of spirits or the simulacra of everything in the real world, from ancestors to a concept. The Hopi Kachina Dolls are carved in the form and concept as such and are used to educate children the ways of life, thus the spiritual faith and carving technique may come into heritage. They show us the unique outlook on life and cosmology of Hopis.
*Please click CC for English subtitles.
Wood Culture: woodculture.org
IWCS: iwcs.com
Facebook: facebook.com/InternationalWoodCultureSociety
Hohokam Pima National Monument - Snaketown
Did you know there is a National Monument in Phoenix called the Hohokam Pima National Monument? Dated from 300 B.C. to 1200 A.D. The Monument protects the Snake town ruins located on the Gila Indian reservation. According to the National Park Service, The Gila River Indian community has decided not to open the extremely sensitive area to the public.
#arizonatimelesstourist
Traveling with Chuck & Rich. Day 3 - ASM Four Corners (DRAFT)
Traveling with Chuck & Rich. Day 3 - ASM Four Corners (DRAFT); Depart for Hopi Mesas; Tour Walpi village on First Mesa; Picnic lunch at Keams Canyon; Hubbell Trading Post, Ganado, AZ; Arrive in Chinle, Thunderbird Lodge
MEO : Passage au Village Hopi
Un passage pour aller au Village Hopi aux USA sur Mission Equitation Online ;)
Mon pseudo sur le jeu : Pabouguim
Third Mesa Expanded for Peace (documentary trailer)
“In the text by the traditional Hopi, Hotevilla Hopi Shrine of the Covenant – Microcosm of the World by Thomas Mails and late traditional chief Dan Evehema the Hopi create a metaphorical book to help us find world peace. The Hopi are among the world’s most spiritually advanced people… they are our spiritual guides and leaders. They pray for us, and our nation. They are our ‘Tibetans’. When I speak of the traditional Hopi I refer to the Hopi that carry on the traditional religion of the Hopi tribe since antiquity. And they fervently want world peace.” - Seth Leonard
UPDATE: This project has been abandoned by it's creator due to legal reasons.
Music:
Night of the Owl Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Hopi Hoop Dance
Grand Canyon National Park
VORTEX PYRAMID AND BURIAL SITE OF GEORGE W.P.HUNT
HERE IS ONE OF THE KEMET STKE PYRAMIDS/EGYPTIAN BURIAL SITE AND VORTEX OF ARIZONA'S PRESIDENT GEORGE W.P.HUNT BORN 1859 DIED 1934..
HE WAS AN ARIZONA PIONEER AND STATESMAN MEMBER OF VARIOUS TERRITORIAL LEGISLATURES .PRESIDENT OF ARIZONA CONSITITUTIONAL CONVENTION 1910 ELECTED ARIZONA'S 1ST,2ND,3RD,6TH,7TH,8TH AND 10TH GOVENOR TO SET A NATIONAL RECORD .ALSO,ENTOMBED HERE ARE HIS WIFE DUETTE,HER PARENTS,THE J.W. ELLISIONS AND HER SISTERS LENA ELLISION....
ALL DURING THIS TIME THE RED AND BLACK INDIANS WERE ENSLAVED..THERE WAS PYRAMIDS DATING BACK SAID TO BE OLDER THEN THE PYRAMIDS OF AFRICA HERE IN THE USA..STAY TUNED AS IN BRING YOU MOOR INFO UP AND CLOSE.. There are twenty-one federally recognized Indian tribes in Arizona today.
Here are the addresses of Arizona's Indian reservations:
Ak-Chin Indian Community:
Route 2, Box 27
Maricopa, AZ 85239
Cocopah Indian Tribe:
PO Box Bin G
15th & Ave. G
Somerton, AZ 85350
Colorado River Indian Tribes:
Route 1, Box 23-B
Parker, AZ 85344
Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation:
PO Box 17779
Fountain Hills, AZ 85269
Fort Mojave Indian Tribe:
500 Merriman Ave
Needles, CA 92363
(The Fort Mojave reservation is on both sides of the Arizona-California border)
Fort Yuma-Quechan Tribe :
PO Box 11352
Yuma, AZ 85364
Gila River Indian Community:
PO Box 97
Sacaton, AZ 85247
Havasupai Tribe:
PO Box 10
Supai, AZ 86435
Hopi Tribe:
PO Box 123
Kykotsmovi, AZ 86309
Hualapai Tribe:
PO Box 179
Peach Springs, AZ 86434
Navajo Nation:
PO Box 9000
Window Rock, Arizona 86515
Kaibab-Paiute Tribe:
HC 65 Box 2
Fredonia, AZ 86022
Pascua Yaqui Tribe:
7474 S. Camino De Oeste
Tucson, AZ 85746
Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community:
Rte 1, Box 216
Scottsdale, AZ 85256
San Carlos Apache Tribe:
PO Box O
San Carlos, AZ 85550
San Juan Southern Paiute Tribe:
PO Box 1989
Tuba City, AZ 86045
Tohono O'odham Nation:
PO Box 837
Sells, AZ 85634
Tonto Apache Tribe:
Tonto Apache Reservation #30
Payson, AZ 85541
White Mountain Apache Tribe:
PO Box 700
Whiteriver, AZ 85941
Yavapai-Apache Nation:
PO Box 348
Prescott, AZ 86322
Yavapai-Prescott Indian Tribe:
530 E. Merritt Street
Prescott, AZ 86301
Teaching and learning activities about Arizona Indians:
Feel free to print these out for classroom use!