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词条 Abiquiú, New Mexico
释义

  1. History

  2. The Old Spanish Trail

  3. In popular culture

  4. Nearby points of interest

  5. Notable people

  6. References

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Abiquiú (or Abiquiu[2] {{IPAc-en|audio=En-us-Abiquiu, New Mexico.ogg|ˈ|æ|b|ᵻ|k|j|uː}}) is a small census-designated place located in Rio Arriba County, in northern New Mexico in the southwestern United States, about 53 miles (85 km) north of Santa Fe.

Abiquiu has an elementary school which is part of the Espanola Public Schools.

Abiquiú means "wild choke cherry place" in the Tewa language. The community is also called Santo Tomas de Abiquiú and the Pueblo of Santo Tomas de Abiquiú.[3] Abiquiù was the one of the homes of artist Georgia O'Keeffe from 1929 until 1984. The Georgia O'Keeffe Home and Studio is in Abiquiú and she also owned property at the nearly Ghost Ranch. Many of her paintings depict scenes near Abiquiú.

History

Abiquiú was first settled in 1742 by 24 Tewa Pueblo families led by a Roman Catholic priest, Francisco Delgado. The Tewa returned to New Mexico after a lengthy residence among the Hopi people in what would become Arizona. Their settlement in Abiquiú was part of the strategy by New Mexico to defend its frontiers against marauding American Indians such as the Apache, Comanche, and Navajo. Abiquiú was on the northern border of the Spanish settlements of New Mexico.[4] In 1747, in one of the numerous Indian raids in the area, Comanches took 23 women and children captive, forcing the temporary abandonment of Abiquiú. The captives probably became part of the flourishing slave trade between and among the Spanish and the surrounding Indian tribes.[5]

In 1754, to deal with the Indian raids and the faltering settlement, New Mexican governor Tomas Velez Cachupin gave 34 genizaro families a land grant in exchange for them taking a prominent role in frontier defense. Abiquiú was the third genizaro settlement established in New Mexico, after Belen and Trampas. The genizaros were American Indians of various tribes whose origin was as slaves, captives, and servants of the Spanish. With few rights under the casta laws of the Spanish, resettlement on the dangerous frontier of New Mexico was the principal way for genizaros to become landowners. Abiquiú became the archetypal genizaro settlement with residents still celebrating their genizaro heritage in the 21st century.[6]

In the late 18th century peace was established between New Mexico and the Comanche and Utes. An annual trade fair at Abiquiú drew many Indians to the town, especially the Utes who traded deer skins for horses and tools. Also, captive children were purchased or redeemed from the Indians. Bands of Utes often camped for the winter near Abiquiú. However, in the 1840s the peace with the Utes broke down and 1,000 of them came to Abiquiú with a list of grievances and demands. Subsequently several Utes were killed. Peace with the Utes was restored in 1849 by the United States government which had recently invaded and conquered New Mexico in the Mexican-American War.[7]

Throughout the 19th century, the residents of Abiquiú struggled to retain ownership of the {{convert|16000|acre|ha}} of land provided them by the 1754 land grant. In 1894 the rights of the community to the land was validated in the Court of Private Land Claims. In 1969, additional land, previously designated as National Forest, was returned to the community. Abiquiú is a popular tourist destination, and some Anglo-Americans have settled in the community.[8]

The Old Spanish Trail

Abiquiú was the starting point of the pioneering route of the Old Spanish Trail. This first route, the Armijo Route, was led by Antonio Armijo of Santa Fe, with sixty mounted men and a caravan of pack animals carrying blankets and other trade goods to barter for mules in Alta California. Armijo's caravan left on November 6, 1829 made the journey from Abiquiu to San Gabriel Mission in eighty-six days, arriving on January 31, 1830. He returned by the same route in 56 days, leaving March 1 and arriving back on April 25, 1830. Unlike the other routes of the Old Spanish Trail, Armijo's route was documented day by day by him, although in a very brief report listing dates and stopping places with few details and no distances recorded. It was submitted to the governor José Antonio Chaves and published by the Mexican government on June 19, 1830.[9]

In popular culture

The colorful canyons and mountains near Abiquiú have been featured in numerous movies, including Silverado (1985), Lonesome Dove (1989), City Slickers (1991), Wyatt Earp (1994), The Wild Wild West (1999), All the Pretty Horses (2000), The Missing (2003), 3:10 to Yuma (2007), No Country For Old Men (2007), Cowboys & Aliens (2011) and The Lone Ranger (2013), [10]

The opening scene of the 4th Indiana Jones movie Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was filmed in Abiquiú. "On June 16, 2007 even before the start of principal photography, the production's second unit crew was on location near Abiquiú, New Mexico, filming the traditional Indiana Jones opening shot of a "mountain" (in this case a prairie dog mound.)" Other notable films shot in Abiquiu are City Slickers, Red Dawn, The Last Outlaw,[11] and the TV series Earth 2.[12]

Nearby points of interest

  • Echo Amphitheater
  • Ghost Ranch, home of the Ruth Hall Museum of Paleontology
  • Dar al-Islam (organisation)
  • Santa Rosa de Lima, New Mexico, a ghost town
  • Monastery of Christ in the Desert
  • Abiquiu Lake
  • Georgia O'Keeffe Home and Studio

Notable people

  • Julian A. Chavez (1808–1879), rancher, landowner and elected official in Los Angeles, California
  • Georgia O'Keeffe American Artist.

References

1. ^{{cite web | title=2010 Census Gazetteer Files - Places: New Mexico | url=http://www2.census.gov/geo/docs/maps-data/data/gazetteer/2010_place_list_35.txt | publisher=U.S. Census Bureau | accessdate=October 20, 2017}}
2. ^{{GNIS|928674|Abiquiu}}
3. ^Gonzales, Moises (Winter 2014), "The Genizaro Land Grant Settlements of New Mexico," Journal of the Southwest, Vol. 56, No.4, pp. 588-592
4. ^Gonzales, pp. 583, 588-589
5. ^Brooks, James F., Captives and Cousins: Slavery, Kinship, and Community in the Southwest Borderlands, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, p. 68
6. ^Gonzales, pp. 588-591
7. ^"Pueblo de Abiquiú--a Genizaro Community," New Mexico History,  , accessed 25 Feb 2019
8. ^ 
9. ^[https://www.jstor.org/stable/3816035 LeRoy R. Hafen and Antonio Armijo, Armijo's Journal,Huntington Library Quarterly, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Nov., 1947), pp. 87-101, Published by: University of California Press,DOI: 10.2307/3816035]
10. ^Maddrey, Joseph (2016). The Quick, the Dead and the Revived: The Many Lives of the Western Film. McFarland. Page 182. {{ISBN|9781476625492}}.
11. ^{{cite web|title=The Last Outlaw (TV 1993)|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110307/|work=IMDb|accessdate=7 June 2011}}
12. ^{{cite web|title=On the Set : Weathering 'Earth 2'|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1994-11-13/news/tv-62002_1_nbc-series}}
{{Rio Arriba County, New Mexico}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Abiquiu, New Mexico}}

3 : Census-designated places in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico|Census-designated places in New Mexico|Old Spanish Trail (trade route)

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