Chapter II: THE ORIGIN AND PREHISTORY OF THE NAVAHO
As yet there is little to be said definitely about the origin of the
Navaho, and of the number of years they had been in the Southwest when
the Spanish first saw them in the early part of the seventeenth century.
A study of the language, culture, and physical type uncovers such
composite and heterogeneous characteristics as to lead most
investigators inevitably to the conclusions that the Navaho and their
close linguistic relatives, the Apache, are not native to the Southwest,
but entered it about two hundred years before the Spanish. During this
period they intermarried with the Pueblo people and adopted features of
their religion and material culture. Where they came from originally and
the history of their migration may never be known definitely. Evidence
points to the north as the homeland, for in a vast area in northwestern
America there are tribes which speak languages similar to that of the
Navaho and Apache groups.
The following sections will summarize the scanty data, and the
reconstructions of the history and origin of the Navaho, which have been
based on them. As one sometimes encounters references to the direct
Asiatic origin and affinities of the Navaho, it may be well to go into
the matter in some detail to get an anthropological perspective of the
situation.
RACE Like all other Indians of North and South America, the
Navaho belonged to the race of Homo sapiens known as Americanoid,
which has many similarities in physical appearance with the Mongoloid
race. The Mongoloids inhabit a wide region in the eastern hemisphere
ranging from the fringes of central Europe across north and central Asia
to the islands of the Pacific. The Americanoids and the Mongoloids both
have black straight hair on the head, very little hair on the face and
body, dark eyes, and high cheekbones. The skin varies from yellow to
brown. How is one to interpret these and other striking physical
resemblances? Wissler (1922:349) answers the question: "That the New
World native is a direct descendant of the Asiatic Mongolian is not to
be inferred, for the differentiation is evidently remote; what is
implied, is that somewhere in the distant past the Asiatic wing of the
generalized type diverged into strains, one of which we now know as
Mongolian, and another as American."
The representatives of this American strain began to leave the
Asiatic mainland at least as early as 15,000 years ago in families or
bands. Most of them, apparently, crossed over by way of Bering Strait
and then slowly spread over the continent. Inbreeding took place in
these small groups, and the different physical types of the American
Indian gradually evolved.
In the Southwest the problem of race is complex. Goddard (1931:18)
writes, "... the inhabitants of the Southwest are of two, perhaps three,
physical types which have either migrated into the region from different
places and at different times, or which, after long residence in the
Southwest, have resulted from the breaking up of a previously uniform
type." The Navaho are very much mixed, although the mixture is not
recent, according to Hrdlicka (1900:340). What they looked like when
they entered the Southwest is unknown. Now they are very closely related
to the Pueblos in blood and possibly to the Yuma-Mohave peoples
(Hrdlicka, 1908:134). The Apache groups, who are linguistic cousins of
the Navaho, represent a distinctly different physical type from them and
most of their other neighbors (Hrdlicka, 1908:8).
Because of their mixed type it is well-nigh impossible to define the
physical characteristics of a typical Navaho. Observers from Spanish to
modern times are in harmony only in agreeing that the Navaho are good
looking, with well formed features and bodies, and pleasant, merry, and
intelligent expressions. Matthews (1910) noted among them a variation
between the gentle, nondescript type of face usually seen among the
Pueblos, and the haughty, sculptured features characteristic of the
Plains. On the other hand, Hrdlicka, who visited different parts of the
reservation between 1898 and 1905, wrote in his paper, "Medical and
Physiological Observations among the Indians of the Southwestern United
States and Northern Mexico" (1908:9): "Notwithstanding their mixed
Indian origin, the Navaho possess a characteristic physiognomy, a great
degree of uniformity in physical features, and practically the same
habits throughout their extensive territory." As the title reveals, he
observed the Indians of a wide region, a procedure which would make the
Navaho stand out as a distinct type in comparison with other
Southwestern tribes despite the local variability in practices and
appearances of different Navaho groups. In giving the measurements of
height and skin color of the Navaho in his paper on Navaho physique
(1900), Hrdlicka remarked on their wide variability. Thus, height varies
from 162.4 to 183.0 centimeters for men, and 148.4 to 166.3 centimeters
for women. Skin color ranges all the way from light tan to dark
sepia.
Usually the features are well shaped with a moderately projecting
jaw and straight nose. The teeth are prominent. As among most Indians,
the hands, feet, and legs are smaller than in Whites. Though the hair is
black, exposure to the sun and too frequent washing with yucca-root suds
bleaches it to a rusty brown and red. Both men and women wear their hair
long and without bangs, except when influenced by Whites. The men
commonly knot their hair up and wear a brightly colored bandana around
the head. The Navaho are somewhat hairier than most American Indians,
perhaps because of mixture with the Mexicans; many men cultivate
straggly moustaches. A decided peculiarity is the very broad head,
flattened at the occiput. This flattening, regarded as beautiful by the
Navaho, is neither congenital nor intentional. It results from laying
the baby on a flat cradle with only bark for a pillow. (See photographs,
Matthews, 1897.)
POPULATION Whereas other tribes have not survived the shock of
contact with white culture, the Navaho have thrived, seemingly turning
every disadvantage of harsh climate, poor soil, and indifferent
treatment to fortune and strength. The old, who often appear more aged
than their years because of their many wrinkles, are hardy and work
vigorously almost to the day of death. Everyone is industrious and
children learn to herd sheep and to weave when they are scarcely beyond
the toddling state. Reichard, in "Spider Woman," tells the story of a
child genius, Atlnaba, who at five was weaving fine blankets.
To date it has been impossible to take an accurate census of the
Navaho, so the figures must be taken as only approximate. Added to the
rough terrain and the scattering of the Navaho far outside the
reservation into Hopi and Zuni territories, the census taker must
struggle with names and addresses. A Navaho will have at least a summer
and winter residence, perhaps with several lean-tos between them. He is
reluctant to give his name when directly questioned; if pressed, he may
give a "a school name," provided he has one, or a name by which he is
known to white people. His friends usually call him by a name that is
personally descriptive, while his immediate family, if the old customs
have been followed, also know another name, suggestive of war, which is
revealed only on certain great occasions. Formerly, too, the Navaho
custom of polygamy complicated the census taker's task.
The Indian Bureau (Survey of Conditions, Pt. 34:17534) states that
the Navaho population is increasing at the rate of 1.08 per cent a year.
Hrdlicka (1908:37) observed a slightly higher proportion of males than
females, which he thought might be due to a higher rate of birth of male
children. The absence of vital statistics makes this impossible to
check. At the present time the health of the people is most affected by
tuberculosis, trachoma, and malnutrition of children, due to smoky,
crowded hogans; dirt; poor diet; and too much dependence on native
medicine men for the treatment of disease. The isolation in which the
Navaho dwell protects them somewhat from the ravages of epidemics,
although the influenza epidemic of 1918 took a heavy toll; and Matthews
(1897) also mentions disastrous epidemics which occurred during his
time.
In 1867, when the Navaho were in captivity at Bosque Redondo, the
American officers counted 7,300. Many more had escaped the drag-net to
find refuge as far west as among the Havasupai in the Grand Canyon
region. There were thought to be more than 12,000 Navaho in all.
Stragglers came into Bosque Redondo during the winter to increase the
total in captivity until, in 1869, the officers counted close to 9,000
as receiving supplies on their return to the old reservation. In the
succeeding years the population steadily increased. In 1900 the estimate
was 21,826; by 1934 the figure was set at 42,989--almost double the
number. The estimate for 1937 is customarily given as 50,000.
LANGUAGE The problem of Navaho language is as knotty as that
of the physical type. No American language can be traced back ultimately
to any Asiatic form as was the physical type, because no old language
links between the two hemispheres have been established as yet.
Identical simple words do occur occasionally in some of the languages of
Asia and North America, but these are far too few to establish a genetic
relationship. The similarities are due perhaps to chance only.
The first man to enter North America certainly had a language when he
arrived, over 10,000 years ago or more. Even the most primitive species
of man, Sinanthropus, who lived thousands of years before Homo
sapiens evolved, had speech centers developed in his brain,
indicating that some kind of system of articulate communication existed
among human beings.
Dr. H. Hoijer, a specialist in linguistics at the University of
Chicago, and an authority on the Southern Athapascan speech family to
which the Navaho language belongs, writes in a letter to the National
Park Service: "It seems quite clear from the evidence of the modern
American Indian languages that the earliest immigrants to America were
already divided into several distinct linguistic stocks. The present day
languages are so divergent, in many cases, as to make it improbable that
these divergences were developed in the relatively short time the
Indians have been in America. It is quite possible, however, that there
were fewer language groups among the original migrants than among the
American Indians of today and that the majority of the sub-groupings of
modern Indian language stocks were developed in America."
He goes on to say, "The Navaho language, together with the languages
of the several Apache tribes of the Southwest and the Plains, forms a
homogeneous linguistic stock or family called Athapaskan. A linguistic
stock may be defined as a group of languages which, because of numerous
and systematic similarities in vocabulary and grammatical structure, are
assumed to be descendants of a single earlier language. The Southern
Athapaskan stock, as a whole, shows considerable similarity to two other
large groups of American Indian languages: the Pacific Coast Athapaskan
stock (which includes such languages as Hupa and Mattole) and the
Northern Athapaskan stock (in western Canada and Alaska). The
similarities between these three groups have led linguists to construct
the larger Athapaskan stock. Navaho is, therefore, in origin, related to
languages spoken on the Pacific Coast, in western Canada, and in the
interior of Alaska."
Thirty years ago the theory that the homeland of the parent language
of the Southern Athapascan stock lay in the northern area of North
America had little concrete evidence to support it. Goddard's
counter-theory (1906) was equally plausible at the time. It is presented
here as a matter of historical information and to illustrate the
advancement in our concrete knowledge of Athapascan linguistics since
1906.
Goddard maintained that the Athapascans might once have occupied a
continuous area over northern and western America, and than been pushed
back or absorbed by intrusive immigrants of other language stocks. This
is exactly the opposite of the established theory that the Athapascans
were the intrusive tribes.
In 1915 Sapir published a preliminary report with evidence to
support his belief that the hypothetical parent language of the
Athapascan which he called Na-Dene, grew in the Northwest, and
that the different dialects and languages of the Athapascan tongue were
offshoots of it. Boas (1920) continued to maintain, however, that we
still had not advanced far beyond the theoretical stage in determining
the character of original American languages, especially of the
Athapascan.
Hoijer writes that "the controversy ... is no longer significant,
There can now be no doubt that the original homeland of the Athapaskan
speaking peoples was in the North and that the Pacific Coast peoples and
the Southern Athapaskan speaking peoples are migrants from the North at
a relatively recent date. This is shown clearly by the fact that both
the Pacific Coast stock and the southern Athapaskan stock are
homogeneous groups; whereas the Northern stock is, in reality, divisible
into at least four distinct sub-stocks. Dr. Fang-Kuei-Li's work on the
northern languages has proved this point (see the International Journal
of American Linguistics, Volume VI, No. 1 and Volume VII, Nos. 3 and
4)."
Hoijer adds: "The theory of northern origin means that centuries ago
the ancestors of the present Athapaskan speaking peoples lived somewhere
in northwestern Canada or Alaska. Gradually this group may have expanded
in numbers and, perhaps by the necessity of the food quest or by
pressure of other immigrants from the Asiatic mainland, they moved
southward. At some period in their history, not more than a thousand or
fifteen hundred years ago, two groups broke off from the main group and
wandered still farther south. One of these presumably followed the
Pacific coastline into California and Oregon, and the other skirted the
eastern edge of the Rockies and ended up in the Southwest. The first of
these groups became the modern Pacific Coast stock and the second the
Southern Athapaskan family."
Though the culture and the physique of the Navaho have been changed
through Pueblo contact, Goddard (1906:351) pointed out that there is
"very slight, if any, evidence of admixture of language, certainly none
with non-Athapascan tongues." Amsden (p. 125) was informed by Sapir, who
is at present making an intensive study of the Navaho language, that
"the Navaho speech is Athapascan of surprising purity, considering the
obvious vicissitudes of tribal development." For the most part, the
Navaho have coined new descriptive terms for unfamiliar objects on the
basis of their former vocabulary instead of twisting American, Spanish,
or other alien words to Athapascan pronunciation. See also the
"Ethnologic Dictionary" by the Franciscan Fathers, and Father Haile's
"Navaho Grammar."
The older theory, held by Matthews and Hodge, was that the language
showed much mixture, especially of Pueblo. Hodge (1890) assumed this
largely on the basis of a myth in the origin legend. The myth relates
that the Navaho clans, which increased through the adoption of alien
bands, met with one such foreign group, thought by Hodge to be Tanoan
(Pueblo). The chiefs decided to choose which of the two groups had the
plainest and most expressive words. The winning language was to be
standardized as the tribal speech. The myth relates that the foreign
tongue was chosen, and its vocabulary imposed on the Navaho.
The difficulties in accepting this myth as history are many. First,
of course, is the recent linguistic study which shows the language to be
relatively free of foreign influence. Second, changes in a language are
usually unconscious and not deliberate. The grammarians organize their
societies to protect or to sanctify the vocabulary, grammar, and
pronunciation of the common man only after the forms have been
standardized by common usage. Goddard (1906:351) considers the talceas
pure myth invented by the Navaho to explain archaic words in their
ceremonial vocabulary, whose original meaning they had forgotten.
As Hoijer stated above, the Navaho language, together with the
language of the several Apache tribes who live in the Southwest and in
the Plains, constitutes a homogeneous linguistic family called Southern
Athapascan. This must not be taken to mean, however, that the languages
spoken by the Navaho and by the many groups forming the Eastern and
Western divisions of the Apache are mutually intelligible. This is not
the case. The point is emphasized in view of Hodge's clever but somewhat
misleading summary of the situation in which he quoted ("Land of
Sunshine," 1900: footnote, p.438), the Navaho maintaining that the
Apache speak bad Navaho, while the Apache declared that the Navaho
language was merely poor Apache. Apache and Navaho coming in contact
with each other might recognize occasional words which are similar in
their languages, but that is about all. As a matter of fact, except for
the Chiricahua and Mescalero Apache, the members of the Apache group
could not understand the members of another (information from
Hoijer).

PLATE II. NAVAHO CAMP SCENE
EARLY NAVAHO CULTURE What kind of culture the Navaho had
before coming into the Southwest and just after their arrival, we can
only guess in our present state of knowledge. They must have had at
least those simple weapons and household tools which the ancestors of
the Indians brought with them from Asia. The northern Athapascans of
today, who proudly call themselves Dene (meaning "the people"),
exactly as the Navaho always refer to themselves, never got far beyond
the primitive life of the ancients. Swanton (1910:110) suggests that if
there ever was a mode of life which all the now widely scattered
Athapascans once had in common before their dispersal from the north, it
was probably something like that of these northern Denes, who lived
poorly by hunting, fishing, and the gathering of wild vegetables and
seeds.
RELATION TO SOUTHWESTERN CULTURES The basic structure of the
Navaho culture is similar to that of the Apache groups of the Southwest.
This culture has been affected by contact with the Pueblo tribes. In his
"Preliminary Report on the Ethnography of the Southwest" (1935), Dr.
Ralph Beals has a convenient summary of the cultural groupings in the
Southwest which brings out, incidentally, the position of the Navaho in
relation to the other tribes.
Dr. Beals states (1935:4): "The modern tribes of the Southwest
present striking differences in culture. It is, in fact, almost
impossible to speak longer of a Southwestern culture area....
"The first and most obvious group is the Pueblos, those Indians who
live in large communities... (characterized by) massive and permanent
architecture and who subsist almost entirely from agriculture. This
group, although homogeneous in culture in contrast to the other
Southwestern tribes, displays certain internal differences and speaks a
diversity of languages.
"Next in the cultural scale are the rancheria tribes, characterized
by more or less scattered villages of unpretentious architecture,
lacking stone or adobe constructions, and with less dependence upon
agriculture than is the case with the Pueblos. This group probably
includes the Opata of northeastern Sonora (about whom little is known;
they possibly belong with the Pueblo group), the Pima and Maricopa on
the Gila River in south central Arizona, the Papago, extending south of
the Gila River into Sonora, and the Cocopa, Yuma, Mohave, Walapai, and
Havasupai in ascending order from the mouth of the Colorado River to
Cataract Canyon. The last two rather shade into the next cultural
group.
"The third group may be termed marginal agriculturists, from the
fact they had no fixed habitations and practised agriculture in only the
most sporadic and desultory fashion. They include the western Apache of
Arizona and southeastern New Mexico, the Yavapai of western Arizona, the
Navaho, and the Paiute groups of southern Utah.
"The final group is the least clearly defined. For convenience the
tribes of this group may be called namads. The really coherent feature
of this grouping is the close Plains affiliations of the members. All
are predominantly hunting peoples without fixed habitations and
depending originally, to some extent, upon the buffalo for subsistence.
Probably some of them practised agriculture in a rudimentary fashion,
but in the main they more resemble typical Plains Indians than they do
any of the Southwestern groups. They include Kiowa, Kiowa-Apache,
Comanche, Southern Ute, and Eastern Apache...."
Formerly it was believed that the Navaho had learned all their
higher arts of life from the Pueblo tribes after their arrival in the
Southwest. There is a growing tendency among anthropologists today
toward the opinion that the Navaho may have acquired, or become familiar
with, some of these arts during their assumed stay in the Plains before
entering the Southwest. Thus far, there is very little concrete evidence
to favor this opinion, but research along these lines has been
stimulated, and we may some day have more facts to support the logic of
this theory.
Pottery is one of the arts the Navaho almost certainly learned in
the Plains rather than from Pueblo teachers. The Navaho are not good
potters like the Hopi and Zuni. Their efforts, according to Kidder
(Reichard, 1936:169), are more like potsherds from archeological sites
in western Nebraska than like any southwestern pottery. The Navaho are
also like the Plains in their methods of hunting, their type of sod
houses, free use of gestures, and their former abundant use of wild
seeds. Also there is something very reminiscent of Plains attitudes in
the bold courage and versatility of the Navaho, which is in decided
contrast to the conservatism of the Pueblos. Nevertheless, the influence
of the Plains tribes cannot compare with the stimuli given to Navaho
culture by contact with the people of the Pueblos, who were far superior
to the newcomers in religion and material culture.
The possibility that the Navaho are descendants of the prehistoric
peoples of the Southwest does not have the support of archaeology. In
the Navaho reservation there are great ruins, such as Pueblo Bonito in
Chaco Canyon on the eastern side of the Lukachukai mountain range, and
the ruins in Canyons de Chelly (a corruption of an Indian name,
popularly pronounced "shay") and del Muerto on the western side of the
mountains. There is no evidence that the Navaho drove out the
inhabitants of these great cliff dwellings and caused their abandonment.
The ingenious tree ring calculations by Douglass (1929) have shown that
Pueblo Bonito was occupied as late as 1167 AD, while the western ruins
at Canyon de Chelly were inhabited in the thirteenth century.
Archaeological discoveries do not give any indication that the Navaho
knew these cliff-dwellings when they were inhabited, though a few of the
Navaho believe that their ancestors were cliff dwellers. The Navaho
apparently came after the dwellings been abandoned.
It is a disputed point whether the Navaho and Apache came into the
Southwest at the same time, forming a single group, which later broke up
and became differentiated; or whether, as Hodge (1895) assumes, the two
had separated before coming into the Southwest, and the Apache were
already in southern Arizona when the Navaho straggled into the San Juan
River area. When the Spanish came, they classed both tribes under the
name of Apache. They distinguished the various bands according to
location--thus, the "Apaches de Xi1a" (Gila River), and the "Apaches de
Nabajo." A third theory is that of Bandelier (1890:175), who believes
that the Navaho are the main body of the two, while the Apache are
"ramifications, degenerated and vagrant, of the Navajos." As mentioned
earlier, the two tribes are distinct in physical type now despite the
similarity of dialects. Although both tribes are camp dwellers, the
Navaho culture is more complex.
It is obvious that the origin and prehistory of the Navaho tribe is
an open question, with abundant theorizing on scant data. Future
archaeological and comparative cultural studies among the Navaho,
Plains, Pueblo, and Canadian tribes will furnish us with better
information on this early period. Unfortunately, we must still depend
largely on the accounts of Navaho life as portrayed in their origin
legend, or in the archaic customs preserved in ceremonies, to form a
picture of their mode of life in pre-Spanish times.
THE ORIGIN LEGEND OF THE NAVAHO The Navaho themselves have no
record, other than their myths, of their ancient life before they
entered the Southwest. The long legend (Matthews 1897), which serves
them as the semi-mythological history of their tribe, begins with the
origin of their gods in the twelve divisions of the underworld, and the
emergence of the ancestors of the Navaho and Pueblo tribes into the
upper world at a place in the San Juan Mountains, in the northern part
of Navaho territory. The land of the Navaho was bounded by four sacred
mountains, one at each of the cardinal points. The mountains considered
sacred depend somewhat on the area inhabited by the Navaho who tells the
story. Generally the mountains are Pelado Peak in the east, Mt. Taylor
in the south, San Francisco Mountain in the west, and San Juan Mountain
in the north. These boundaries are still recognized, though some of the
Navaho have moved beyond them.
"First Man" shaped the world into its present appearance, while
"Changing Woman," the benevolent and eternally young goddess of the
Navaho, taught the people how to live and made the clans from her own
body. These clans became the nucleus of Navaho social life. The original
number was increased by the formation of new clans from descendants of
captives and slaves, as well as from small, vagrant bands of Pueblo,
Apache, Ute, and Mexican people.
The myth also tells us that the original clans lived very simply
along the San Juan River. The men hunted rabbits, rats, prairie dogs,
and other small game with throwing sticks or a wooden bow. The arrows
were reeds tipped with wood. Deer were captured by driving them over a
precipice, or by using steep-sided box canyons as corrals.
For vegetable food, the people depended on wild fruits and berries,
and on the harvest of maize from their little farms in the valleys. Food
for winter was stored in niches in the cliff walls or in pits. The hut
was semi-underground and covered with brush and mud. Woven cedar bark
served as door curtains. People slept about the fire under the smoke
hole, and protected themselves from draughts with blankets of cedar
bark, yucca fibre, or a number of skins sewed together. The clothing was
primitive. Men tied the forlegs of two large skins together and tossed
them over a shoulder, while the women wore two webs of cedar bark, which
served as a front and back apron. They wore moccasins of yucca fibre or
cedar bark only for long trips. A headdress was fashioned of weasel and
rat skins with the tails hanging behind; or it was decorated with
artificial horns of wood or with the horns of a female mountain sheep
shaved thin.
No one would think of accepting a tribal tradition like the Origin
Legend as the true history of the Navaho; myth and fact are almost
inextricably interwoven in it. Also there are many different versions of
it; and each narrator varies it to give his own clan a noble history.
However, a tradition like this may contain nuggets which inspire the
scientist to investigate new research leads. Such was the case when Boas
(1897) read the Origin Legend and noticed that certain of the folktales
in it about boy heroes and mischievous Coyote were similar to stories in
northwestern America. His comparisons led him to the conclusions that
the Navaho tales were "undoubtedly derived from the same sources from
which the northern tales sprung. Most of them are so complex and curious
that, taken in connection with the known northern affiliations of the
Navaho, they must be considered as a definite proof of either a survival
of ancient myths or as proving a later connection."
Hodge (1895) in his well-known paper, "The Early Navaho and Apache,"
attempted to determine how much true history; there was in that later
section of the Origin Legend which tells of the addition of alien groups
to the original Navaho clans in the Southwest. His method was to
correlate parts of the tradition, which concerned historic times, with
Spanish record of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Hodge's paper
is important because he brought together in 1895 practically the sum
total of our still fragmentary knowledge of Navaho events. With the data
he attempted to reconstruct a connected account of Navaho history in the
Southwest. Some of his broad conclusions are still accepted--for
instance, that the Navaho are recent comers into this southern region,
arriving about 600 or 700 years ago; that at first they were a small
weak group which grew by assimilating bands from other Indian tribes.
Early in the seventeenth century, they were strong enough to become a
menace to the Pueblos and their neighbors. The arrival of the Spaniards
gave an impetus to their development because of the sheep, cattle, and
horses introduced for the first time into the New World by Coronado in
1540 and Onate in 1598. The Navaho stole herds from the Pueblos and
began their career as shepherds.
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