Middle Village (Halona Idiwan’a)

E360067

Middle Village (Halona Idiwan’a) is the traditional central pueblo of the Zuni people in western New Mexico, recognized for its historic adobe architecture and enduring cultural and religious significance.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Middle Village (Halona Idiwan’a) canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historic place
pueblo
traditional settlement
architecturalStyle adobe architecture
pueblo architecture
associatedWith Zuni ceremonial calendar
Zuni clan system
associatedWithReligion Zuni traditional religion
country United States of America
surface form: United States
county McKinley County
culturalHeritageStatus important Zuni cultural landscape
culturalRegion Ancestral Puebloans
surface form: Puebloan Southwest
culturalSignificance central village of Zuni people
ethnicGroupAssociated Zuni people
hasBuildingMaterial adobe
stone
hasCulturalSignificanceFor Zuni people
hasFeature kivas
multi-story adobe dwellings
plazas
religious structures
hasHistoricContinuity pre-contact Zuni settlement patterns
hasPlanningPattern plaza-centered layout
hasUrbanForm compact clustered dwellings
heritageType traditional Zuni pueblo
indigenousTo Zuni people
inhabitedBy Zuni people
isTraditionalCenterOf Zuni culture
Zuni religious life
Zuni social life
languageCommunity Zuni language
locatedIn McKinley County, New Mexico
United States of America
surface form: United States

Zuni Pueblo
western New Mexico
nativeName Halona Idiwan’a
partOf Zuni Reservation
surface form: Zuni Indian Reservation
region southwestern United States
surface form: American Southwest
religiousSignificance Zuni ceremonial center
state New Mexico
timeDepth prehistoric origins as a Zuni settlement
usedFor ceremonial activities
community gatherings
residential purposes

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Zuni Reservation contains Middle Village (Halona Idiwan’a)