pueb·lo Village, town or group of people.
An Indian or Mexican village of the southwestern U.S. (Spanish, village, literally, people, from Latin populus [1808])
The non-Indian towns established to help colonize Alta California.
a member of any of about two dozen Native American peoples called pueblos by the Spanish because they live in villages built of adobe and rock
a communal village built by Indians in the southwestern United States
a corporation under the laws of New Mexico and as a corporation of New Mexico is authorized to carry on its business and affairs in accordance with State law
a traditional American Indian building with several stories which often houses an entire village
a traditional dwelling of several Native American tribes in the southwest USA, also a collective name for this nation
A mission or Indian settlement.
(Pooh-EB-lo) Spanish Village; hence the Indians who built the large dwellings in the Southwest. Also applied to the dwellings themselves.
(Pooh-EB-loh) Spanish Village or people.
A term for a Native American town or community that encompasses not only the physical town but the cultural aspects of a tribe. Also used as a term for describing a group of nineteen tribes in the Southwest (Puebloans).
adjective] of the Pueblo Indians; Native Americans who live today primarily in northern New Mexico in pueblo dwellings
the name given by the Spanish to Indian towns of the Southwest composed of multistoried, flat-roofed adjacent buildings constructed of adobe
A Spanish term meaning "town." Currently, this word is applied both to a style of building (stone-and-adobe pueblo) and to particular Indian groups (the modern Pueblo Indians and the ancient Pueblo people).
A Spanish term meaning "town." Currently, this word is applied both to a style of building (adobe-and-stone pueblo) and to particular Indian groups (the modern Puebloans and the ancestral Puebloans). The ancestral Puebloan people are also called the Anasazi.
A type of Indian village constructed by some tribes in the southwestern United States. A large community dwelling, divided into many rooms, up to five stories high, and usually made of adobe. Also, a Spanish word for town or village.
town created under Mexican or Spanish rules
('town dwelling') An alternate description for reservation, or exclusive domicile for Native Americans, used mostly as a descriptive in New Mexico; pueblos are communities, and life revolves around the plaza, where ceremonial dances are often held; pueblos also have their own government and law enforcement agencies
town. Name give by the Spaniards to the Río Grande and several other Indian nations of present-day New Mexico who built multi-storied houses of adobe (dried mud).
Spanish for “people” or “town.” Now, the traditional people of the Rio Grande and the Jémez River valleys as well as Laguna, Ácoma, Zuni, and Hopi.
Pueblos are traditional communities of aboriginal Americans in the southwestern United States of America. The communities are recognized worldwide for adobe buildings, which are sometimes called "pueblos," although some pueblos only have a few of these buildings still standing. The Castilian word pueblo, evolved from the Latin word populus ("people"), means "village".