Wide Ruins, Arizona

Wide Ruins is a chapter of the Navajo Nation and a census-designated place (CDP) in Apache County, Arizona, United States. The population was 176 at the 2010 census.[3]

Wide Ruins, Arizona
Wide Ruins
Coordinates: 35°25′10″N 109°29′38″W
CountryUnited States
StateArizona
CountyApache
Area
  Total0.39 sq mi (1.01 km2)
  Land0.39 sq mi (1.01 km2)
  Water0.00 sq mi (0.00 km2)
Elevation
6,263 ft (1,909 m)
Population
 (2010)
  Total176
  Estimate 
(2016)[2]
N/A
Time zoneUTC-7 (MST)
FIPS code04-82810
GNIS feature ID0013740

Geography

Wide Ruins is located at 35°25′10″N 109°29′38″W (35.41959, −109.49408).

According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of 0.39 square miles (1.0 km2), all of it land.[3]

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.
U.S. Decennial Census[4]

History

Jilhaal and Kin Naazinii (Upstanding House)

A mix of oral legend and archaeology suggest that singer, and warrior/ runner Jilhaal(not easily translated, refers to a war club) came to the Ganado-Wide Ruins area in the early 18th century. It is believed that he traveled extensively and lived amongst the Puebloan people along the Rio Grande, and migrated with many of them to the refuge of Dinetah at the start of the Spanish invasion and occupation of modern-day Arizona and New Mexico.

In Jilhaal, it is also believed, came many of the cultural, architectural and agricultural influences to the greater Ganado-Wide Ruins region. Research suggests that Jilhaal contributed to the construction of fortifications to the north and south, notably in the hills east of Wide Ruins, 15 miles to the southeast of Ganado. Archaeologist David M. Brugge offers that Jilhaal "might have been a local headman of the mid-1770s, possibly a refugee from Awatobi, considering his clan(Tachii' nii) and his move to Black Mountain, a refuge of Tobacco Tachii' nii people from Awatobi." Oral history research suggests that he inhabited "Wide Ruins, (meaning the Anasazi site) and, a few miles north up Wide Ruins Wash, at" the citadel of "Kin Naazinii (Upstanding House)"; if not contributed to its construction – with the help of elder Daalgai – "a Navajo fortified 'pueblito' that archaeologists date at 1720–1805 (NLC, site S-MLC-UP-L; Bannister and others 1966:8; Navajo Nation 1967:263, 271, 285; Gilpin 1996)." Thus, Jilhaal is believed to have traveled between here "north to Canyon de Chelly" regularly.

Oral histories tells of a Jilhaal who carried "gigantic arrows, and had enormous feet. The sight of his footprints struck terror in his enemies. Some say he was a hunter who could run down deer; others say he knew various healing and war ceremonies. Some say he was of the Red Streak into Water (Tachii' nii) clan and later moved to Black Mountain." His fame amongst Navajo oral history is well known amongst various historical families. "Some of his attributes may reflect late pre-" Hispanic "iconography (big feet, for example, a common petroglyph motif). These pre-" Hispanic " associations of Jilhaal, together with the idea that Wide Ruins was some kind of 'boundary' place between Hopi and Zuni zones ..., makes one wonder if the north-south travel corridor through Wide Ruins to Canyon de Chelly could have been a late 'everyone's land' as conceptualized by LaBlanc (1999:70, 333) between settlement clusters" much older.[5]

Kin Naazinii Fortress

According to oral history, "Kin Naazinii was built as a fortress, with [defensive] slits in the walls for shooting arrows at enemies. People lived around the site and on top of the hill." The fortress was used as a citadel and "refuge when enemies were detected in the area. Some elders lived south of the site, including one named Daalgai, who helped build the fortifications" with Jilhaal. "Four stones deep were used (apparently meaning wall thickness). ... A passage underneath existed, "where one would crawl in and upward. This was the means of entry." It has since collapsed. "The defensive strategy was employed against "Utes and White Mountain Apaches. There was a goat corral in the rocks (or rincon?) below the fortress. The architecture provided good shield; modern in technology, it provided that those inside would not be a casualty by arrow shot. Hogans(homes) were constructed around the citadel for peace time use. Kin Naazinii Spring, located further up the canyon, was used as a water resource for the citadel. Oral legend suggest that a coyote had dug it out. At one point in the citadel's history, an ancient massacre occurred at Kin Naazinii. It is said that bones fragments were scattered around about the location, as well as leather, bridles, and other items.[5]

Scholars postulate that Kin Naazinii was positioned off circuitous routes from Zuni Pueblo to Hopi Mesa Pueblos, so that local Navajos could watch such travel without being seen. Surrounding hilltops provided views of the terrain that the ancient trails crossed.

References

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