WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS VERIFIED LATEST UPDATE
The story of Juanotilla of Cochiti in Etulain's Chapter 4 shows that "gender" in
Hispanic life in colonial New Mexico was
a social construction, defined differently in various times and places and according to
individual status
Judging by the amount possessions passed to heirs in her will, how was
Juanotilla of Cochiti's economic standing portrayed?
relatively well-off
According to the colonial the census of New Mexico in 1790 (which did not
include Indians), the majority of Spanish speaking people living in New Mexico by
then were
people born in New Mexico, many of mixed blood.
In colonial New Mexico, Spanish officials awarded land grants in which of the
following ways?
Pueblo land grants.
Community land grants
Private land grants
All of the above
In colonial New Mexico, the main occupation of the people was
farming.
, The networks of irrigation ditches used by both the Spanish and Pueblo peoples
were known as
acequias.
New Mexican Hispanic villagers who hunted Buffalo in the off-season after the
harvest was gather were known as
Ciboleros.
Practically the only way to acquire outside and/or manufactured in colonial New
Mexico was to receive them
over the El Camino
over the Old Spanish Trail.
over the Chihuahua Trail.
All of the above
After 1750, the Hispanic New Mexico folk art religious image-makers were known
as
santeros
In some isolated New Mexico mountain communities, the exit of the exit of
Franciscan priests and the organized Catholic Church gave rise to a localized
religious brotherhood known as the
Penitentes.
The most immediate and probably most important effect Mexican Independence
had on New Mexico was
the end of Spain's prohibition on outside trade with New Mexico.