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The Kizh or Kit’c ( ) are an Indigenous people of California, the historically and ethnographically documented lineal descendants of the Mission Indians of San Gabriel. They belong to a group commonly known by the Spanish name Gabrieleño. The name Kizh is a shortened version of the first name used to represent all of the Gabrieleño-speaking People of the Los Angeles Basin, Kichereno, which "is not a place name, but a tribe name, the name of a kind of people." (Harrington 1986: R129 F345; cited in McCawley 1996, 43). The name ''Kizh'' is derived from a reference by a Canadian ethnologist to one of the numerous villages in the Los Angeles Basin from records at ''Mission Viejas, Kizheriños'' (The People of the Willow Houses). Hugo Reid documented at least 28 Gabrielino villages.


Language

The Kizh language is a Takic language, part of the Uto-Aztecan language family. In 1811, the priests of Mission San Gabriel recorded the Gabrieleño language and at least three dialects, including Fernadeño, Nicoleño, and Cataleño. These early language maps can be used to best define the precontact tribal boundaries.


Settlements

In January 1982, the U.S. Corps of Engineers issued a report describing and identifying numerous Gabrieleño villages.


Contemporary groups

Today, the Kizh Nation have their tribal offices and museum in Covina, California. The Kizh Nation's homeland consists of Los Angeles County, Orange County, and parts of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, and includes about 500 members.


Name

During
colonization 475px, Map of the year each country achieved List of sovereign states by date of formation, independence. Colonization (British English: colonisation) is a process of establishing occupation of or control over foreign territories or peoples f ...
, the people were referred to as Gabrieleño, a name derived from Mission San Gabriel Arcángel, a Spanish mission built on their land. The name Tongva has been criticized by the Kizh Nation, who see it as coming into existence in 1905 from the accounts of one ethnographer, C. Hart Merriam. They claim that the name ''Kizh'' has origins in the earliest records of contact as a name the people used to refer to the
willow Willows, also called sallows and osiers, of the genus ''Salix'', comprise around 350 species (plus numerous hybrids) of typically deciduous trees and shrubs, found primarily on moist soils in cold and temperate regions. Most species are known ...
branch, tule, and brush houses they lived in, and was used widely by various ethnographers in the 19th and early 20th century. Due to strategic branding, ''Tongva'' remains the most widely used name, gaining popularity in the late 20th century. The word ''Tongva'' was coined by C. Hart Merriam in 1905, sourced from a Gabrieleño woman, Mrs. James Rosemyre (), who lived around Fort Tejon, near Bakersfield. According to Ernie Salas, Merriam asked how to pronounce the name of a village, and misinterpreted her response, Toviscangna, as a tribal identifier. Unable to understand or pronounce the word Toviscangna, he abbreviated it as "tonve" or "tonvey" in his field notes; by his orthography, it would be pronounced , . Since tribal members referred to themselves primarily by their village name rather than a "national" or "pan-tribal" name, it is argued that Rosemyre was referring to her village name, not an overarching tribal name. From the perspective of the Kizh, ''Tongva'' was falsely promoted in the 1980s and 1990s until the point that it reached favorability. According to C. H. Merriam, the term Kij (or Kizh) was a "term invented by obert GordonLatham for Indians of San Gabriel (based on numerals published by De Mofras)." As stated by Kizh Nation (Gabrieleño Band of Mission Indians) tribal spokesperson Ernest Perez Teutimez Salas, ''Tongva'' gained notoriety in 1992 when the tribe was approached by non-Native people who expressed that in order to save a sacred spring in
Santa Monica Santa Monica (; Spanish language, Spanish: ''Santa Mónica'') is a city in Los Angeles County, California, Los Angeles County, situated along Santa Monica Bay on California's South Coast (California), South Coast. Santa Monica's 2020 United Sta ...
from a major development project and receive federal recognition that the tribe needed to use the name "Tongva." Although Salas had reservations about doing so and had never heard the term before, the tribe hesitantly supported the decision in order to save the spring, which was saved under the “Gabrieleño/Tongva Springs Foundation.” About a year later, contact with these individuals was cut off. As stated by Nadine Salas, "we used to have get-togethers, and then it was like they got what they wanted; they didn’t want anything to do with us anymore.” Kizh Nation biologist Matt Teutimez stated, "When you just throw it out into the universe, and it sticks, you go with it, and that’s what happened with the Tongva." E. Gary Stickel observes that ethnologist John Peabody Harrington, who conducted extensive ethnographic work among the Southern California tribes, wrote in his notes (presently housed at the Smithsonian Institution archives) that the word ''tongva'' refers to where the Gabrieleño people ground their seeds on rocks, and that the noun must be accompanied by a positional prefix. Stickel writes that the term ''tongva'' has been used mistakenly to refer to the tribe "when, according to Harrington, it refers to what archaeologists call a 'bedrock mortar', which is a rock outcrop with depressions in it created by Indians pounding pestles into them to process acorns and other plant products."


Kizh

According to Andrew Salas, the name ''Kizh'' (pronounced Keech), sometimes spelled ''Kij'', comes from the first construction of Mission San Gabriel in 1771. The people of the surrounding villages who were used as slave laborers to construct the mission referred to themselves as "Kizh" and the Spanish hispanicized the term as "Kichireños", as noted by ethnographer J.P. Harrington's consultant Raimundo Yorba. The word Kizh referred to the houses they lived in, "most of which were dome-shaped and made with a framework of willow branches and roofed over with thatching." The neighboring ''ʔívil̃uqaletem'' ( Cahuilla) referred to the people as ''Kisianos'' or "people of the willow-brush houses," which has been cited as a potential source for the term ''Kizh''. Following the destruction of the original mission, the Spanish relocated the mission five miles north and began to refer to the Kizh as "Gabrieleño."
...Kizh for the Indians living near San Gabriel (i.e. Whittier Narrows area)... According to Harrington's (ethnographer J.P. Harrington) consultant Raimundo Yorba, the Gabrielino in the Whittier Narrows area referred to themselves as Kichireno, one of a bunch of people that lived at that place of San Gabriel which is known as Mission Vieja. Kichereno is not a place name, but a tribe name, the name of a kind of people.
In 1846, a Canadian scholar Horatio Hale used the term ''Kizh'' in a United States government report on “Ethnography and Philology.” Lieutenant Amiel Weeks Whipple, Thomas Ewbank, and William Turner used ''Kizh'' when publishing a “Report upon the Indian Tribes” in 1855 for the U.S. War Department. German scholar Johann Carl Eduard Buschmann used the term in a study on language in 1856 published in the German Royal Academy of Science. Further notable scholars who used ''Kizh'' throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries include George Bell (in 1856), Robert Gordon Latham (in 1860), Lewis H. Morgan (in 1868), Albert Samuel Gatschet (in 1877), Hubert Howe Bancroft (in 1883), Daniel G. Briton (in 1891), David Prescott Barrows (in 1900), and A. L. Kroeber (in 1907). In 1875, H. C. Yarrow stated that the name ''Kizh'' could not be verified at Mission San Gabriel, though later reports contradict his statement. He reported that the natives called themselves ''Tobikhar'' meaning Settlers and spoke the Spanish language more than their own. In 1885, Hoffman also referred to the natives as ''Tobikhar''. In 1900, David Prescott Barrows used the term ''Kizh'' and stated that use of the term ''Tobikhar'' was incorrect: "Mr. Gatschet is in error when he speaks of the Serrano and San Gabriel Indians calling themselves Takhtam and Tobikhar, respectively. The words are unknown as tribal designations among these Indians themselves, and precisely this point constitutes the objections to them.” This may be because of multilingualism at the mission; in 1811, the priests of Mission San Gabriel recorded 7 languages, due to the fact they deliberately imported workers from distant villages in an effort to minimize the organization of residence. The Kizh Nation has never denied the indigeneity of some that claim to be Tongva, but do deny they are lineal descendants of the Los Angeles Basin. Mission records show that along with the original inhabitants of the LA Basin (Kizh people), Luiseño-speaking,
Nahuatl Nahuatl ( ; ), Aztec, or Mexicano is a language or, by some definitions, a group of languages of the Uto-Aztecan language family. Varieties of Nahuatl are spoken by about Nahuas, most of whom live mainly in Central Mexico and have smaller popul ...
-speaking and Mayan-speaking people were baptized at Mission San Gabriel and are therefore "Gabrieleño". Therefore, the Kizh Nation considers them native and Gabrieleño, but not Native to the Los Angeles Basin and therefore not Kizh.


Gabrieleño

The Act of September 21, 1968 introduced this concept of the affiliation of an applicant's ancestors in order to exclude certain individuals from receiving a share of the award to the "Indians of California" who chose to receive a share of any awards to certain tribes in California that had splintered off from the generic group. The members or ancestors of the petitioning group were not affected by the exclusion in the Act. Individuals with lineal or collateral descent from an Indian tribe who resided in California in 1852, would, if not excluded by the provisions of the Act of 1968, remain on the list of the "Indians of California". To comply with the Act, the Secretary of Interior would have to collect information about the group affiliation of an applicant's Indian ancestors. That information would be used to identify applicants who could share in another award. The group affiliation of an applicant's ancestors was thus a basis for exclusion from, but not a requirement for inclusion on, the judgment roll. The act of 1968 stated that the Secretary of the Interior would distribute an equal share of the award to the individuals on the judgment roll, "regardless of group affiliation". ''Gabrieleño'' was the name assigned to the Indigenous peoples surrounding Mission San Gabriel by the Spanish. It was not a name that the people ever used to refer to themselves. However, it remains a part of every official tribe's name, either as "Gabrieleño" or "Gabrielino." Because of the disagreement between tribal groups surrounding usage of the term ''Tongva'', ''Gabrieleño'' has been used as a mediating term. For example, when Debra Martin, a city council member from Pomona, led a project to dedicate wooden statues in local Ganesha Park to the Indigenous people of the area in 2017, there was considerable conflict over which name, ''Tongva'' or ''Kizh'', would be used on the dedication plaque. A tentative agreement was reached to use the term ''Gabrieleño'', despite its colonial origins.


See also

* Mission Indians


References


Notes


Citations


Bibliography

* {{cite book , last1=Loew , first1=O. , article=Analytical report upon ethnology of Southern California and Adjacent Regions , title=Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers to the Secretary of War , date=1876 , publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office , location=Washington, D.C. , url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZJ1TAAAAYAAJ , pages=556–57


External links


Kizh Nation
Gabrieleño Band of Mission Indians, official website Tongva Mission Indians Indigenous peoples of California History of Los Angeles History of Los Angeles County, California History of Orange County, California San Gabriel, California Unrecognized tribes in the United States Uto-Aztecan peoples