
New Mexico: From Prehistory to the Pueblo Revolt
Jan 31, 2026
A journey through New Mexico’s deep past, from irrigation-making Pueblo builders and Chacoan mega-sites to drought-driven migrations. Spanish incursions, myth-chasing entradas, and brutal clashes that founded colonial towns feature next. The narrative culminates with the coordinated Pueblo uprising that expelled Europeans and reshaped regional power.
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Rumors Of Cibola Sparked Deadly Expeditions
- Early entradas were driven by rumors of wealthy northern cities like Cibola after Cabeza de Vaca's tale.
- Sam recounts Marcos de Niza sending Estevanico ahead, Estevanico's death at Hawica, and Niza's embellished report back to Mexico.
Coronado's Violent Search For Gold
- Francisco Vázquez de Coronado led a major 1540 entrada of ~400 Spaniards and 1,500 indigenous allies searching for riches.
- Sam describes Coronado's seizure of Zuni and Tiwa pueblos, use of steel, horses, and the first sustained European-indigenous war in the future U.S.
Crown Acted To Stop Rogue Colonizers
- Official colonization followed illegal entradas to prevent rogue actors destabilizing frontier regions.
- Sam explains the Crown commissioned Juan de Oñate in 1595 to preempt criminal colonists who had already attempted New Mexico conquest.



