Lindsay Montgomery - Comanches and Genízaros in Taos
Dr. Lindsay Montgomery is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Arizona where she teaches and writes about colonialism, mobility, and indigenous ontology. Dr. Montgomery received a Bachelor’s degree in Anthropology and Human Rights from Columbia University in 2008 and completed her Ph.D. in anthropological archaeology from Stanford University in 2015. Her dissertation research focused on Ute, Apache, and Comanche encampment practices and iconographic traditions in seventeenth and eighteenth century New Mexico. Her current research explores the historical relationships between nomads and New Mexicans and how these relationships are manifested materially and immaterially.

▶︎
Matthew Liebmann - Archaeology of the 1680 Pueblo Revolt

▶︎
Gregorio Gonzales - Comanches and Genízaros in Taos

▶︎
Genízaro Ethnogenesis, Emergence, and Futurism

▶︎
Jon Ghahate's Presentation on the Pueblo Revolt

▶︎
Mimbres: History and Politics, Then and Now

▶︎
New Book Shares Genízaro Slavery History in New Mexico

▶︎
Apache Terror | The Comanche “War of Extermination” that DESTROYED the Apache

▶︎
Los Comanches de la Serna

▶︎
Zuni Artist Phil Hughte | New Mexico PBS

▶︎
Cipriano Vigil: Músico de la Gente

▶︎
Native Voices Episode 2 - Taos Pueblo

▶︎
Robert Torrez - THE 1847 REVOLT: THE BEGINNING OF MODERN TAOS

▶︎
Crypto-Jews in New Mexico

▶︎
Los Comanches

▶︎
Why Do We Call Them Kivas? with Dr. Steve Lekson, Dr. Susan Ryan, and Lyle Balenquah

▶︎
Cultural Perspectives of New Mexico - Larry Torres

▶︎
Ute, Comanche, and Pueblo Interaction in the Northern Rio Grande

▶︎
Stephen Lekson - A History of the Ancient Southwest

▶︎
Surviving Columbus: First Encounters | New Mexico PBS

▶︎
