| Author/Contributor(s): | Schmader, Matthew F.; Flint, Richard; Shirley, Flint Cushing; Jojola, Theodore S. |
| Publisher: | UNM Press |
| Date: | 4/1/2025 |
| Binding: | Hardcover |
| Condition: | NEW |
By the winter of 1540, increasing tensions and resistance spilled over into violence in America’s earliest named war, the Tiguex War, which occurred in an area settled by ancestors of today’s Rio Grande Pueblos. The largest and most intact battle site of that fierce conflict is known as Piedras Marcadas Pueblo, situated within present-day Albuquerque, New Mexico. Fighting back against Coronado’s crossbows and muskets with stone-tipped arrows and slingstones, the Puebloans mounted a courageous defense of their largest village, piling rocks on rooftops and hurling them down at attackers. Hundreds of artifacts found at Piedras Marcadas reveal the life-and-death contest for survival that occurred within those ancient walls and plazas.