"The Customs of our Ancestors": Cora Religious Conversion and Millenarianism, AD 1722-2000

Using documentary and ethnographic information, an analogy is drawn between conquest-period (ca. 1722) and contemporary political and religious institutions among the Cora (Nayari) people of the Sierra del Nayar in the Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico. Fundamental to these political and religious i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Coyle, Philip E.
Language:en_US
Published: University of Arizona, Department of Anthropology 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/110871
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-110871
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1108712015-10-23T04:24:44Z "The Customs of our Ancestors": Cora Religious Conversion and Millenarianism, AD 1722-2000 Coyle, Philip E. Cora millenarianism religious conversion ancestor worship ethnohistory Using documentary and ethnographic information, an analogy is drawn between conquest-period (ca. 1722) and contemporary political and religious institutions among the Cora (Nayari) people of the Sierra del Nayar in the Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico. Fundamental to these political and religious institutions-then and now-is the idea that the deceased elders of the Cora people continue as active agents in the lives of living Coras, particularly as the seasonal rains. Based on this analogy, an inference is extended from contemporary attitudes of Cora people in the town of Santa Teresa toward the political and religious customs that mediate their relationships with these deceased ancestors, to the possible attitudes of Cora people toward their religious customs at the time of the Spanish conquest of the region. Millenarian fear, an anxiety that is widespread in Santa Teresa as contemporary Coras confront their own failure to adequately continue the customs of their ancestors, is inferred to have been a motivating factor in the Cora's acceptance of Catholic religious customs during the colonial period of their history. 1996 Article Arizona Anthropologist 12:1·30. © 1996 Association of Student Anthropologists Department of Anthropology. University of Arizona. Tucson. AZ 85721 1062-1601 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/110871 Arizona Anthropologist en_US University of Arizona, Department of Anthropology
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Cora
millenarianism
religious conversion
ancestor worship
ethnohistory
spellingShingle Cora
millenarianism
religious conversion
ancestor worship
ethnohistory
Coyle, Philip E.
"The Customs of our Ancestors": Cora Religious Conversion and Millenarianism, AD 1722-2000
description Using documentary and ethnographic information, an analogy is drawn between conquest-period (ca. 1722) and contemporary political and religious institutions among the Cora (Nayari) people of the Sierra del Nayar in the Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico. Fundamental to these political and religious institutions-then and now-is the idea that the deceased elders of the Cora people continue as active agents in the lives of living Coras, particularly as the seasonal rains. Based on this analogy, an inference is extended from contemporary attitudes of Cora people in the town of Santa Teresa toward the political and religious customs that mediate their relationships with these deceased ancestors, to the possible attitudes of Cora people toward their religious customs at the time of the Spanish conquest of the region. Millenarian fear, an anxiety that is widespread in Santa Teresa as contemporary Coras confront their own failure to adequately continue the customs of their ancestors, is inferred to have been a motivating factor in the Cora's acceptance of Catholic religious customs during the colonial period of their history.
author Coyle, Philip E.
author_facet Coyle, Philip E.
author_sort Coyle, Philip E.
title "The Customs of our Ancestors": Cora Religious Conversion and Millenarianism, AD 1722-2000
title_short "The Customs of our Ancestors": Cora Religious Conversion and Millenarianism, AD 1722-2000
title_full "The Customs of our Ancestors": Cora Religious Conversion and Millenarianism, AD 1722-2000
title_fullStr "The Customs of our Ancestors": Cora Religious Conversion and Millenarianism, AD 1722-2000
title_full_unstemmed "The Customs of our Ancestors": Cora Religious Conversion and Millenarianism, AD 1722-2000
title_sort "the customs of our ancestors": cora religious conversion and millenarianism, ad 1722-2000
publisher University of Arizona, Department of Anthropology
publishDate 1996
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/110871
work_keys_str_mv AT coylephilipe thecustomsofourancestorscorareligiousconversionandmillenarianismad17222000
_version_ 1718096518484852736