Riveting presentation!!! I grew up in Tucson, AZ & I remember walking around old, old smelly (musty) adobe ruins in a playground where arrowheads were just laying on top of the ground to pick up & take home. I remember seeing some Indians ride horses into downtown Tucson for their part in parades in all their finery. It was amazing to me & I just love learning about this history with the native peoples. Their turquoise & other beautiful stones… pottery…etc. I moved at 9 yrs old when my mother remarried to a military man & I’ll always hold dear these desert 🌵 lands. I live in OK now which has its own stories.Fascinating! I’m 60 now & I have time to learn these wonderful accounts of the history of our world. Thank you uTubers!!!
My 5th great uncle Nicolas Galindo was on the Anza expedition. His grandson had one of the first land grants at lake Merced. They are buried at Santa Clara mission
I loved this presentation. I teach 4th graders California History. We create a timeline of the Native Americans from pre-European contact to present day. Every year, I learn more about the injustices that they endured.
Loved your presentation. I am now in my 80s. I attended public schools in California. In elementary school, we were told that the padres came up from Mexico and built beautiful missions. The Indians were converted to Christianity and civilized. Nothing was said about forced labor and disease.
Exactly. In San Fernando they have murals and art renderings that show the Spanish nobles and Indigenous labor as if they are one happy family. When we realize no one other than the religious clergy cared if the missions were built or not, then we have think critically and realize Indigenous labor was enslaved.
@@BobU2b1 her heart is good Bob. plus, you know that the mormons were high-jacked by the occult free masons with an agenda to advance westward. you know that the ol' us fed government was also a very big sponsor of all the attempted genocides here in cali ....some attempts 100% successful, some only 40% to 80% successful.
@@BobU2b1 c'mon mr. rowell, you and i both know that the schools couldn't tell these truths because it would worry and scare everyone. so they just said disease came and measles wiped 'em out , etc the schools ain't gonna teach about the "sunset curfews" placed on the native here post 1849 ... any 'indian' (read first nation person) caught traveling after sunset could be locked up in something like the drunk-tank for a period of a full 72 hours if caught out after sundown. same with traveling between counties, an indian needed to have a permission slip signed by his/her mayor, lol. cannot makes this stuff up man. but the schools are most assuredly not going to be sharing this
this gentlemen does some excellent research. however, Queen Isabella had signed all orders into place which prohibited the killing of the native peoples. so, work and teaching of horticulture, etc., was the methodology. just as in mexico and the southwest. but! things became wild around the time that mexico got their independence from spain. nobody in mexican lands was any longer required to abide by the original orders of Isabella (who was deeply catholic in her heart). but it was not only the mexican men who would soon need an exorcism from the greed-spirit .... soon, many more men/invaders would come. some of the invaders even came here on assignment by the ol' u.s. federal government. some of those invaders were given particular assignments related to the eradication of the "indian problem." federally funded
As a Anthropology graduate from the University of San Bernardino and a six generation Calliforniano I really appreciated this presentation. In one of my classes on native Americans we covered one group in the San Diego area of Southern California called Kumeyaay/Diegueno. What is interesting in comparing this group with the central native groups is that they were a "seasonal round" substance hunting gathering group. Winter areas found them on the coast living off of sea foods and in the summer living in the mountains eating pinon nuts. They also spent time in northern area of Baja California. This adaptation to their environment appears to be extremely different from the Central and Northern California groups. I also read Anne Fishers book " Cathedral in the Sun ". She used the oral history of Isabella Meadows, the daughter of Carmel Mission Indian, to tell the life of the mission Indians in Carmel Valley. I am also the great grandson of Franciso Luis Boranda. His adobe in the State of California at Salinas was where my grandmother lived before they moved to Baja California.
@@admirationlakes8994 : I have not read any of his history of the Native Americans. I’ll have to give one of his books a read. I studied the Navajo and Hopi cultures in class and wrote a paper on the Yaqui culture in Mexico. I learned from the Yaquis survival from the Spanish invasion compared to the California indigenous groups was from their warrior system. Every male Yaqui was a warrior and met the Spanish military invasions with enough force to make every attempt very costly. The Yaquis were defending what they perceived to be their spiritual lands to defend to their death. They negotiated with the Spaniards from a position of strength. This their key for survival. On the other hand, it appears that the many California indigenous groups lack this strength to resist the Spanish Military.
My husband’s brother lives in Spain with his Spanish wife & their grown children + grandchildren. He’s a Czech decedent but his wife is pure Spanish blood. We’d love to go there some day & see that beautiful country with our own eyes.
great video was always curious about California during the colonial periods, its one of the former Spanish territories that I haven't learned too much about.
Correcto, pêro para estos “expertos” eso no lês interessa. Toda esa informacional de archivos tiraria por tierra su principal narrativa - exploration y “esclavitud” por parte de lós espanoles, invluyendo a Los Padres misioneros. 😂
Love this video. I was raised in Santa Barbara county. And lived at Tajiguis, Gaviota, and Olglvi. My sister is Chumash. She is 1 percent Polynesian. I have a degree in archaeology and worked with Hutash and Professor Erlanson in the 90s. My heart and soul are here. We are blessed. Thank you.
Interesting fact that your sister is 1 % Polynesian which would imply that you are as well. Many Polynesians came to our coastal regions in the early 1800's. I suggest you and her read Henry Dana's "Two Years Before The Mast". He dedicates a significant portion of his book to the Polynesians whom at the time were called Kanakas. (spelling ?) He described them in the most affectionate terms.
Fantástico recollection of facts, stories, tribal Peoples and the expansión of Europeans into the Native Americans. Amazing history and a wonderful way narrating the History of California Mark.
Excellent bur brief documentary. This period of discovery and settlement could involve a full course. I am 5th generation Californian, both sides of my family brought a small share of Native American. My parents both grew up in southern California. I attended 3rd grade in Monterey where this subject was taught as local history with local examples. I attended 4th grade in southern San Joaquin Valley- California history year- where my teacher was straight from Arkansas. I had to teach her California history, or should I say, correct her misinterpretation. I have have been a student of California history ever since; I am now 77.
There are Mexicans out there who are direct descendants of the conquistadors and Aztecs, but overall, a majority of us are descendants of European peasants/immigrants and random Indian tribes. It's the same thing as some gringo claiming he's a descendant of George Washington even though his ancestry comes from like Poland or Germany lol
@@R-BURQUENO Those Chicanos are less likely chicano and probably straight linked to D.F. (which is Mexico City). but, the Aztec way had become very perverse, violence towards women and children, eating of human hearts, etc. they/the Aztec were originally shunned/exiled and went trekking southbound until they landed in the swamplands/marshes of mexico city. getting back to why they were exiled, it's because they were committing too many sins against their own wives and children, no respect for their neighbors & they failed to keep/honor the old ways. so they got kicked out
Why do you say that spanish did not know about the diversity of the tribes while you are saying the documents for locate and name the tribes are the missions documents ? It is a little contradiction, don't you?.
My first experience of you, pretty balanced and occasional surprises. Well done from what I watched. I’m thoroughly a fan of Asian immigrants “First Peoples” Land management practices. CRH, Fire Management Officer/ Division Chief Retired, 1976-2020.
Native californian, I admit I romantisize the californio lifestyle, I feel bad for the indians, but to live in cali before the white settleres arrived must have been magical
Thanks you this is just the type of extra Information I was seeking on the history of the California coast. Thanks to the presentation and the algorithm.
thanks for giving this talk. it's important that we know what came before us + I fully commend you for this talk. If I had been able to attend in person, then surely I would have put on some food for everyone in attendance. it's worthwhile, it matters, and plus those maps you held on to are so cool
As someone who's been interested in history all my life, it just dawns on me that perhaps the reason most students and adults grumble that they don't like history, is that it's so damn depressing! And on the flip side maybe we need to REINFORCE how depressing it is, so that we don't keep doing the same awful things to each other.
This is a truly impressive presentation - outstanding job, Mark! Fun, accurate, comprehensive, and so much more. I am a historian and so wish I could communicate as effectively as you.
From a historian perspective, the absolute best narrative on the subject of California History. Absolutely incredible. Beautiful. Only 6K views. Sad. California has 40 mil population. Pathetic.
And here’s me watching it from Bonny Scotland 😂 because I just like history. Very very interesting. Do Americans get taught this kind of stuff in school out of curiosity
@@jkerr962 If folks from Scotland were here I'm sure everyone would vote to ensure it makes the curriculum. Land of Scotland knows the dangers of not preserving the truths of the past (no matter how ugly they were/are).
can you imagine what it feels like to be of a first-nations family here in cali ... where all the refugees from allllllllll over the world have come to try their luck .... and yet nobody knows or yet would rather remain ignorant of the land in which they daily dwell. I'm with you Mike; it is pathetic. (food for thought = probably how we also ended up with this crazy super majority in the assembly and the senate these last few years)
Hylkema would be unable to substantiate the indigenous population claims that he makes in this video. Spain did not have colonies; California was a part of the Viceroyalty of Nueva España which encompassed what is now Guatemala, México, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah, Colorado, all the way to Alaska and the Philippines. As a matter of fact, the administrative capitol of Philippines was Acapulco. All indigenous people during Spain's empire period were on an equal footing as peninsular Spanish. Most of the town councils within the American parts of the empire, from California to Argentina were comprised of indigenous men and matter were discussed in indigenous languages; that's why the first printed books in America were dictionaries on Nahuatl, Quechua, and Aymara - long before places such as England or France had printed grammar books. The first printed grammar book was in Spain by Antonio Nebrija in 1492. During Spain'e empire period enslavement of indigenous people was forbidden on penalty of execution; the viceroy of Ecuador was executed for attempting it. The decree of 1503 encouraged Spanish men to marry indigenous women ; read the Laws of Burgos of 1510, where you will find the non-snarky information that Hylkema either doesn't know or ignored.
As for Utah there were no real connections of the local tribes there to the viceroyalty of New Spain other than map claims. The first European baby born in Utah actually was from none other than the Mormons as late as the 1840s! However the Ute tribe, much less the Shoshone, were never under Spanish or Mexican control due to those pesky Apache and Comanche limiting the reach of the Spanish frontier.
@@Mcfunface : The birth of aa foreign baby doesn't legitimize presence in someone else's territory. Spain's form of empire building was carefully albeit in measured steps in the northern reaches of the vice-royalty. If the Spanish language is something that you can understand, the following link may help you understand the difference of Spanish empire building versus the haphazard ones employed by the English, French and Dutch. ua-cam.com/video/9eUPMObT8AY/v-deo.html
Our mission was rebuilt twice ,it was founded in 1787 ,destroyed by an earthquake in 1812, moved to the northwest side of the valley and reestablished . Abandoned , left to the winds of change fell in to ruin .Then the CCC rebuilt it into the ,what to me ,is one of the best places to have as a playground while growing up ,LA PURISIMA CONCEPCIO'N DE MARIA SANTISIMA
this is one of the best things ive watched. i was born and raised in millbrae and we learned a lot of this around 4th grade. had field trips to sanchez adobe and carmel mission and a lot of other places that we learned about california history. this was great to watch
The social system is ESTAMENTAL in spanish (not castas), It is an open system for everybody, anyone can goes and study as military or priest to obtain nobilty by meritocracy... The catas system is a racial and closed system, never a Hispanic system was closed and racist.
The Spanish guest would have starved if not for the hospitality of our Indigenous ancestors… not so lucky for the English who starved to death at Jamestown for other reasons
Great presentation. I was enthralled the entire video. Informative with some funny as well. I like that. My ancestors are from the Monterey Bay Area. I would love to pick your brain. But I’m certain you haven’t the time for that. But just one question…..maybe two My ancestry says I have a greatx8ish grandmother who was a native of an area around where Watsonville is today. Could you tell me the name please of the tribal Indians in Watsonville by a river? My Monterey family have the name Jose Feliciano Graxiola and Georgiana Hayden Graxiola. Both Mexican and was the constable in Monterey. And George Hayden who arrived with Commodore Sloats fleet of 3 ships at Monterey in 1848ish as well as gggggrandfather Austin and my ggggrandmother Boronda or Feliz Created Monterey Jack Cheese with an old house Jack. I find your knowledge seems so correct and you truly seem to care. So if you can tell me the name of the natives small tribe in Watsonville. I was told my ancestors were called Ohlone and the other was Salinian. Something like that. Sorry if I’m vague.i don’t have my family’s info close by. I’m just so curious. Thank you, Annie Oh the second question is books. Where can I find a good book about the peoples of that area? OkBye 😊
I have traced my ancestory to the ice age migration. We originated in Saberia when Mongolian & Japanese began our lenage around 270AD. I tried back 69 generation. When my ancestors migration down to California & settled in Los Angeles & San Gabriel. I was told by my grandmother we are part of Tongva & Chumesh. My great grandparents rest place is at the SG mission. However I am not registered as a tribe member because I don't remember or have my roll number. I am continuing my quest & reserves.....
Went to California schools in the 1960’s and 70’s. The amount of info taught on the natives in amounted, in total, to an hour lecture. In other words the natives weren’t important
Gold discs sparked not only the Spaniards' imaginations but also their greed. You didn't mention their secret weapon for subjugating the Aztecs: the extinct breed of aggressive Cuban dogs. I learned this from another video. I loved this video because it seems you are quite knowledgeable and I learned some things.
Thats interesting about the Cuban dogs. I am still listening to his presentation as I am texting you, he just said "you can check in but you can never leave ". Clearly a reference to the song Hotel 🏨 California by the Eagles, such a lovely place? for the indigenous peoples, their time, life sentences, likely not a lovely experience. Small Pox was a very effective Biological weapon, developed by the far from natural 🇨🇭 Swissys. Generously applied to blankets, then presented as gifts 🎁 to the indigenous guests of the Hotel California's many locations. Soon Hotels had a spike in vacancies & trouble finding free labour's. 🤔 problem solved, there is gold in there hills advertising campaign began.
Mark Hylkema is the Santa Cruz District Archaeologist and Tribal Liaison for California State Parks where he manages cultural resources within the District’s 32 park units. He offers public lectures occasionally. With 38 years professional experience in California archaeology, he is a Registered Professional Archaeologist (RPA) and has worked on archaeological projects throughout the state. His primary research emphasis and publications are focused on ancestral Native American cultures of the San Francisco Bay area, and early Spanish Colonial Period history. Mark is also an Adjunct Professor of Anthropology at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, and has taught anthropology, archaeology, and Native American Studies courses at Santa Clara University, University of California at Santa Cruz, De Anza College, Ohlone College and Cabrillo College. Mr. Hylkema was President of the Society for California Archaeology (search scahome.org) during the 2015/2016 term and has contributed a great deal to the regional archaeological literature.
You are the greatest historian narrator thank very i know that its extensive to cover it up in ine session you mention Vallejo county but you didnt mentioned the last mexican general Vallejo his cuartel full restored i visited and us a great historical site the geberal Vallejo recived the wagon donner expedition Right there close to the event of California got occupied by american government But letters from general Vallejo to santa anna Mexican emperor President With full of detailed The wagoners arrivals any ways general Vallejo didnt shot any guns the Occupation happened in a peaceful manner with a wine glass he said salud to Call it quittens . Thank very much irs rich your narration
In deed California was.. Mexico's. Territory. General Vallejo last Mexican. General in north California. His cuartel quarters Still intact in Vallejo county . Iam proud of my ancestors that wave war against invaders from east coast. David Bowie gang in Alamo. Texas
Actually the Indigenous people that were on the Channel Islands were Kizh - Tongva - Gabrielino also the indigenous people of Los Angles area. My ancestors.
Yes I believe this is standard 4th or 5th grade curriculum in the state. My best friend from years ago remembered most of the Spanish explorations just from grade school right up into early adulthood. It really is incredible to think about just how much raw land the Spanish Monarchy and Catholic Church were able to conquer internationally from the Philippines by Asian to parts of continental U.S. (Montana for “mountains” got its name from the conquistadors) all the way to the eastern Atlantic in the other ocean!
After the reconquista of the Iberian peninsula Spain had a thousands of unemployed soldiers. After Columbus returned from the Caribbean the King of Spain licensed Conquistadors to to the Americas. To conquer the natives and send back riches
@@rodrigodiaz9472 Diaz, do not have a worry ... neither the Spanish nor the Mexican government ever offered $5 per indian scalp (woman or child), plus $200 for an indian scalp if it was of a man. However, the u.s. federal government did. When the Californio put on a big rodeo y fiesta all were invited even the poor and lowly. were there jokes make about "los indios" the natives, yes sure they were ... but there was also lots of respect and a big need to keep them around and close because they knew all routes n resources. it was much more symbiotic than the liberal media might paint it. the u.s. federal government, you see, would much rather that the populace be 'angry' with Spain + Catholicism ... using that disdain as a smokescreen for their own federally funded atrocities.
You are correct. He didn't specify that San Diego mission was being founded by a splinter group of their expedition as the rest of the team continued to Monterey. He implies it a little when he mentions the starving sailors back in San Diego harbor.
During this time, the 1800s over to the east, Arizona, New Mexico and western Teaxas were fighting the indians before and after the Civil War, when the real Indian Wars started by the US Army...the Indians lose again.
i'll have to rewind, but he digressed from going to deep into one topic involving the miwok of the northbay marin miwok i think he said it, but he also said it was a long story. it is a long story. but gotta admit that Marino was tough stuff, and very healthy and strong to be able to live into old age still working at the presidio boat yard
Attention focused on Monteray-SF i think. Miwok is spoken around 15 minute mark just before 'black ship' comment. Very important tribe, huge and Im guessing made up of many language groups also. Miwok is dominant in my foothill communities Sonora- south that i know.
If the Spaniards were to encounter people, they would spread the word of God and Jesus, how ironic is it, that the Native Americans were already closer to God than the Spaniards.
looks like they were inviting the natives to assimilate into the spanish colonial culture . interesting. that means those natives must have descendants even if they did not keep thier culture or tribal ways that much.
@@ZealotZabay promised land?? Are we talking about the same people? Stone Age people that where introduced to cattle for the first time, just take a look to the demographics of indigenous people in the Spanish America, multiplied by six in two hundred years!
Unbelievably insensitive "joke" made: "the misson cemetery for the native people who check in, but can't check out". The "first colonial foothold in Upper California" and "first of the 21 missons" was not San Carlos in 1770. It was Mission San Diego de Alcala, established July 16, 1769.
I was surprised myself when he stated it was "San Carlos" in 1770 as it is a well known fact that it was Mission San Diego. For an "expert" he sure is lacking knowledge on this historical fact!
Have you read Columbus and the book of prophecies ? The book is over 1,000. Columbus brought a Hebrew speaking translator with him because he was looking for the lost tribes of Israel. The 4th part. The LORD will bring a nation against you from far away, from the ends of the earth, like an eagle swooping down, a nation whose language you will not understand,
Riveting presentation!!! I grew up in Tucson, AZ & I remember walking around old, old smelly (musty) adobe ruins in a playground where arrowheads were just laying on top of the ground to pick up & take home. I remember seeing some Indians ride horses into downtown Tucson for their part in parades in all their finery. It was amazing to me & I just love learning about this history with the native peoples. Their turquoise & other beautiful stones… pottery…etc. I moved at 9 yrs old when my mother remarried to a military man & I’ll always hold dear these desert 🌵 lands. I live in OK now which has its own stories.Fascinating! I’m 60 now & I have time to learn these wonderful accounts of the history of our world. Thank you uTubers!!!
I love tucson
My 5th great uncle Nicolas Galindo was on the Anza expedition. His grandson had one of the first land grants at lake Merced.
They are buried at Santa Clara mission
It’s really a small world, yes?
Ii a
I loved this presentation. I teach 4th graders California History. We create a timeline of the Native Americans from pre-European contact to present day. Every year, I learn more about the injustices that they endured.
Loved your presentation. I am now in my 80s. I attended public schools in California. In elementary school, we were told that the padres came up from Mexico and built beautiful missions. The Indians were converted to Christianity and civilized. Nothing was said about forced labor and disease.
... and if you were any kind of self-respecting Xian nationalist, that's the way you'd want to keep it.
Exactly. In San Fernando they have murals and art renderings that show the Spanish nobles and Indigenous labor as if they are one happy family. When we realize no one other than the religious clergy cared if the missions were built or not, then we have think critically and realize Indigenous labor was enslaved.
@@BobU2b1 her heart is good Bob. plus, you know that the mormons were high-jacked by the occult free masons with an agenda to advance westward. you know that the ol' us fed government was also a very big sponsor of all the attempted genocides here in cali ....some attempts 100% successful, some only 40% to 80% successful.
@@BobU2b1 c'mon mr. rowell, you and i both know that the schools couldn't tell these truths because it would worry and scare everyone. so they just said disease came and measles wiped 'em out , etc
the schools ain't gonna teach about the "sunset curfews" placed on the native here post 1849 ... any 'indian' (read first nation person) caught traveling after sunset could be locked up in something like the drunk-tank for a period of a full 72 hours if caught out after sundown. same with traveling between counties, an indian needed to have a permission slip signed by his/her mayor, lol. cannot makes this stuff up man. but the schools are most assuredly not going to be sharing this
this gentlemen does some excellent research. however, Queen Isabella had signed all orders into place which prohibited the killing of the native peoples. so, work and teaching of horticulture, etc., was the methodology. just as in mexico and the southwest. but! things became wild around the time that mexico got their independence from spain. nobody in mexican lands was any longer required to abide by the original orders of Isabella (who was deeply catholic in her heart).
but it was not only the mexican men who would soon need an exorcism from the greed-spirit .... soon, many more men/invaders would come. some of the invaders even came here on assignment by the ol' u.s. federal government. some of those invaders were given particular assignments related to the eradication of the "indian problem." federally funded
I could listen to this guy for days. Amazing.
As a Anthropology graduate from the University of San Bernardino and a six generation Calliforniano I really appreciated this presentation. In one of my classes on native Americans we covered one group in the San Diego area of Southern California called Kumeyaay/Diegueno. What is interesting in comparing this group with the central native groups is that they were a "seasonal round" substance hunting gathering group. Winter areas found them on the coast living off of sea foods and in the summer living in the mountains eating pinon nuts. They also spent time in northern area of Baja California. This adaptation to their environment appears to be extremely different from the Central and Northern California groups. I also read Anne Fishers book " Cathedral in the Sun ". She used the oral history of Isabella Meadows, the daughter of Carmel Mission Indian, to tell the life of the mission Indians in Carmel Valley. I am also the great grandson of Franciso Luis Boranda. His adobe in the State of California at Salinas was where my grandmother lived before they moved to Baja California.
are you yet been introduced to the work of Prof. Benjamin Madley?
@@admirationlakes8994 : I have not read any of his history of the Native Americans. I’ll have to give one of his books a read. I studied the Navajo and Hopi cultures in class and wrote a paper on the Yaqui culture in Mexico. I learned from the Yaquis survival from the Spanish invasion compared to the California indigenous groups was from their warrior system. Every male Yaqui was a warrior and met the Spanish military invasions with enough force to make every attempt very costly. The Yaquis were defending what they perceived to be their spiritual lands to defend to their death. They negotiated with the Spaniards from a position of strength. This their key for survival. On the other hand, it appears that the many California indigenous groups lack this strength to resist the Spanish Military.
Very interesting! Thank you!
A mí me encanta el significado de California y porqué los españoles le pusieron ese nombre, Saludos desde España.
Saludos de California
My husband’s brother lives in Spain with his Spanish wife & their grown children + grandchildren. He’s a Czech decedent but his wife is pure Spanish blood. We’d love to go there some day & see that beautiful country with our own eyes.
Thank you, Mr. Hylkema. Your presentation is as delightful as it is illuminating.
great video was always curious about California during the colonial periods, its one of the former Spanish territories that I haven't learned too much about.
pre Civil War period is a bit more interesting and colorful, lots of chaos.
Devén estudiar los archivos mexicanos hai esta toda la historia de alta California
Correcto, pêro para estos “expertos” eso no lês interessa. Toda esa informacional de archivos tiraria por tierra su principal narrativa - exploration y “esclavitud” por parte de lós espanoles, invluyendo a Los Padres misioneros. 😂
Love this video. I was raised in Santa Barbara county. And lived at Tajiguis, Gaviota, and Olglvi. My sister is Chumash. She is 1 percent Polynesian. I have a degree in archaeology and worked with Hutash and Professor Erlanson in the 90s. My heart and soul are here. We are blessed.
Thank you.
Me: SB, Gaviota, Las Cruces and Buellton. Hopelessly Santa Barbara County enamorada!
Wait, Tajiguis? Is this indigenous or Portuguese?
@@kathyjoanderson6430 Tajiguas. I apologize for the spelling error. 🙂
Interesting fact that your sister is 1 % Polynesian which would imply that you are as well. Many Polynesians came to our coastal regions in the early 1800's. I suggest you and her read Henry Dana's "Two Years Before The Mast". He dedicates a significant portion of his book to the Polynesians whom at the time were called Kanakas. (spelling ?) He described them in the most affectionate terms.
Fantástico recollection of facts, stories, tribal Peoples and the expansión of Europeans into the Native Americans. Amazing history and a wonderful way narrating the History of California Mark.
Excellent bur brief documentary. This period of discovery and settlement could involve a full course. I am 5th generation Californian, both sides of my family brought a small share of Native American. My parents both grew up in southern California. I attended 3rd grade in Monterey where this subject was taught as local history with local examples. I attended 4th grade in southern San Joaquin Valley- California history year- where my teacher was straight from Arkansas. I had to teach her California history, or should I say, correct her misinterpretation. I have have been a student of California history ever since; I am now 77.
Excellent documentary.
Just what I was looking for sir.
We are descendants of the Spanish conquistadors. We are still here. And today we love our country and we will fight to protect her.
Most "Chicanos" don't embrace their Hispano roots, just their "Aztec" roots. Yet they speak Spanish 😏
There are Mexicans out there who are direct descendants of the conquistadors and Aztecs, but overall, a majority of us are descendants of European peasants/immigrants and random Indian tribes. It's the same thing as some gringo claiming he's a descendant of George Washington even though his ancestry comes from like Poland or Germany lol
@@R-BURQUENO Those Chicanos are less likely chicano and probably straight linked to D.F. (which is Mexico City). but, the Aztec way had become very perverse, violence towards women and children, eating of human hearts, etc. they/the Aztec were originally shunned/exiled and went trekking southbound until they landed in the swamplands/marshes of mexico city. getting back to why they were exiled, it's because they were committing too many sins against their own wives and children, no respect for their neighbors & they failed to keep/honor the old ways. so they got kicked out
@@R-BURQUENO Los indígenas no son solo aztecas también de distintos pueblos.
@@R-BURQUENO Aztec was a minority in the Viceroyalty...
This absolute gold popped up in my recommended, very interesting stuff, especially as a Californian myself. Thank you
Thank you for this. And yes we are still here :)
Amazing documentary, very epic story of the exploration of ancient California.
wow, you should check out jon levi videos on this subject. Epic is not even the word.
all of 300 yrs is 'ancient' apparently...
Why do you say that spanish did not know about the diversity of the tribes while you are saying the documents for locate and name the tribes are the missions documents ? It is a little contradiction, don't you?.
Muy bueno
Mark, this was very good - thank you for sharing - really enjoyed it and learn quite a bit.
My first experience of you, pretty balanced and occasional surprises. Well done from what I watched. I’m thoroughly a fan of Asian immigrants “First Peoples” Land management practices. CRH, Fire Management Officer/ Division Chief Retired, 1976-2020.
Native californian, I admit I romantisize the californio lifestyle, I feel bad for the indians, but to live in cali before the white settleres arrived must have been magical
I bet it was even more magical then
I'm a descendant of the Yaqui Indians, a Uto-Aztecan tribe... And this documentary was very informative..
Absolutely fascinating, thanks!!😊
I am now over 60 thank you for your presentation ...
Thanks you this is just the type of extra Information I was seeking on the history of the California coast. Thanks to the presentation and the algorithm.
thanks for giving this talk. it's important that we know what came before us + I fully commend you for this talk. If I had been able to attend in person, then surely I would have put on some food for everyone in attendance. it's worthwhile, it matters, and plus those maps you held on to are so cool
Excellent talk: thank you very much.
As someone who's been interested in history all my life, it just dawns on me that perhaps the reason most students and adults grumble that they don't like history, is that it's so damn depressing!
And on the flip side maybe we need to REINFORCE how depressing it is, so that we don't keep doing the same awful things to each other.
This is a truly impressive presentation - outstanding job, Mark! Fun, accurate, comprehensive, and so much more. I am a historian and so wish I could communicate as effectively as you.
From a historian perspective, the absolute best narrative on the subject of California History. Absolutely incredible. Beautiful. Only 6K views. Sad. California has 40 mil population. Pathetic.
And here’s me watching it from Bonny Scotland 😂 because I just like history. Very very interesting. Do Americans get taught this kind of stuff in school out of curiosity
Because Californios don't respect their Spanish roots. Just their Aztec roots.
We New Mexicans Embrace BOTH👍
@@jkerr962 We do get taught for the most part. Unfortunately school age children don't care. Especially Hispanic kids. To involved in street B.S.
@@jkerr962 If folks from Scotland were here I'm sure everyone would vote to ensure it makes the curriculum. Land of Scotland knows the dangers of not preserving the truths of the past (no matter how ugly they were/are).
can you imagine what it feels like to be of a first-nations family here in cali ... where all the refugees from allllllllll over the world have come to try their luck .... and yet nobody knows or yet would rather remain ignorant of the land in which they daily dwell. I'm with you Mike; it is pathetic. (food for thought = probably how we also ended up with this crazy super majority in the assembly and the senate these last few years)
Thank you, Mark!
Hylkema would be unable to substantiate the indigenous population claims that he makes in this video. Spain did not have colonies; California was a part of the Viceroyalty of Nueva España which encompassed what is now Guatemala, México, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah, Colorado, all the way to Alaska and the Philippines. As a matter of fact, the administrative capitol of Philippines was Acapulco. All indigenous people during Spain's empire period were on an equal footing as peninsular Spanish. Most of the town councils within the American parts of the empire, from California to Argentina were comprised of indigenous men and matter were discussed in indigenous languages; that's why the first printed books in America were dictionaries on Nahuatl, Quechua, and Aymara - long before places such as England or France had printed grammar books. The first printed grammar book was in Spain by Antonio Nebrija in 1492. During Spain'e empire period enslavement of indigenous people was forbidden on penalty of execution; the viceroy of Ecuador was executed for attempting it. The decree of 1503 encouraged Spanish men to marry indigenous women ; read the Laws of Burgos of 1510, where you will find the non-snarky information that Hylkema either doesn't know or ignored.
As for Utah there were no real connections of the local tribes there to the viceroyalty of New Spain other than map claims. The first European baby born in Utah actually was from none other than the Mormons as late as the 1840s! However the Ute tribe, much less the Shoshone, were never under Spanish or Mexican control due to those pesky Apache and Comanche limiting the reach of the Spanish frontier.
@@Mcfunface : The birth of aa foreign baby doesn't legitimize presence in someone else's territory. Spain's form of empire building was carefully albeit in measured steps in the northern reaches of the vice-royalty. If the Spanish language is something that you can understand, the following link may help you understand the difference of Spanish empire building versus the haphazard ones employed by the English, French and Dutch. ua-cam.com/video/9eUPMObT8AY/v-deo.html
Great video! I was pleasantly surprised to hear my hometown Ventura mentioned 😊
Mark has a wealth of experience and knowledge.
This was super interesting and really well put together, he did a great job
Thank God we have Utube… Share with your friends.
Our mission was rebuilt twice ,it was founded in 1787 ,destroyed by an earthquake in 1812, moved to the northwest side of the valley and reestablished . Abandoned , left to the winds of change fell in to ruin .Then the CCC rebuilt it into the ,what to me ,is one of the best places to have as a playground while growing up ,LA PURISIMA CONCEPCIO'N DE MARIA SANTISIMA
The King and the Crown was the administrator of lands and gave the titles of property for colonicers, missions and tribes....
this is one of the best things ive watched. i was born and raised in millbrae and we learned a lot of this around 4th grade. had field trips to sanchez adobe and carmel mission and a lot of other places that we learned about california history. this was great to watch
well they sure had nice architecture, and showed the later Americans how to build for that mediterranean type of climate.
Awesome presentation!
Great timeline story! Thank you for sharing 😁
The social system is ESTAMENTAL in spanish (not castas), It is an open system for everybody, anyone can goes and study as military or priest to obtain nobilty by meritocracy... The catas system is a racial and closed system, never a Hispanic system was closed and racist.
The Spanish guest would have starved if not for the hospitality of our Indigenous ancestors… not so lucky for the English who starved to death at Jamestown for other reasons
Amazing how the Spaniards traveled through out the world without today’s technology
Thank you so much for this information.
El nombre de California es el nombre de un lugar imaginario en La gran novela de Caballerias Española, Don Quijote de la Mancha. Del s. XVI-XVII.
Great presentation. I was enthralled the entire video. Informative with some funny as well. I like that. My ancestors are from the Monterey Bay Area. I would love to pick your brain. But I’m certain you haven’t the time for that.
But just one question…..maybe two My ancestry says I have a greatx8ish grandmother who was a native of an area around where Watsonville is today. Could you tell me the name please of the tribal Indians in Watsonville by a river?
My Monterey family have the name Jose Feliciano Graxiola and Georgiana Hayden Graxiola. Both Mexican and was the constable in Monterey. And George Hayden who arrived with Commodore Sloats fleet of 3 ships at Monterey in 1848ish as well as gggggrandfather Austin and my ggggrandmother Boronda or Feliz Created Monterey Jack Cheese with an old house Jack.
I find your knowledge seems so correct and you truly seem to care.
So if you can tell me the name of the natives small tribe in Watsonville. I was told my ancestors were called Ohlone and the other was Salinian. Something like that.
Sorry if I’m vague.i don’t have my family’s info close by. I’m just so curious.
Thank you, Annie
Oh the second question is books. Where can I find a good book about the peoples of that area?
OkBye 😊
I have traced my ancestory to the ice age migration. We originated in Saberia when Mongolian & Japanese began our lenage around 270AD. I tried back 69 generation. When my ancestors migration down to California & settled in Los Angeles & San Gabriel. I was told by my grandmother we are part of Tongva & Chumesh. My great grandparents rest place is at the SG mission. However I am not registered as a tribe member because I don't remember or have my roll number. I am continuing my quest & reserves.....
Was that Land Bridge still around 2000 years ago?
@@malaquiasalfaro81 😂🤣😅
Don't tell Dane Callaway............
@@carljohnson317 I keep hearing this name? there are so many Callaway(s). can you drop me a tip, please? who is this? a historian perhaps?
😮 Wow that’s incredible!!
Damn good lecture 🫡🗣️🗣️
I found out recently San Francisco was originally named yerba Buena
mari juana 🤣😂
Spearmint
That remains the name of the island in the harbour joined with 'Treasure Island' .
Nice vid - thanks for sharing
Thank you for this exposure,
Ancient CemAnahuac will rise again ✊🏾
🤣🤣
CHALE
Shut up.
Super good.
Thanks for sharing all this interesting information.
El Zorro , brought me here 👍
Went to California schools in the 1960’s and 70’s. The amount of info taught on the natives in amounted, in total, to an hour lecture. In other words the natives weren’t important
By the early 2000s that changed for us. We went on field trips to Native American Miwok and Nisenan grounds.
Great info ty
Gold discs sparked not only the Spaniards' imaginations but also their greed. You didn't mention their secret weapon for subjugating the Aztecs: the extinct breed of aggressive Cuban dogs. I learned this from another video. I loved this video because it seems you are quite knowledgeable and I learned some things.
Los ya había derrotados en 1521.
Thats interesting about the Cuban dogs. I am still listening to his presentation as I am texting you, he just said "you can check in but you can never leave ".
Clearly a reference to the song Hotel 🏨 California by the Eagles, such a lovely place? for the indigenous peoples, their time, life sentences, likely not a lovely experience.
Small Pox was a very effective Biological weapon, developed by the far from natural 🇨🇭 Swissys.
Generously applied to blankets, then presented as gifts 🎁 to the indigenous guests of the Hotel California's many locations.
Soon Hotels had a spike in vacancies & trouble finding free labour's.
🤔 problem solved, there is gold in there hills advertising campaign began.
this is great! thank you. where does the lecturer teach?
Mark Hylkema is the Santa Cruz District Archaeologist and Tribal Liaison for California State Parks where he manages cultural resources within the District’s 32 park units. He offers public lectures occasionally. With 38 years professional experience in California archaeology, he is a Registered Professional Archaeologist (RPA) and has worked on archaeological projects throughout the state. His primary research emphasis and publications are focused on ancestral Native American cultures of the San Francisco Bay area, and early Spanish Colonial Period history. Mark is also an Adjunct Professor of Anthropology at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, and has taught anthropology, archaeology, and Native American Studies courses at Santa Clara University, University of California at Santa Cruz, De Anza College, Ohlone College and Cabrillo College. Mr. Hylkema was President of the Society for California Archaeology (search scahome.org) during the 2015/2016 term and has contributed a great deal to the regional archaeological literature.
You are the greatest historian narrator thank very i know that its extensive to cover it up in ine session you mention Vallejo county but you didnt mentioned the last mexican general Vallejo his cuartel full restored i visited and us a great historical site the geberal Vallejo recived the wagon donner expedition Right there close to the event of California got occupied by american government But letters from general Vallejo to santa anna Mexican emperor President With full of detailed The wagoners arrivals any ways general Vallejo didnt shot any guns the Occupation happened in a peaceful manner with a wine glass he said salud to
Call it quittens .
Thank very much irs rich your narration
Why do you say "black ship" for the "Manila Galleon" or The China ship? Why you don't know the spanish names for these Major events...
was it really relevant to the discussion? you’re nitpicking for absolutely no reason.
In deed California was.. Mexico's. Territory. General Vallejo last Mexican. General in north California. His cuartel quarters
Still intact in Vallejo county .
Iam proud of my ancestors that wave war against invaders from east coast. David Bowie gang in Alamo. Texas
Would like to talk about your information. Great presentation.
Actually the Indigenous people that were on the Channel Islands were Kizh - Tongva - Gabrielino also the indigenous people of Los Angles area. My ancestors.
Black Legend, as usual.
Spanish Subtitles please ...
This should be taught in grade school. George Washington and eastern history is irrelevant here
Actually it isn't.
It sounds like he is teaching it in grade school
@@joeforns That is a good thing.
Ca history is taught in fourth grade:) I taught 4th grade for ten years. Plenty of field tips to missions and gold rush areas!
Yes I believe this is standard 4th or 5th grade curriculum in the state. My best friend from years ago remembered most of the Spanish explorations just from grade school right up into early adulthood. It really is incredible to think about just how much raw land the Spanish Monarchy and Catholic Church were able to conquer internationally from the Philippines by Asian to parts of continental U.S. (Montana for “mountains” got its name from the conquistadors) all the way to the eastern Atlantic in the other ocean!
10/10 great video
The Anza trail
After the reconquista of the Iberian peninsula Spain had a thousands of unemployed soldiers. After Columbus returned from the Caribbean the King of Spain licensed Conquistadors to to the Americas. To conquer the natives and send back riches
No tienes ni puta de idea
I am very proud of my Spanish roots. My ancestors did very good. We. Are. Not. Sorry.
@@rodrigodiaz9472 Diaz, do not have a worry ... neither the Spanish nor the Mexican government ever offered $5 per indian scalp (woman or child), plus $200 for an indian scalp if it was of a man. However, the u.s. federal government did.
When the Californio put on a big rodeo y fiesta all were invited even the poor and lowly. were there jokes make about "los indios" the natives, yes sure they were ... but there was also lots of respect and a big need to keep them around and close because they knew all routes n resources. it was much more symbiotic than the liberal media might paint it.
the u.s. federal government, you see, would much rather that the populace be 'angry' with Spain + Catholicism ... using that disdain as a smokescreen for their own federally funded atrocities.
I always thought san diego was first. But he says different?
You are correct. He didn't specify that San Diego mission was being founded by a splinter group of their expedition as the rest of the team continued to Monterey. He implies it a little when he mentions the starving sailors back in San Diego harbor.
Chumash Portola mestizo from Ojai, Mission Santa Buenaventura Alta California
Puerto navidad is in New Spain , not Spain, and was founded there at the Pacífic coast of México by Cortés
nice!
Alta California
During this time, the 1800s
over to the east, Arizona, New Mexico and western Teaxas were fighting the indians before and after the Civil War, when the real Indian Wars started by the US Army...the Indians lose again.
not wars, attempted genocides, canons guns weaponry of that nature
4:34 is not "costaños" it is "costeños"
July 22nd 2017 Mark Hylkema 220 Years Ago
13:00 poor Cabrillo died from the dumbest way possible...slipping on a mossy stone...
Its Trippy that you dont mention the Miwoks even once? someone pay you to not mention us?
i'll have to rewind, but he digressed from going to deep into one topic involving the miwok of the northbay marin miwok i think he said it, but he also said it was a long story. it is a long story. but gotta admit that Marino was tough stuff, and very healthy and strong to be able to live into old age still working at the presidio boat yard
You cant rely on gringos teaching history-they conveniently leave a lot of info out
Attention focused on Monteray-SF i think. Miwok is spoken around 15 minute mark just before 'black ship' comment.
Very important tribe, huge and Im guessing made up of many language groups also. Miwok is dominant in my foothill communities Sonora- south that i know.
They took down his statue in Pacifica it was pointing east looking at the hills of Pacific they took down the statue!!!
If the Spaniards were to encounter people, they would spread the word of God and Jesus, how ironic is it, that the Native Americans were already closer to God than the Spaniards.
Most American thing I ever read
Redwoods and oaks are beautiful, but not the exact same tree.
it's Alta California, not California!
looks like they were inviting the natives to assimilate into the spanish colonial culture . interesting. that means those natives must have descendants even if they did not keep thier culture or tribal ways that much.
some of you missed the soup made of limbs ?
Wow
YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT THE MEXICAN INDEPENDENCE, NOT THE REVOLUTION 100 YEARS LATER.
Imagine when the smallpox hit. destroyed everyone's lives.
Imagine how nice it must have been before the Europeans came
@@ZealotZabay it wasn’t that nice! The natives used to do war and slavery to each other,
@@jesusseoane2296 being enslaved by strangers that came on a boat and stole the promise land wasn’t better, but worse.
@@ZealotZabay promised land?? Are we talking about the same people? Stone Age people that where introduced to cattle for the first time, just take a look to the demographics of indigenous people in the Spanish America, multiplied by six in two hundred years!
@@jesusseoane2296 lol you clearly don’t know enough history. But also, quality > quantity.
give us back our land kid.
Unbelievably insensitive "joke" made: "the misson cemetery for the native people who check in, but can't check out".
The "first colonial foothold in Upper California" and "first of the 21 missons" was not San Carlos in 1770. It was Mission San Diego de Alcala, established July 16, 1769.
But we ALL check out at some point… It’s just a fact of life. I don’t think he meant any slur with that
I was surprised myself when he stated it was "San Carlos" in 1770 as it is a well known fact that it was Mission San Diego. For an "expert" he sure is lacking knowledge on this historical fact!
57:25 bookmark
Wow, I'd have to be high to listen anymore to this " lecture" on California.
But I'm not high so bye
BYE!!!
Stay ignorant!!
Well then get high and get grounded.
Californios not californians.
california no fue colonia !!! España ni mexico tuvieron Colonias
the ancient american hebrew lands and customs sound beautiful
Have you read Columbus and the book of prophecies ? The book is over 1,000. Columbus brought a Hebrew speaking translator with him because he was looking for the lost tribes of Israel. The 4th part.
The LORD will bring a nation against you from far away, from the ends of the earth, like an eagle swooping down, a nation whose language you will not understand,
hey, thanks for the book recommendation. i've read columbus himself was of mizrahi lineage there in italia (from where he came).