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has gloss | eng: Sikyátki is an archeological site and former Hopi village spanning 40,000 to 60,000 square metres (400,000 to 600,000 ft²) on the eastern side of First Mesa, in what is now Navajo County in the U.S. state of Arizona. It was inhabited by Kokop clan of the Hopi from the 14th to the 17th century. Jesse Walter Fewkes led a Smithsonian Institution funded excavation of the site in 1895. During the excavations many well preserved pottery shards were found. The designs on the pottery shards inspired the artist Nampeyo; sparking the Sikyátki revival in polychrome pottery. |
lexicalization | eng: Sikyatki |
lexicalization | eng: Sikyátki |
instance of | (noun) a member of any of about two dozen Native American peoples called `Pueblos' by the Spanish because they live in pueblos (villages built of adobe and rock) Pueblo |
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Russian | |
has gloss | rus: Сикьятки, на языке хопи — Sikyátki, букв. «жёлтый дом» — археологический памятник и бывшее поселение индейцев хопи, занимавшее площадь от 40 до 60 тыс. кв. метров на восточной оконечности Первой Месы, ныне округ Навахо, штат Аризона. Здесь в 14-17 вв. обитал клан Кокоп плпмени хопи. |
lexicalization | rus: Сикьятки |
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geo loc | geographic location 35.85888888888889 -110.36999999999999 |
media:img | Sikyatki bowl.jpg |
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