Hogan
{{Short description|Primary traditional home of the Navajo people}}
{{Other uses}}
{{Refimprove|date=October 2018}}
A hogan ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|h|oʊ|ɡ|ɑː|n}} or {{IPAc-en|ˈ|h|oʊ|ɡ|ən}}; from Navajo {{spell-nv|hooghan}} {{IPA|ath|hoːɣan|}}) is the primary, traditional dwelling of the Navajo people. Other traditional structures include the summer shelter, the underground home, and the sweat house. A hogan can be round, cone-shaped, multi-sided, or square; with or without internal posts; with walls and roof of timber, packed earth, and stone in varying amounts, and a bark roof for a summer house.Franciscan Fathers, An Ethnologic Dictionary of the Navajo Language. 1910 Saint Michaels, Arizona, reprinted 1929 by Max Breslauer; Leipzig, Germany. The door traditionally faced east to welcome the rising sun, believed to bring good fortune.
Today, while some older hogans are still used as dwellings and others are maintained for ceremonial purposes, new hogans are rarely intended as family dwellings.
Hogans are energy efficient: using packed mud against the wooden walls, the home was kept cool in summer by natural ventilation and water sprinkled on the packed dirt floor. In winter the fireplace kept the inside warm well into the night, due to the high specific heat capacity of the earth in the construction.{{Cite journal|last=DeVault|first=Kayla|date=2018-10-19|title=The Energy Efficiency and Cultural Significance of Traditional Housing: Comparing the Navajo Nation and Pueblo of Acoma in an Effort to Reform Federal Indian Programs|url=http://www.indigenouspolicy.org/index.php/ipj/article/view/565|journal=Indigenous Policy Journal|language=en|volume=29|issue=2|issn=2158-4168}}
Modern application and revival
{{Original research|date=July 2020}}
The preference of hogan construction and use is still very popular among the Navajos, although the use of it as a home shelter dwindled through the 1900s, due mainly to the requirement by many Navajos to acquire homes built through government and lender funding – which largely ignored the hogan and traditional styles – in preference for HUD-standardized construction.{{Cite journal|last=DeVault|first=Kayla|date=2018-10-19|title=The Energy Efficiency and Cultural Significance of Traditional Housing: Comparing the Navajo Nation and Pueblo of Acoma in an Effort to Reform Federal Indian Programs|url=http://www.indigenouspolicy.org/index.php/ipj/article/view/565|journal=Indigenous Policy Journal|language=en|volume=29|issue=2|issn=2158-4168}}
File:16 21 2006 monument valley.jpg
With government and lender requirements requiring low costs, as well as bathrooms and kitchens, the hogan as a home was dwindling away, save for those who could build their own. That began to officially change in the late 1990s with various projects to find ways to bring the hogan back.
In 2001, a joint venture involving the Navajo Nation, Northern Arizona University, and the US Forest Service began building log hogans with materials from a Navajo-owned log home factory in Cameron, Arizona, next to the Cameron Chapter House, using surplus wood culled from Northern Arizona forests to prevent wildfires. While providing the traditional sacred space of the hogan, new construction also meets requirements for modern amenities. The project has also provided jobs, summer school construction experience for Navajo teens, and new public buildings.{{Cite web|url=https://azdailysun.com/hogans-readied-for-sale/article_85fe399c-47ad-5e91-bf12-7a15b55b6338.html|title=Hogans readied for sale|last=Minard|first=Anne|date=3 September 2001|website=Arizona Daily Sun}}
In other languages
Possible Native American sources of the English word hogan:
- {{spell-nv|hooghan}} in Navajo
- gowąh (Western Apache)
- guughą or kuughą (Chiricahua)
See also
{{portal|Housing}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{commonscat-inline|Hogans}}
{{Huts}}
{{Native american styles}}
{{Architecture in the United States}}
Category:Indigenous architecture
Category:Traditional Native American dwellings