- The Luiseño or
Payómkawichum are an
Indigenous people of
California who, at the time of the
first contacts with the
Spanish in the 16th century, inhabited...
-
closely related to the Luiseño
language still spoken by the
neighboring Payómkawichum (Luiseño) people.
Spanish colonists called the
Acjachemen Juaneños,...
- The
Pechanga Band of Indians, also
known as
Payómkawichum (the
People of the West),
stand as 1 of 6
federally recognized tribes of Luiseño Indians, currently...
-
shared by
multiple groups,
including the Tongva, Acjachemen,
Serrano and
Payómkawichum. The
mother village of the
Acjachemen was
Putiidhem and is now located...
- (February 6, 1948 –
October 15, 2023) was a
Native American of the
Payómkawichum (Luiseño)
people and
culture keeper and
ethnobotany instructor in San...
-
eighteenth century, the area was
primarily inhabited by the
Tongva and
Payómkawichum, who
lived in a
series of
villages throughout the area. What is now...
- California, a
group of Takic-speaking peoples,
today divided into the
Payómkawichum (Luiseño),
Tongva (Gabrieliño and Fernandeño), and
Acjachemem (Juaneño)...
- to the late 18th century, by the Tongva, Taaqtam,
Ivilyuqaletem and
Payómkawichum Native Americans.The
first American settlers, a
group of
Mormon pioneers...
- of the World". The
community of
Fallbrook was
first settled by the
Payomkawichum people,
later called Luiseños by the
Spanish missionaries who were present...
- Puhú (
Payómkawichum: “its
arrow place”) was a
major residential village in the
Santa Ana
Mountains shared by the Tongva, Acjachemen,
Payómkawichum, and...