-
Yaanga was a
large Tongva (or Kizh) village,
originally located near what is now
downtown Los Angeles, just west of the Los
Angeles River and
beneath U...
-
September 4, 1781,
under Spanish governor Felipe de Neve, on the
village of
Yaanga. It
became a part of the
First Mexican Empire in 1821
following the Mexican...
- Angeles. The
pueblo was
built using labor from the
adjacent village of
Yaanga and was
totally dependent on
local Indigenous labor for its survival. Official...
-
village of
Yaanga served as the main
source of
labor for the
pueblo and
surrounding ranchos... In fact, as the
demand for
Indian labor grew, the
Yaanga village...
- to a
small settlement of
relocated Tongva refugees from the
village of
Yaanga in 1845. The
villagers were
relocated to this new site
known as Pueblito...
- 1784 in the
burgeoning Pueblo de Los Ángeles
adjacent to the
village of
Yaanga as an
asistencia or "sub-mission" to the
nearby Mission San
Gabriel Arcángel...
- has been
described as
slave labor from
nearby Tongva villages, such as
Yaanga and was
built on the site of the
village of Toviscanga. When the nearby...
-
greatly on the
presence of a
nearby and
prosperous Tongva village called Yaanga,
which was
located by the
freshwater artesian aquifer of the Los Angeles...
- (Topanga, Cahuenga, Tujunga, Cucamonga, etc.) For example,
individuals from
Yaanga were
known as
Yaangavit among the
people (in
mission records, they were...
-
arteries connecting the
largest Tongva village in the area, then
known as
Yaanga,
which eventually became Union Station, to the
Pacific Ocean. From the founding...