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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HoganHogan - Wikipedia

    A hogan (/ ˈ h oʊ ɡ ɑː n / or / ˈ h oʊ ɡ ən /; from Navajo hooghan) is the primary, traditional dwelling of the Navajo people. Other traditional structures include the summer shelter, the underground home, and the sweat house.

  2. hogan, traditional dwelling and ceremonial structure of the Navajo Indians of Arizona and New Mexico. Early hogans were dome-shaped buildings with log, or occasionally stone, frameworks. Once framed, the structure was then covered with mud, dirt, or sometimes sod.

  3. navajopeople.org › blog › navajo-homes-hogansNavajo Homes – Hogans

    Every family even if they live most of the time in a newer home — must have the traditional hogan for ceremonies, and to keep themselves in balance. The Navajos used to make their houses, called hogans, of wooden poles, tree bark and mud.

  4. 2 mar 2011 · Almost without exception it is made of piñon logs, boughs, and cedar bark, with a liberal roofing of damp earth and all the cracks chinked with mud. So it might be said that the new house costs nothing but the labor of assembling the material and the expense of feeding the helpers, a sum of forty or fifty dollars at the most.

  5. 26 sie 2024 · Explore the Navajo Hogan's architecture, symbolism, and cultural significance, reflecting the rich heritage and traditions of the Navajo people.

  6. The Navajos used to make their houses, called hogans, of wooden poles, tree bark and mud. The doorway of each hogan opened to the east so they could get the morning sun as well as good blessings. Today, many Diné families still live in hogans, although trailers or more modern houses are tending to replace them.

  7. 6 sty 2020 · familiar and well-known hogan today is the “femalehogan, a hexagonal building made of logs linked together log-cabin style, chinked with mud, and a rounded roof also formed of cribbed logs covered with dirt.

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