214 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [Bull. 184 
Joseph Manuel Reed, a Jemez Indian, whose father was a Laguna mar- 
ried and living in Jemez, married Rafaelita Galvan, Sia Corn clan, of 
Sia, in Albuquerque in 1954. They established their residence in Sia. 
(16) Vincente Shije of Sia married Juanita Charlie of Acoma at San 
Fidel in 1953; they reside in Sia. Juanita’s clan affiliation was not 
ascertained. (17) Marcus Shije of Sia married Dorothy Pedro of 
Laguna (Paguate) in the Sacred Heart Church in Albuquerque on 
March 5, 1955. They were married after the Indian custom in Sia 
on April 17, 1955, and established their residence there. Dorothy’s 
clan affiliation was not ascertained. (18) Jose Medina, a Sia, born 
1915, Coyote clan, married Elizabeth Cimmaron of Acoma. She ap- 
pears on the Agency’s rolls for 1948, but it is said that she did not 
live in Sia. In 1957 they were said to be ‘‘separated.”’ 
We have records of 17 people who married into Sia and lived there. 
Eleven were women; 6, men. Fifteen were Indians; 1 was Anglo- 
American; 1, Spanish-American. Of the 15 Indians, 4 were from 
Jemez; 3 from Cochiti; 3 Navahos; and 1 each from San Feliipe, 
Acoma, and Laguna. In 1957 there were 8 alien spouses living in Sia. 
Six were women; 2, men. Seven were Indians; 1,a Mexican. Three 
came from Jemez; 2 from Cochiti; and 1 each from Acoma, Laguna, 
Navaho. 
It is clear that women are much more likely to marry into Sia than 
men. The number of marriages with Jemez Indians is rather sur- 
prising. It is curious, too, that we have no record of marriage with 
a Santana at all. 
MARRYING OUTSIDE OF SIA 
I have knowledge of but few Sia who have left the pueblo because 
they had married someone elsewhere and went there to live. One Juan 
Andres Shije, born 1897, married a Santa Clara woman and went to 
her home to live. Two women married into Jemez, but marriage 
may not have been the only factor involved. Refugia Moquino and 
Adelaida Moquino married Jose Rey Toledo and Simon Toyah, 
respectively. But Refugia was a sister and Adelaida a daughter of 
San Juanito Moquino, one of the early leaders of the evangelical 
heretics; and we believe Toledo was a heretic, also. George Her- 
rera, a leader of the Sia heretics, married a Picuris woman; and 
Velino, George’s brother, married the sister of George’s wife. One 
of George’s daughters married into San Juan, and most of the children 
of Benina Moquino, another heretic, married non-Sias after they 
left home. A few men, such as Julian Salas, born 1895, have left Sia 
and may have married after their departure. 
No doubt we are more likely to have knowledge of outsiders who 
have married into Sia than of Sias who have left the pueblo because 
