Economics of the IroquoisNew Era Printing Company, 1905 - 159 páginas Reprint of the 1905 ed. printed by Press of New Era Print. Co., Lancaster, Pa., which was issued as v. 1, no. 3 of Bryn Mawr College monographs, Monograph series. |
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Página 3
... Lakes southward , the climate was warm and the soil fertile enough to encourage more or less cultivation of maize in the river valleys and open spaces and clear- ings in the woods . Generally speaking , it was an environment conducing ...
... Lakes southward , the climate was warm and the soil fertile enough to encourage more or less cultivation of maize in the river valleys and open spaces and clear- ings in the woods . Generally speaking , it was an environment conducing ...
Página 14
... Lake Ontario between the Hudson River and Lake Erie . In the center of this tract , occupying the Onondaga River valley and the adjacent hills , was the tribe of the Onondagas . On their right hand , around and near Oneida Lake , were ...
... Lake Ontario between the Hudson River and Lake Erie . In the center of this tract , occupying the Onondaga River valley and the adjacent hills , was the tribe of the Onondagas . On their right hand , around and near Oneida Lake , were ...
Página 15
... lakes and not exceeding four leagues in width , consisting of almost uninterrupted plains , the woods bordering which are extremely beautiful . " 3 In the Seneca coun- try , there were several such open tracts , formed by a recession of ...
... lakes and not exceeding four leagues in width , consisting of almost uninterrupted plains , the woods bordering which are extremely beautiful . " 3 In the Seneca coun- try , there were several such open tracts , formed by a recession of ...
Página 16
... Lake , and east of it was Seneca Lake ; the Cayuga territory contained Cayuga Lake , a sheet of water twenty - eight miles long and from two to four miles wide ; the Onondagas owned Skaneateles Lake ; the Oneidas controlled the lake ...
... Lake , and east of it was Seneca Lake ; the Cayuga territory contained Cayuga Lake , a sheet of water twenty - eight miles long and from two to four miles wide ; the Onondagas owned Skaneateles Lake ; the Oneidas controlled the lake ...
Página 17
... lakes and ponds of the Iroquois country . Nearly all of them were more or less suitable for food . Among them were ... Lake , " says the Jesuit chronicler , " turtle doves from all the country around flock thither toward spring , in so ...
... lakes and ponds of the Iroquois country . Nearly all of them were more or less suitable for food . Among them were ... Lake , " says the Jesuit chronicler , " turtle doves from all the country around flock thither toward spring , in so ...
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Términos y frases comunes
¹ Jes ¹Jes according affairs agricultural animals Ataentsic bark Beauchamp cabin captives Carr carried ceremonies Chadwick clan economy communal clan confederacy consumption group coöperation corn councillors cultivated deer deities distribution domestic economic environment expedition fact feasts federacy fire forest gens gentes gentile hence Hist Hontan household hunters and warriors hunting and fishing hunting season Hurons husband implements Indian individual Inst Iroquois Trail Iroquois village Jesuit Relations Jouskeha Keasbey La Potherie labor Lafitau latter Longhouse Loskiel LVII maize Mary Jemison meat men's clan Mohawk Morgan N. Y. St nature nevertheless Onondaga Oyander phratry Potherie Powell production regarded religious Sachem Sagard says Schoolcraft Seneca Seneca Tribe skins slaves sometimes sort supply surplus tion trade tribal council wampum whole wife women women's clan wood wooden worship Wyandot Gov't XLIII XVII XXXVIII
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Página 32 - In order to expedite their business, and at the same time enjoy each other's company, they all work together in one field, or at whatever job they may have on hand. In the spring, they choose an old active squaw to be their driver and overseer, when at labor, for the ensuing year. She accepts the honor, and they consider themselves bound to obey her.
Página 62 - Within, upon the two sides, were arranged wide seats, also of bark boards, about two feet from the ground, well supported underneath, and reaching the entire length of the house. Upon these they spread their mats of skins, and also their blankets, using them as seats by day and couches at night. Similar berths were constructed on each side, about five feet above these, and secured to the frame of the house, thus furnishing accommodations for the family. Upon crosspoles near the roof were hung in...
Página 100 - ... or as was often done, go and start a new matrimonial alliance in some other. The women were the great power among the clans, as everywhere else They did not hesitate, when occasion required, to 'knock off the horns...
Página 28 - ... the crop, and also aided in the labors of the harvest field. This may not have been a part of their duty, but we have the authority of Charlevoix for saying that when asked to aid in gathering the crop " they did not scorn to lend a helping...
Página 71 - Property rights. — Within the area claimed by the tribe each gens occupies a smaller tract for the purpose of cultivation. The right of the gens to cultivate a particular tract is a matter settled in the council of the tribe, and the gens may abandon one tract for another only with the consent of the tribe. The women councilors partition the gentile land among the householders, and the household tracts are distinctly marked by them.
Página 133 - They pass yet beyond this, and regard him as profane Antiquity once did Ceres. According to their story, it is louskeha who gives them the wheat they eat, it is he who makes it grow and brings it to maturity. If they see their fields verdant in the Spring, if they reap good and abundant harvests, and if their Cabins are crammed with ears of corn, they owe it to louskeha. I do not know what God has in store for us this year, but to judge from the reports going round, we are threatened in earnest with...
Página 98 - In this manner there is usually one, two or more potential councillors in each gens who are expected to attend all the meetings of the council, though they take no part in the deliberations and have no vote. When a woman is installed as councillor a feast is prepared by the gens to which she belongs, and to this feast all the members of the tribe are invited. The woman is painted and dressed in her best attire, and the sachem of the tribe places upon her head the gentile chaplet of feathers, and...
Página 116 - He announced his project by giving a war dance and inviting volunteers. This method furnished a practical test of the popularity of the undertaking. If he succeeded in forming a company, which would consist of such persons as joined him in the dance, they departed immediately, while enthusiasm was at its height.
Página 74 - ... among them. Their kindness, humanity, and courtesy not only make them liberal with what they have, but cause them to possess hardly anything except in common. A whole village must be without corn before any individual can be obliged to endure privation.
Página 117 - It may be said that the life of the Iroquois was either spent in the chase, on the warpath, or at the council-fire. They formed the three leading objects of his existence, and it would be difficult to determine for which he possessed the strongest predilection.
Referencias a este libro
Indian Affairs in Colonial New York: The Seventeenth Century Allen W. Trelease Sin vista previa disponible - 1997 |