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Native American Ceremony

A Wisdom Archive on Native American Ceremony

Native American Ceremony

A selection of articles related to Native American Ceremony

We recommend this article: Native American Ceremony - 1, and also this: Native American Ceremony - 2.
Native American Ceremony

ARTICLES RELATED TO Native American Ceremony

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Tobacco smoking - Moral aspects

Communal smoking of a sacred tobacco pipe was a universal ritual through Native America. Native Americans considered tobacco a sacred part of their religion. It was grown for ceremonial use and considered the ultimate sacred plant. Tobacco smoke was believed to carry prayers to the heavens. These rituals were performed, on average, no more than once a month, which differs widely from modern smoking, which is much more frequent and usually devoid of spiritual significance. The tobacco used during these rituals varied widely in potency -- the ...

See also:

Tobacco smoking, Tobacco smoking - History, Tobacco smoking - Health effects, Tobacco smoking - Smoking cessation, Tobacco smoking - Moral aspects, Tobacco smoking - Legal issues & Regulation, Tobacco smoking - Notes

Read more here: » Tobacco smoking: Encyclopedia II - Tobacco smoking - Moral aspects

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Tobacco smoking - Moral and religious considerations

Communal smoking of a sacred tobacco pipe was a universal ritual through Native America. Native Americans considered tobacco a sacred part of their religion. It was grown for ceremonial use and considered the ultimate sacred plant. Tobacco smoke was believed to carry prayers to the heavens. These rituals were performed, on average, no more than once a month, which differs widely from modern smoking, which is much more frequent and usually devoid of spiritual significance. The tobacco used during these rituals varied widely in potency ...

See also:

Tobacco smoking, Tobacco smoking - History, Tobacco smoking - Health effects, Tobacco smoking - Smoking cessation, Tobacco smoking - Moral and religious considerations, Tobacco smoking - Legal issues & Regulation, Tobacco smoking - Notes

Read more here: » Tobacco smoking: Encyclopedia II - Tobacco smoking - Moral and religious considerations

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Cherokee society - Cultural values and traditional views

Culture is born from beliefs and traditions that draw people together with a sense of "oneness" through the unity of family, clan, and tribe. Traditional American Indians (Cherokee) in earlier years focused on the tribe first, the clan second, and the family third in terms of importance and duty. Cherokee society - Centrality of family. In Native American (Cherokee) culture "family" extends well beyond one's immediate relatives to extended family relatives, members of one's clan, members of t ...

See also:

Cherokee society, Cherokee society - The seven Cherokee clans, Cherokee society - Blood revenge, Cherokee society - The Council House, Cherokee society - Villages, Cherokee society - White government, Cherokee society - Red government, Cherokee society - Cherokee society, Cherokee society - Seven festivals of the Cherokee, Cherokee society - Cultural values and traditional views, Cherokee society - Centrality of family, Cherokee society - Leadership, Cherokee society - Principle of non-interference, Cherokee society - Purpose of life, Cherokee society - Sacred ceremonies and traditons, Cherokee society - Naming, Cherokee society - Traditional use of masks

Read more here: » Cherokee society: Encyclopedia II - Cherokee society - Cultural values and traditional views

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Carmen Miranda - Hollywood tribute

On September 25, 1998, a city square in Hollywood was named Carmen Miranda Square in a ceremony headed by longtime honorary Hollywood mayor Johnny Grant who was also one of the singer's personal friends dating back to World War II. The effort was spearheaded by Native American concert promoter Jean Chakanaka and Carmen Miranda's Brazilian-born grandniece, Cheryl Miranda Cunha, herself a songwriter, singer and performer who adopted the stage name "Miranda" and performs many of her aunt's songs in tribute. Brazil's consul general Jorió Gama was on hand for opening remarks as were memb ...

See also:

Carmen Miranda, Carmen Miranda - Life and career, Carmen Miranda - Hollywood tribute, Carmen Miranda - Filmography

Read more here: » Carmen Miranda: Encyclopedia II - Carmen Miranda - Hollywood tribute

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Music of Minnesota - Music history

Music in Minnesota extends prior to historical documentation, with the music of the Native Americans of the area. The Dakota musical traditions of what is now Minnesota are generally based around vocal, percussive and dance music; folk songs among the Dakota can be celebratory, martial or ceremonial [6]. European settlers to Minnesota brought their own tradition of folk and classical music. The first singing school in Minnesota was in St. Anthony (now part of Minneapolis), opened in 1851. Later ...

See also:

Music of Minnesota, Music of Minnesota - Music institutions and venues, Music of Minnesota - Music venues, Music of Minnesota - Music education, Music of Minnesota - Music history, Music of Minnesota - Modern music, Music of Minnesota - Rock, Music of Minnesota - Recent styles, Music of Minnesota - Notes

Read more here: » Music of Minnesota: Encyclopedia II - Music of Minnesota - Music history

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Swastika - Overview

The swastika is a holy symbol in Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism. In the West, it is more widely known as symbol of Nazism. The motif seems to have first been used by early inhabitants of Eurasia. However, it was also adopted in Native American cultures, seemingly independently. The swastika is now used universally in religious and civil ceremonies in India. Most Indian temples, wedding, festivals and celebrations are decorated with swastikas. The symbol was introduced to Southeast Asia by Hindu kings and remains an integral part of Ba ...

See also:

Swastika, Swastika - Overview, Swastika - Etymology and alternative names, Swastika - History, Swastika - Adoption of the swastika in the West, Swastika - Geometry and symbolism, Swastika - Sauwastika, Swastika - Art and architecture, Swastika - Religion and mythology, Swastika - Hinduism, Swastika - Buddhism, Swastika - Jainism, Swastika - The Abrahamic religions, Swastika - Other Asian traditions, Swastika - Native American traditions, Swastika - Pre-Christian European traditions, Swastika - Asatru, Swastika - Early 20th century, Swastika - Europe, Swastika - North America, Swastika - Nazi Germany, Swastika - Taboo in Western countries, Swastika - Apperance in Media

Read more here: » Swastika: Encyclopedia II - Swastika - Overview

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - First haircut - Orthodox and Hasidic Jewish boys

Orthodox and Hasidic Jewish boys get their first haircut at age 3. The hair-cutting ceremony is called the upsherenish or upsheren, a Yiddish word meaning to "cut off". This custom is beleived by some Hasidim to have its roots in the Torah, which compares a man to a tree. "A person is like the tree of a field..." (Deut. 20:19) Because fruit may not be cut from a tree during the first three years of its life (Leviticus 19:23), a ...

See also:

First haircut, First haircut - United States babies, First haircut - Native American babies, First haircut - African American boys, First haircut - Orthodox and Hasidic Jewish boys, First haircut - Israeli boys, First haircut - Hasidic Jewish women, First haircut - Indian babies, First haircut - Hindu babies, First haircut - Kashmiri babies, First haircut - Chinese babies, First haircut - Ukrainian babies

Read more here: » First haircut: Encyclopedia II - First haircut - Orthodox and Hasidic Jewish boys

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Swastika - Overview

The swastika is a holy symbol in Hinduism, Jainism, Heathenry and Buddhism. In the West, it is more widely known as symbol of Nazism. The motif seems to have first been used in Neolithic Eurasia. However, it was also adopted in Native American cultures, seemingly independently. The swastika is now used universally in religious and civil ceremonies in India. Most Indian temples, weddings, festivals and celebrations are decorated with swastikas. The symbol was introduced to Southeast Asia by Hindu kings and remains an integral part of B ...

See also:

Swastika, Swastika - Overview, Swastika - Etymology and alternative names, Swastika - History, Swastika - Comet/bird hypothesis, Swastika - Early Hinduism, Swastika - Adoption of the swastika in the West, Swastika - Geometry and symbolism, Swastika - Sauwastika, Swastika - Art and architecture, Swastika - Religion and mythology, Swastika - Hinduism, Swastika - Buddhism, Swastika - Jainism, Swastika - The Abrahamic religions, Swastika - Other Asian traditions, Swastika - Native American traditions, Swastika - Pre-Christian European traditions, Swastika - Early 20th century, Swastika - Britain, Swastika - North America, Swastika - Russia, Swastika - Poland, Swastika - Finland, Swastika - Sweden, Swastika - Latvia, Swastika - Icelandic, Swastika - Ireland, Swastika - Nazi Germany, Swastika - Taboo in Western countries, Swastika - Popular culture and media, Swastika - Notes

Read more here: » Swastika: Encyclopedia II - Swastika - Overview

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Swastika - Overview

The swastika is a holy symbol in Hinduism, Jainism, Heathenry and Buddhism. In the West, it is more widely known as symbol of Nazism. The motif seems to have first been used in Neolithic Eurasia. However, it was also adopted in Native American cultures, seemingly independently. The swastika is now used universally in religious and civil ceremonies in India. Most Indian temples, weddings, festivals and celebrations are decorated with swastikas. The symbol was introduced to Southeast Asia by Hindu kings and remains an integral part of B ...

See also:

Swastika, Swastika - Overview, Swastika - Etymology and alternative names, Swastika - History, Swastika - Adoption of the swastika in the West, Swastika - Geometry and symbolism, Swastika - Sauwastika, Swastika - Art and architecture, Swastika - Religion and mythology, Swastika - Hinduism, Swastika - Buddhism, Swastika - Jainism, Swastika - The Abrahamic religions, Swastika - Other Asian traditions, Swastika - Native American traditions, Swastika - Pre-Christian European traditions, Swastika - Early 20th century, Swastika - Britain, Swastika - North America, Swastika - Russia, Swastika - Poland, Swastika - Finland, Swastika - Sweden, Swastika - Latvia, Swastika - Icelandic, Swastika - Ireland, Swastika - Nazi Germany, Swastika - Taboo in Western countries, Swastika - Popular culture and media, Swastika - Notes

Read more here: » Swastika: Encyclopedia II - Swastika - Overview

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - California State University Northridge - Groups and Organizations

California State University Northridge - Traditional festivities. Native Americans have used the campus to converge on for ceremonies, on a yearly basis. The drama department celebrates year-end by staging the local version of Yosemite's Bracebridge Dinner. The artistic events that occur on the campus are often very distinguished and popular. Also, the university has a prominent band, especially the jazz band. < ...

See also:

California State University Northridge, California State University Northridge - President's Vision Statement for the University, California State University Northridge - Academics, California State University Northridge - Library, California State University Northridge - Groups and Organizations, California State University Northridge - Traditional festivities, California State University Northridge - CSUN Jazz Studies, California State University Northridge - Community services, California State University Northridge - CSUN Speech & Debate, California State University Northridge - Athletics, California State University Northridge - Student Organizations, California State University Northridge - Northridge Trivia, California State University Northridge - Northridge earthquake, California State University Northridge - CSUN sculpture, California State University Northridge - Notable alumni, California State University Northridge - Points of interest, California State University Northridge - CSUN in film

Read more here: » California State University Northridge: Encyclopedia II - California State University Northridge - Groups and Organizations

Native American Ceremony: New Age Spirituality Dictionary on Ghost Dance

Ghost Dance

A new religious movement among Native Americans of the western United States.

 

The Ghost Dance had two distinct phases, both of which originated in the visions of a Paiute shaman living in western Nevada.

 

The Ghost Dance of 1870: Wodziwob (d. ca. 1872), the prophet of the 1870 dance, proclaimed that the world would soon be destroyed, then renewed; the dead would be brought back to life and game animals restored. He instructed his followers to dance a nocturnal circle dance.

 

This dance was similar to both older Paiute traditions and an earlier regional movement, the Plateau Prophet Dance, but it addressed very present conditions of deprivation resulting from white incursions into tribal territories. It spread to California, Oregon, and Idaho but, with the death of Wodziwob and the nonfulfillment of his prophecies, died out within a few years. The Shoshone and Bannock of Fort Hall, Idaho, however, continued to perform the Ghost Dance at least intermittently up to 1890.

 

The Ghost Dance of 1890: Wovoka (ca. 1856-1932), a Paiute Native American prophet, inaugurated the Ghost Dance of 1890 on the basis of a vision he had received during a total eclipse of the sun. His message was in direct continuity with the 1870 dance: there was to be an immanent renewal of the world in which dead Native Americans would be resurrected and the living would no longer be subject to sickness and old age, game animals would be restored to their former abundance, and the old way of life would once more flourish. Euro-Americans, by this time firmly in control, would be eliminated by supernatural means, such as a flood or earthquake. It is uncertain whether Wovoka announced a specific date for these events, but many expected them in the spring of 1891.

 

Wovoka's message also contained ethical admonitions (e. g. , members of different tribes should live in peace with each other; they should cooperate with, not war against, the whites). In anticipation of the great event and to speed its arrival, Wovoka instructed his followers to perform circle dances periodically. They did so in large numbers, and (especially among Plains tribes) dancers often fell into trances, subsequently reporting that they had visited the spirit world and spoken with dead relatives, who were living a life like the one that had flourished before the coming of the whites. The 1890 dance spread mainly eastward along the length of the Rocky Mountains and Great Plains. In some tribes (e. g. , Paiute, Cheyenne, Shoshone, Pawnee) acceptance was almost unanimous; in others (like the Sioux) only segments of the population became believers. No Pueblo (except at Taos) or Navajo accepted it, the latter because of a culturally conditioned aversion to ghosts. As news of the Paiute prophet Wovoka began to spread, tribes sent delegations to the Walker Lake Reservation in western Nevada to see him. They returned with versions of his teachings that were sometimes shaped by the particular needs of their tribe.

 

Among the Pawnee, the dance provided the basis for an important cultural renewal, for the visions of the dancers made possible the revival of old ceremonial activities that had fallen into disuse because knowledge of their correct performance had been lost. The Sioux, who had a number of current grievances against the government (e. g. , loss of reservation lands, cuts in rations), altered Wovoka's message in the direction of greater hostility toward the whites. Delegates like Short Bull and Kicking Bear advocated the use of "ghost shirts" (special garments that were supposed to make the wearer invulnerable to bullets) and spoke of the possibility of armed conflict with the government soldiers.

 

During 1890, newspapers around the country carried often sensational stories about the "messiah craze" (Wovoka was often called the "Indian messiah") and the possibility of renewed warfare with the Sioux. Violence did erupt in December: during an attempt to arrest him, Chief Sitting Bull was shot to death, and Chief Big Foot and almost three hundred of his band were massacred by the cavalry at Wounded Knee. These events were more the result of government blunders than of a Sioux outbreak. Following the violence among the Sioux and the failure of the expected transformations the next spring, the popularity of the dance began to fade. However, it did not die out altogether.

 

Wovoka remained active, but shifted his message in the direction of ethical admonitions. As late as 1896 some Kiowa were still dancing, and one of the early Northern Cheyenne delegates, Porcupine, led a brief revival of the dance in 1900. The movement continued elsewhere in a more substantive way. In the first decade of the twentieth century, Fred Robinson, an Assiniboin who had been instructed in the Ghost Dance by Kicking Bear and had corresponded with Wovoka, brought the dance to a small community of Sioux living in Saskatchewan. Combined with a traditional Medicine Feast, apocalyptic elements disappeared and the themes of ethical admonition and community solidarity predominated.

 

Among the Wind River Shoshone (Wyoming), the Ghost Dance apparently combined with an earlier ceremony (the Father Dance) of thanksgiving to God for food. As a result, the annual renewal of nature took on a cosmic dimension: shamans reported dreams in which they saw the dead assembled in heaven waiting to return to earth at some unspecified time in the future. The people on earth anticipated this event and performed a dance thought to imitate that of the dead. In both these places the Ghost Dance continued to be performed into the 1950s.

 

In the 1970s the dance was revived by the activist American Indian Movement. Even among persons and groups who no longer practice it, knowledge of the Ghost Dance has not died out and lessons are still derived from it. Thus ca. 1970 the Sioux medicine man Lame Deer reinterpreted an old Ghost Dance song about straightening arrows and killing and butchering buffalo to mean that individuals must live upright lives in order to help bring about a new earth.

 

(See also: Ghost Dance, New Age Spirituality, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Native American Ceremony: New Age Spirituality Dictionary on Ghost Dance

Ghost Dance

A new religious movement among Native Americans of the western United States.

 

The Ghost Dance had two distinct phases, both of which originated in the visions of a Paiute shaman living in western Nevada.

 

The Ghost Dance of 1870: Wodziwob (d. ca. 1872), the prophet of the 1870 dance, proclaimed that the world would soon be destroyed, then renewed; the dead would be brought back to life and game animals restored. He instructed his followers to dance a nocturnal circle dance.

 

This dance was similar to both older Paiute traditions and an earlier regional movement, the Plateau Prophet Dance, but it addressed very present conditions of deprivation resulting from white incursions into tribal territories. It spread to California, Oregon, and Idaho but, with the death of Wodziwob and the nonfulfillment of his prophecies, died out within a few years. The Shoshone and Bannock of Fort Hall, Idaho, however, continued to perform the Ghost Dance at least intermittently up to 1890.

 

The Ghost Dance of 1890: Wovoka (ca. 1856-1932), a Paiute Native American prophet, inaugurated the Ghost Dance of 1890 on the basis of a vision he had received during a total eclipse of the sun. His message was in direct continuity with the 1870 dance: there was to be an immanent renewal of the world in which dead Native Americans would be resurrected and the living would no longer be subject to sickness and old age, game animals would be restored to their former abundance, and the old way of life would once more flourish. Euro-Americans, by this time firmly in control, would be eliminated by supernatural means, such as a flood or earthquake. It is uncertain whether Wovoka announced a specific date for these events, but many expected them in the spring of 1891.

 

Wovoka's message also contained ethical admonitions (e. g. , members of different tribes should live in peace with each other; they should cooperate with, not war against, the whites). In anticipation of the great event and to speed its arrival, Wovoka instructed his followers to perform circle dances periodically. They did so in large numbers, and (especially among Plains tribes) dancers often fell into trances, subsequently reporting that they had visited the spirit world and spoken with dead relatives, who were living a life like the one that had flourished before the coming of the whites. The 1890 dance spread mainly eastward along the length of the Rocky Mountains and Great Plains. In some tribes (e. g. , Paiute, Cheyenne, Shoshone, Pawnee) acceptance was almost unanimous; in others (like the Sioux) only segments of the population became believers. No Pueblo (except at Taos) or Navajo accepted it, the latter because of a culturally conditioned aversion to ghosts. As news of the Paiute prophet Wovoka began to spread, tribes sent delegations to the Walker Lake Reservation in western Nevada to see him. They returned with versions of his teachings that were sometimes shaped by the particular needs of their tribe.

 

Among the Pawnee, the dance provided the basis for an important cultural renewal, for the visions of the dancers made possible the revival of old ceremonial activities that had fallen into disuse because knowledge of their correct performance had been lost. The Sioux, who had a number of current grievances against the government (e. g. , loss of reservation lands, cuts in rations), altered Wovoka's message in the direction of greater hostility toward the whites. Delegates like Short Bull and Kicking Bear advocated the use of "ghost shirts" (special garments that were supposed to make the wearer invulnerable to bullets) and spoke of the possibility of armed conflict with the government soldiers.

 

During 1890, newspapers around the country carried often sensational stories about the "messiah craze" (Wovoka was often called the "Indian messiah") and the possibility of renewed warfare with the Sioux. Violence did erupt in December: during an attempt to arrest him, Chief Sitting Bull was shot to death, and Chief Big Foot and almost three hundred of his band were massacred by the cavalry at Wounded Knee. These events were more the result of government blunders than of a Sioux outbreak. Following the violence among the Sioux and the failure of the expected transformations the next spring, the popularity of the dance began to fade. However, it did not die out altogether.

 

Wovoka remained active, but shifted his message in the direction of ethical admonitions. As late as 1896 some Kiowa were still dancing, and one of the early Northern Cheyenne delegates, Porcupine, led a brief revival of the dance in 1900. The movement continued elsewhere in a more substantive way. In the first decade of the twentieth century, Fred Robinson, an Assiniboin who had been instructed in the Ghost Dance by Kicking Bear and had corresponded with Wovoka, brought the dance to a small community of Sioux living in Saskatchewan. Combined with a traditional Medicine Feast, apocalyptic elements disappeared and the themes of ethical admonition and community solidarity predominated.

 

Among the Wind River Shoshone (Wyoming), the Ghost Dance apparently combined with an earlier ceremony (the Father Dance) of thanksgiving to God for food. As a result, the annual renewal of nature took on a cosmic dimension: shamans reported dreams in which they saw the dead assembled in heaven waiting to return to earth at some unspecified time in the future. The people on earth anticipated this event and performed a dance thought to imitate that of the dead. In both these places the Ghost Dance continued to be performed into the 1950s.

 

In the 1970s the dance was revived by the activist American Indian Movement. Even among persons and groups who no longer practice it, knowledge of the Ghost Dance has not died out and lessons are still derived from it. Thus ca. 1970 the Sioux medicine man Lame Deer reinterpreted an old Ghost Dance song about straightening arrows and killing and butchering buffalo to mean that individuals must live upright lives in order to help bring about a new earth.

 

(See also: Ghost Dance, New Age Spirituality, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Iditarod - History

Portions of the Iditarod Trail were used by the Native American Inuit and Athapaskans hundreds of years before the arrival of Russian fur traders in the 1800s, but the trail reached its peak between the late 1880s and the mid 1920s as miners arrived to dig coal then gold, especially after the Alaska gold rushes at Nome in 1898, and at the "Inland Empire" along the Kuskokwim Mountains between the ...

See also:

Iditarod, Iditarod - History, Iditarod - Route, Iditarod - Checkpoints, Iditarod - Ceremonial start, Iditarod - Restart, Iditarod - Into the Interior, Iditarod - Divided path, Iditarod - Last dash, Iditarod - Mushers, Iditarod - Dogs, Iditarod - Records and awards, Iditarod - List of Iditarod winners

Read more here: » Iditarod: Encyclopedia II - Iditarod - History

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Hsuan Hua - Early Life

Master Hsuan Hua, a native of Shuangcheng County of Jilin Province, was born Bai Yushu on April 16th , 1918. His father was diligent and thrifty in managing the household. His mother was a faithful Buddhist who ate only vegetarian food and recited the Buddha's name every day. When she was pregnant with Yushu, she constantly prayed to the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas for her well being. The night before his birth, in a dream she saw Amitabha Buddha emitting a light. Shortly after, she gave birth to her youngest son. When the Master ...

See also:

Hsuan Hua, Hsuan Hua - Early Life, Hsuan Hua - Leaving Home, Hsuan Hua - Dharma Transmisson from Hsu Yun, Hsuan Hua - Residing in Hong Kong, Hsuan Hua - Bringing the Dharma to the West, Hsuan Hua - Monk in the Grave, Hsuan Hua - The First American Sangha, Hsuan Hua - A Road of Hardship, Hsuan Hua - Building the Foundation of Buddhism in America, Hsuan Hua - Hosting Ordination Ceremonies on Western Soil, Hsuan Hua - Protecting the Dharma, Hsuan Hua - Working towards a harmonious Sangha, Hsuan Hua - Chinese and American Buddhism, Hsuan Hua - Teaching and Protecting All Nations, Hsuan Hua - Death, Hsuan Hua - Funeral, Hsuan Hua - Sharira, Hsuan Hua - Lectures

Read more here: » Hsuan Hua: Encyclopedia II - Hsuan Hua - Early Life

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Culture of the United States - Language

Main article: Languages in the United States The primary, although not official, language of the United States is American English. Other languages that are considered to be important to U.S. culture include Spanish because of the proximity of and immigration from Mexico and other Spanish-speaking countries of the Caribbean and Central and South America, as well as the cultural crossover of the borderlands, the native Hawaiian language, Korean, Chinese, Vietnamese, and Tagalog due to immigration f ...

See also:

Culture of the United States, Culture of the United States - Attitudes, Culture of the United States - Society and economic attitudes, Culture of the United States - Relationship to other countries/cultures, Culture of the United States - Body contact and expression, Culture of the United States - Names, Culture of the United States - Intra-national allegiances, Culture of the United States - Food, Culture of the United States - Popular Culture, Culture of the United States - Technology and Gadgets, Culture of the United States - Tobacco and other drugs, Culture of the United States - Sports, Culture of the United States - Clothing, Culture of the United States - Education, Culture of the United States - Public education, Culture of the United States - Private education, Culture of the United States - Higher education, Culture of the United States - Language, Culture of the United States - Religion, Culture of the United States - Work and jobs, Culture of the United States - Housing, Culture of the United States - Romantic relationships, Culture of the United States - Marriage ceremonies, Culture of the United States - Divorce, Culture of the United States - Death rituals, Culture of the United States - Gender roles, Culture of the United States - Family arrangements, Culture of the United States - Nuclear family living patterns, Culture of the United States - Single-parent living patterns, Culture of the United States - Regional distinctions, Culture of the United States - Variations

Read more here: » Culture of the United States: Encyclopedia II - Culture of the United States - Language

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Culture of the United States - Language

Main article: Languages in the United States The primary, although not official, language of the United States is American English. Other languages that are considered to be important to U.S. culture include: Spanish because of the proximity of and immigration from Mexico and other Spanish-speaking countries of the Caribbean and Central and South America, as well as the cultural crossover of the borderlands, the native Hawaiian language, Korean, Chinese, Vietnamese, and Tagalog due to immigration ...

See also:

Culture of the United States, Culture of the United States - Attitudes, Culture of the United States - Society and economic attitudes, Culture of the United States - Relationship to other countries/cultures, Culture of the United States - Body contact and expression, Culture of the United States - Names, Culture of the United States - Intra-national allegiances, Culture of the United States - Food, Culture of the United States - Popular culture, Culture of the United States - Technology and gadgets, Culture of the United States - Tobacco and other drugs, Culture of the United States - Sports, Culture of the United States - Clothing, Culture of the United States - Education, Culture of the United States - Public education, Culture of the United States - Private education, Culture of the United States - Higher education, Culture of the United States - Language, Culture of the United States - Religion, Culture of the United States - Work and jobs, Culture of the United States - Housing, Culture of the United States - Romantic relationships, Culture of the United States - Marriage ceremonies, Culture of the United States - Divorce, Culture of the United States - Death rituals, Culture of the United States - Gender roles, Culture of the United States - Family arrangements, Culture of the United States - Nuclear family living patterns, Culture of the United States - Single-parent living patterns, Culture of the United States - Regional distinctions, Culture of the United States - Variations

Read more here: » Culture of the United States: Encyclopedia II - Culture of the United States - Language

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Sandpainting - Native American Sandpainting

In the sandpainting of southwestern Native Americans (the most famous of which are the Navajo), the Medicine Man (or Singer) paints loosely upon the ground, or on some occasions, on a buckskin or cloth tarp, by letting the colored sands flow through his fingers with control and skill. The colors for the painting are usually made with naturally colored sand, crushed gypsum (white), yellow ochre, red sandstone, charcoal, and a mixture of charcoal and gypsum (blue). Brown can be made by mixing red and black; red and white make pink. Other coloring agents ...

See also:

Sandpainting, Sandpainting - Native American Sandpainting, Sandpainting - Tibetan Sand Painting, Sandpainting - Other Sandpainting

Read more here: » Sandpainting: Encyclopedia II - Sandpainting - Native American Sandpainting

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Timucua - Culture

Timucua - Organization and Classes. Like most Native American tribes, the Timucua were not a unified and single tribe. Rather, they were split into a number of chiefdoms - perhaps 25-30 - with each chiefdom comprised of at least five hundred villages. Villages were divided into family clans, usually bearing animal names. The chiefs were despotic and absolute in their power. There were three social classes - the nobles, common people and below that were prisoners-of-war who were slaves. ...

See also:

Timucua, Timucua - History, Timucua - Culture, Timucua - Organization and Classes, Timucua - Customs, Timucua - Settlements, Timucua - Diet, Timucua - Physical Appearance, Timucua - Reference, Timucua - Bibliography

Read more here: » Timucua: Encyclopedia II - Timucua - Culture

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Blackfoot mythology - Cosmology

In Blackfoot mythology there is also a supernatural world, dominated above the natural world by the sun, and below by the beaver. The sun is sometimes personified by the part human Napi, or Old Man. The area in which the Blackfoot lived was created by Old Man exploring the area on his way north. (Nettl, 1989) The numbers four, the cardinal directs, and seven, the six principle points and center, are important in Blackfoot mythology. Communication occurs between the supernatural world and Blackfoot through visions of guardian spirits, ...

See also:

Blackfoot mythology, Blackfoot mythology - Cosmology, Blackfoot mythology - Misc, Blackfoot mythology - The Buffalo Dance, Blackfoot mythology - Source

Read more here: » Blackfoot mythology: Encyclopedia II - Blackfoot mythology - Cosmology

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Native Americans in the United States - Cultural aspects

Though cultural features, including language, garb, and customs vary enormously from one tribe to another, there are certain elements which are encountered frequently and shared by many tribes. Early nomadic hunters forged stone weapons from around 10,000 years ago; as the age of metallurgy dawned, newer technologies were used and more efficient weapons produced. Prior to contact with Europeans, most tribes used similar weaponry. The most common implement were the bow and arrow, ...

See also:

Native Americans in the United States, Native Americans in the United States - Early history, Native Americans in the United States - The Bering Strait Land Bridge theory, Native Americans in the United States - Settling down, Native Americans in the United States - European colonization, Native Americans in the United States - Initial impacts, Native Americans in the United States - Early relations, Native Americans in the United States - Removal and reservations, Native Americans in the United States - Current status, Native Americans in the United States - Cultural aspects, Native Americans in the United States - Society, Native Americans in the United States - Religion, Native Americans in the United States - Gender roles, Native Americans in the United States - Music and art, Native Americans in the United States - Economy, Native Americans in the United States - Terminology differences, Native Americans in the United States - Common usage in the U.S., Native Americans in the United States - Bibliography

Read more here: » Native Americans in the United States: Encyclopedia II - Native Americans in the United States - Cultural aspects

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Zuni - Culture

Zuñi speak the Zuñi language, a unique language which is unrelated to the languages of the other Pueblo peoples. The Zuñi continue to practice their traditional shamanistic religion with its regular ceremonies and dances and an independent mythology. The Zuñi Tribal Fair and Rodeo is held the third weekend in August. The Zuñi participate in the Gallup Inter-Tribal Ceremonial. ...

See also:

Zuni, Zuni - Culture, Zuni - History, Zuni - Miscellaneous, Zuni - Books on Zuñi by Frank Cushing

Read more here: » Zuni: Encyclopedia II - Zuni - Culture

Native American Ceremony: Encyclopedia II - Medicine wheel - History

Erecting massive stone structures is a well-documented activity of ancient man, from the Egyptian pyramids to Stonehenge, and the natives of Northern America are no different in this regard. What does separate them from the rest is how non-intrusive their structures were. Unlike the usual towering stone monoliths, the natives simply laid down lots of stones on the earth in certain arrangements. One of the more ...

See also:

Medicine wheel, Medicine wheel - History, Medicine wheel - How are they made?, Medicine wheel - What do they mean?

Read more here: » Medicine wheel: Encyclopedia II - Medicine wheel - History




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