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| Indians in America
Indians in America
Referat im Leistungskurs Englisch von Goeran Zängerlein
am 09.10.1996
Indians in America
The Ancient Indians
- Bering - Mankind came from Asia to America
in the Pleistocene age ( = Ice Age) via the Bering street land bridge during the
Wisconsin (corresponding to the Würm, 90,000 or 75,000 to 8,000 B.C.).
These Paleo-Siberians who went there were the first Indians. The first artefacts
of this culture date back to 50,000 to 10,000 B.C. About 3,000 to 1,000 B.C.,
long after the submersion of the Bering land bridge Eskimos and Aleuts came with
wooden dugouts and skin boats to America.
- Lithic-Indian - Lithic Indians first did
not have the knowledge of stone points for their spears. This age was called the
Pre-Projectile-Point stage (about 50,000 B.C. to about 25,000 B.C.). The hunters
probably used fire to harden the tips of their spears, but their did not remain
any spears. After 25,000 B.C. new techniques appeared among Lithic Indians, and
workable stone (flint, chert and obsidian) was used to make cutting tools and
the spear points which were very important for hunting.
- Archaic-Indians (Foraging Indians) - This
time lasted from about 6,000 B.C. to 1,000 B.C. and is characterized by Indians
hunting and trapping small game, fishing and gathering of edible plants. The
Archaic-Indian tribes became more localized than the Lithic Indian ones and
archaeologists even found some permanent Archaic sites. More materials were used
during this time and food was stored in baskets and skin containers. Archaic
Indians were the first North Americans to craft wooden boats and domesticate the
dog. In this time they also started to make ornaments.
In general
it is difficult to find a system classifications for these periods because each
of the Indian groups developed in their own way with different habits, progress
and success. This makes the study of prehistoric Indians confusing.
Ancient civilizations
- Southwest - In this part of America which
today contains southern Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, a corner of Texas
and northern Mexico. Because of the limited food sources agriculture was
discovered here as an alternative. The cultures which lived here especially
developed village life, tools, arts and pottery. The three most important
cultures were: Mogollon ("Mountain People"), Hohokam ("Vanished Ones") and
Anasazi ("Ancient Ones"). All these cultures existed between 500 A.D. to 1,500
A.D.
- The Mound Builders - In eastern and
midwestern America was enough food so that advanced cultures with bigger
populations could arise without much agriculture. The two main cultures were the
Adena and the Hopewell. They were both situated in Ohio Valley. The Adena
existed from 1,000 B.C. to 200 A.D., the Hopewell from about 300 B.C. to 700
A.D. Both cultures constructed Mounds made out of earth. These mounds reached a
height up to 30 or 40 feet.
- The Temple Mound Builders - This culture
was very good in farming. They lived in the Southeast near rivers and grew corn,
squash, pumpkins and tobacco. They had an eccelent trade net between themselves
and other Indians. They had a highly developed social structure and caste
system. Because they were obsessed with death they built mounds like the Adena
and Hopewells and also temple mounds.
Indian Lifeways
- Art and technology
- Woodwork - Indians were masters of
woodwork and they used a variety of tools to shape the wood. They made axes,
knives, scrapers, drills and hammers out of stone, shell, copper, bone, horn and
teeth. They made houses, boats, sleds, snowshoes, bows and arrows, spears,
clubs, shields and much more.
- Stonework - Before the iron tools from
Europe arrived, stone was the primary material used to form tools for cutting,
piercing, scraping and hammering. Soft stones like catlinite (pipestone) and
steatite (soapstone) were used to shape bowls, containers and religious objects.
Gemstones were used to make jewelry.
- Skinwork - The Indians used the skin of
animals for several purposes. The uncured skin was used to make shields, boxes,
drums and rattles. Indians also had various techniques to cure leather. Leather
and fur served to make clothing, sheats and blankets.
- Textiles - Indians not only used skin for
clothing but plant fibres and wool from buffalo, too. They did not have looms,
except Indians in the Southwest. Yarn was spun on a spindle or by hand.
- Basketry - This art developed together
with weaving and Indians made various forms of baskets for various
purposes.
- Pottery - This was mainly used by local
tribes in North America because the vessels were to fragile for the nomadic
lifestyle.
- Metalwork - Although the Native North
Americans did not enter the Iron Age, metals were used all over the
continent.
There are much more interesting discoveries like
shellwork, featherwork, painting, dramatic arts and games and toys but it would
take too much time to explain them all.
- Shelter - Depending on which tribe you
look at, you can find different shelters. They were all specialized for the
lifestyle of a specific tribe. There were tepees, wigwams, igloos, pueblos and
lean-tos.
- Clothing - The style of clothin depended
on the climate the Indians had to face and on which materials were available for
them. For their clothing Indians used fur, cotton and various plant materials.
Common articles were shirts, leggings for men and skirts and blouses for women,
plus robes and blankets for cold weather. Some Indians went barefoot others wore
leather moccasins or woven plant fibre sandals.
- Religion - This part of Indian life was
very important and had influence on their whole lifestyle. Indians saw
themselves as an extension of animate and inanimate nature. Religion and ritual
were important for everyday activity like the quest for food, technology,
warfare and art. Prayer was used in combination with hunting, for example.
Indian religion generally involved that the universe is suffused with
preternatural forces and powerful spirits. Shamanism was a common form of
religious practice in which the individual tried to control these spirits
through the use of magic.
- Language - In former times there existed
many Indian languages - perhaps as many as 2,200! This caused problems in
intertribal communication, but made it also possible for scientists to trace the
development of Indian culture. Many of these languages have survived and are
spoken by contemporary Indians, over 100 in the United States
alone!
Indians and explorers
There are different speculations if there came other people to America
before Columbus. The only case that can be proved, is the presence of Vikings in
the New World. Archeologists found remains at L`Anse aux Meadows in
Newfoundland. And expeditions to the New World are also mentioned in Norse
documents.
The white exploration of North America lasted for four centuries, from the
end of the 15th into the 20th. Five European nations sent
out expeditions: Spain, France, England, the Netherland and Russia. Even Sweden
held a territory in the Delaware Bay. But none of the first expeditions was
carried out by men of those nations: Columbus who sailed for Spain in 1492 was
an Italian as was Cabot who sailed for England in 1497. Verranzo for France in
1524 was also Italian. Hudson who sailed for the Netherlands, in his exploration
of 1609 was English. And Bering for Russia in 1741 was Danish.
Indian wars
After the Whites from Europe arrived a difficult time started for the
Indians. Waves over waves of settlers from the overpopulated Europe came to the
New World. Because the Whites did not accept traditions and habbits of the
Indians they started wars. These wars should last for four hundred years. In the
end the Indians lost the Four-Hundred-Year-War. But they only lost because not
all Indian tribes did fight at one front.
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