Happy Indigenous People's Day!

Native American Culture

Native American culture goes back thousands of years; to a time when these indigenous people lived in what is now known as North America. Native American culture revolved heavily around nature, and every aspect of their lives was based around the Earth. The Native American tribes worshipped the spirits of these animals as gods, but they also killed them for food and clothing. They would never waste any part of the animals though, they would eat the meat, wear the hides, they used the skin to make drums and they used the bones for tools and weapons.

They believed the spirit of the animals would live on in spirit within the tribe. They also fashioned totem poles carved out of wood with different animals faces on them, and these faces represented the spirits of family and important tribal figures. In Native American culture they believed that everyone person had the spirit of a certain animal and when they died their spirit would live on inside the animal. The Native Americans also harvested plants and berries that they would use for various things from medicines to dyes. They lived in harmony with the Earth which they lived on and they let nothing go to waste."

Well, 'civilized' America sure screwed up that record.

I really dislike articles of this kind. No offense. But it's basically lumping an entire people into one culture, while in reality they were as unique and varied as the cultures of Europe or of Asia. They had different religious beliefs as well.
 
So who built Stonehenge then, you fucking moron?
Neolithic stone age tribes who predate any English, Romans, or Greeks by thousands of years.

If the North American pre-Columbian cities of Poverty Point and Cohokia do not count as civilization to Deplorables, then neither does Stone Henge.

Using rightwing logic, England was populated by primitive, savage tribal cultures who were only dragged kicking and screaming into civilized behavior at the tip of a Roman sword.
 
Hello ThatOwlWoman,

I really dislike articles of this kind. No offense. But it's basically lumping an entire people into one culture, while in reality they were as unique and varied as the cultures of Europe or of Asia. They had different religious beliefs as well.

Yeah, I was surprised to find it depicted as if it was just one culture. I expected more diversity. But that was just one link. There are so many more...

"The Cherokee Nation is a sovereign tribal government. Upon settling in Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma) after the Indian Removal Act, the Cherokee people established a new government in what is now the city of Tahlequah, Oklahoma. A constitution was adopted on September 6, 1839, 68 years prior to Oklahoma’s statehood.

Today, the Cherokee Nation is the largest tribe in the United States with more than 390,000 tribal citizens worldwide. More than 141,000 Cherokee Nation citizens reside within the tribe’s reservation boundaries in northeastern Oklahoma. Services provided include health and human services, education, employment, housing, economic and infrastructure development, environmental protection and more. With approximately 11,000 employees, Cherokee Nation and its subsidiaries are one of the largest employers in northeastern Oklahoma. The tribe had a more than $2.16 billion economic impact on the Oklahoma economy in fiscal year 2018."

Cherokee Nation

"Electric Transit Buses


The Cherokee Nation unveiled its first public, rural eco-friendly electric buses to transport employees and tribal citizens to work and tribal health centers, and its first electric school bus, which is the first of its kind in the state of Oklahoma."
 
Ancient Civilizations of North America
Source credit: Professor Edwin Barnhart, Ph.D. Maya Exploration Center

Arriving in the 15th century and beyond, European explorers came to North America hoping to discover another civilization like those of the Maya or Inca to plunder. Not finding mountains of gold or silver, they saw no value in what they did find: myriad sophisticated cultures with hundreds of vibrant cities, roadways, canals, extensive trade networks, art, religious traditions, and thousands of earthen pyramids.

The people who shaped these civilizations—the engineers, political leaders, mathematicians, and astronomers—were also considered to be of no value, labeled by the Europeans as primitive and backwards, often enslaved or murdered. And because the native peoples left no written language, the narrative continued to be shaped by the conquerors, passed down as truth from generation to generation.

But now—with the technological advances of modern archaeology and a new perspective on world history—we are finally able to piece together their compelling true stories.

Astronomers, Engineers, and Hydrologists
The peoples of ancient North America were exceptionally knowledgeable about their environment; their lives required it. They used their detailed understanding of flora and fauna, landforms, geology, and water resources when developing strategies for hunting and gathering, locating villages, and farming. But their intellectual and artistic curiosity went much beyond the immediate need for food and safety. Beginning thousands of years ago, and without the benefit of written language, native peoples became skilled mathematicians, metallurgists, jewelers, construction engineers, astronomers, and more.

Ancient Cities to Rival Those of Classical European Antiquity
Built by a Late Archaic people, Poverty Point is considered by most archaeologists to be the first city in North America. Supporting a population of more than 4,000—40 times the size of an average village at the time—it existed for more than 1,000 years. With Professor Barnhart as your guide, you will understand how Poverty Point has been revealed as a master-planned community, with a 37-acre central plaza; earthen pyramids; and six semi-circular, concentric platform mounds holding hundreds of houses. Carbon-14 dating reveals that the entire set of concentric platform mounds were built in one single phase, requiring extensive leadership, planning, surveying skills, and cooperation from an enormous pool of laborers. Even with its compact organization, every single house had a view of the central plaza—a feat many modern planners would be challenged to accomplish.

Cahokia, built about 1,000 years ago just east of present-day St. Louis, was the largest city in ancient North America north of Mesoamerica. With 3,000 acres and 50,000 people living in its interior and satellite communities, Cahokia dwarfed the contemporaneous populations of London, Paris, and Rome. At one point in its history, the ancient city was razed and replaced with a master-planned version more than three times its previous size. Although many of Cahokia’s features, such as large mounds, ritual spaces, and communal farming, had been seen elsewhere, its scale and level of social organization were unprecedented.

The Legacy of the Iroquois: North American Democracy
At the time of European contact, the Iroquois were a semi-sedentary farming people near Lakes Erie and Ontario whose villages were often in fierce conflict with each other. When three visionary leaders recognized that such continual warfare was holding the nation back, they proposed a tribal confederation known as The Great League of Peace. The League’s Great Council consisted of 50 chiefs, or sachem, each of whom was elected to represent a specific clan by the clan’s female elders. These women voted their representatives in—and could also vote them out. The Great Council settled all disputes and conflicts through dialog, debate, and consensus, guided by the 117 articles of confederation known as the “Great Law of Peace.”

Not only did the Iroquois establish the first North American democracy, but the framers of the U.S. Constitution held the system in the highest regard. Two hundred years after establishing its own Constitution, the United States formally acknowledged this Iroquois legacy in Congressional Resolution 331, stating the “confederation of the original Thirteen Colonies into one republic was influenced by the political system developed by the Iroquois Confederacy as were many of the democratic principles which were incorporated into the Constitution itself.”

https://www.amazon.com/Ancient-Civil.../dp/B07DX73HVN


Source:
https://www.justplainpolitics.com/s...ations-of-North-America&p=2696479#post2696479

The Pre-Columbian North American cities of Poverty Point and Cohokia could not have been constructed without some knowledge of surveying, geometry, astronomy, hydrology, and the organizational skills to plan a city's construction and have thousands of people work on it.
 
They had a wide variety of water craft, from rafts to dugouts to kayaks to craft with sails. And in those "unseaworthy vessels," they managed to create trade that spanned the coasts, and brought goods from Canada down to the Gulf Coast, and back again. They have found Great Lakes copper items in ancient pueblos in the Southwest, and of course maize, which was first domesticated by indigenous Mexicans, found its way across the entire continent.
I like the way your brain works!
 
Hello Cypress,

The Pre-Columbian North American cities of Poverty Point and Cohokia could not have been constructed without some knowledge of surveying, geometry, astronomy, hydrology, and the organizational skills to plan a city's construction and have thousands of people work on it.

Wow!

That's AWESOME.

America is only just discovering how much we owe to the indigenous people of America.
 
Hello Cypress,



Wow!

That's AWESOME.

America is only just discovering how much we owe to the indigenous people of America.

Owl could tell you better than me, but paleoanthropological research in the past few decades is dispelling our notions of North American indigenous people strictly limited to living in teepees and existing as strictly nomadic cultures.
 
Happy Stone-Age Savages Day everyone!

The plains Indians are now recognized as one of the most warlike group of people documented. There was very little option other than all out war.

The Anisazi - the Ancestral Puebloans? They were eaten by their enemies in order to terrorize them. They are gone now, not so much as a sprig of parsley left.

The Aztecs? So despised by their neighbors that upon the arrival of the Conquistadors, local communities united with the Spaniards in order to annihilate the murderous beast-like Aztecs who had abused, terrified and slaughtered their men, women and children over the decades.



5e2b1a1e91312.jpg
 
The plains Indians are now recognized as one of the most warlike group of people documented. There was very little option other than all out war.

The Anisazi - the Ancestral Puebloans? They were eaten by their enemies in order to terrorize them. They are gone now, not so much as a sprig of parsley left.

The Aztecs? So despised by their neighbors that upon the arrival of the Conquistadors, local communities united with the Spaniards in order to annihilate the murderous beast-like Aztecs who had abused, terrified and slaughtered their men, women and children over the decades.



View attachment 21012

What is your point?
 
The plains Indians are now recognized as one of the most warlike group of people documented. There was very little option other than all out war.

The Anisazi - the Ancestral Puebloans? They were eaten by their enemies in order to terrorize them. They are gone now, not so much as a sprig of parsley left.

The Aztecs? So despised by their neighbors that upon the arrival of the Conquistadors, local communities united with the Spaniards in order to annihilate the murderous beast-like Aztecs who had abused, terrified and slaughtered their men, women and children over the decades.



View attachment 21012

When I read the title, I thought it was a day of celebration for Trump supporters. Turned out I was correct. :thumbsup:
 
Indigenous People's Day

1. Female warriors

Native American women fought alongside men in battles, the most popular among them being the Buffalo Calf Road Woman of the Northern Cheyenne tribe.

2. Popcorn

The Indigenous Americans were the first to domesticate the strains of maize that produced popcorn thousands of years ago.

3. Maria Tallchief

The first Native American (and American) to dance at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow and with the Paris Opera Ballet was Maria Tallchief.


4. Hockey


The Native American tribes of Foxes, Saux, and Assiniboine played a game called shinny, which is where hockey came from.


5. The sequoia tree

The sequoia tree is named after the revered Cherokee leader Sequoyah, who created an alphabet for his people.

1492: the year the Indians discovered they needed a wall.
 
heart-human-sacrifice.jpg

WHAT A GREAT PEOPLE AND CULTURE TO HONOR


they did much worse things to other people than any America slave holder did in 1860
 
Back
Top