native americans: cahokia and iroquois

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Native Americans: Native Americans: Cahokia and Cahokia and Iroquois Iroquois US History – Libertyville US History – Libertyville HS HS

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Native Americans: Cahokia and Iroquois. US History – Libertyville HS. Cahokia Mound Builders. City of Cahokia, c. 1100 AD (artist’s rendition). Who were the Cahokia?. Mississippian people (group of related tribes along Mississippi River) Mound Builders - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Native Americans: Native Americans: Cahokia and IroquoisCahokia and Iroquois

US History – Libertyville HSUS History – Libertyville HS

Page 2: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Cahokia Mound BuildersCahokia Mound Builders

City of Cahokia, c. 1100 AD (artist’s rendition)

Page 3: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Who were the Cahokia?Who were the Cahokia?• Mississippian people

(group of related tribes along Mississippi River)

• Mound Builders– Subgroup of Miss. tribes

that erected earthen mounds as common public works

– Cahokian culture was centered on a big city near modern day St. Louis

Page 4: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

CahokiaCahokia• City and “suburbs”

of 30,000 +

• Rich art work reflected leisure time

• Huge trade network

• Tech included calendars, walls

Page 5: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Cahokian MoundsCahokian Mounds• Purpose of mounds

– Burial? Ceremonial?– Living space above flood

plain?

• Massive building effort requiring mobilization of entire civilization, decades / centuries

• French explorers in 1600s discovered mounds, did not build on them (recognized their significance)

Monk’s Mound, Cahokia

“Monk’s Mound” – 1037 feet long, 790 feet wide base; ten stories tall; over 250,000

square feet

Page 6: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Mississippian Trade NetworkMississippian Trade Network• Centered on Great

Lakes region– North to St.

Lawrence– Along Atlantic coast– South to Gulf of

Mexico– West to Oklahoma

• Larger than Europe & Scandinavia!

Page 7: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

CahokiaCahokia

• Cahokia flourished from 850 to 1500s

• Abruptly disappeared; why?

– Massive flooding?– Disease?

Page 8: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Iroquois ConfederacyIroquois Confederacy• Located in upstate

New York and Canada; Empire extended into Ohio Valley

• Niagara Falls = center of Iroquois culture, religion

• Iroquois were major force in early US history – why?

Page 9: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Iroquois ConfederacyIroquois Confederacy• Trading empire• Military empire based on

warrior culture• Total population = 25,000• Unified government /

people / culture • Union of five tribes

– Mohawk– Oneida– Onodagas– Cayugas– Senecas

Mohawk Logo“Tree of Peace”

Page 10: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Iroquois ConfederacyIroquois Confederacy• Called selves

“Haudenosaunee” = human being (“the people”)

– very arrogant people due to their military success

– Ohio Valley Indians called them “Irokwek” – rough translation = “snake in the grass”

– French translation = Iroquois

Page 11: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Lifestyle of the IroquoisLifestyle of the Iroquois• Village dwellers (100-

125 persons / village)– Communal living, based

on gender– NOT based on equality– Village made up of

extended families – cousins, aunts, etc

– Families identified matrilineally (through mother’s family)

• Child, son / daughter of mother, etc

Iroquois village, c. 1720(note longhouses, wall)

Page 12: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Lifestyle of the Iroquois Lifestyle of the Iroquois • Families lived matrilocally

(live where mothers are)– Lived in mother’s family lodge– Longhouse = oval shaped,

single entrance; sleep to sides, eat, meet in center

– Village, longhouse as woman’s domain

– Woods, everything else = male’s domain

– Male goes to live in wife’s longhouse

– Why is this a more practical way of organizing society?

Iroquois longhouse(interior view here)

Page 13: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Lifestyle of the IroquoisLifestyle of the Iroquois• Divorce customs

• Raising children

• Lack of domestic violence

• Child raising

• High suicide rate amongst male teens

Page 14: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Iroquois CultureIroquois Culture• Concept of time

– Patience needed to hunt, farm

– No concept of minutes, hours

– Cycle of seasons, moon basis of “time”

– Time concept circular – no beginning or end vs. European linear time: start, end point

• Examples?• European view of

Indians = lazy

VS.

Page 15: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Iroquois CultureIroquois Culture• Matriarchal society

– Village leadership = clan mother

• Gender division of labor– Men = hunter, warrior,

political leader– Women = farmers, village

leaders

• Naming of individuals– Clan mother named kids– Names given when you do

something good, bad, funny– Iroquois adopted European

names based on what they liked

Page 16: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Iroquois PoliticsIroquois Politics• Iroquois political

system– Iroquois a confederacy

of tribes– 50 or so male chiefs

got together about 1 / year

– 2 issues to consider• Make war?• Everyone have food?

– “Circle of Power”• Inner circle of males• Outer circle of clan

mothers

• Men discuss, women decide

Page 17: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Iroquois EmpireIroquois Empire• Rivals to Iroquois = Ohio Valley Indians

– Iroquois defeat them in every conflict • BUT . . . European involvement changed

dynamic

Map of Ohio RiverSystem, created byGeorge Washington(1754)

Page 18: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Iroquois and the EuropeansIroquois and the Europeans• European rivalries

translated to rivalries between Indian tribes

• French allied with Ohio Valley Indians

– Wanted trade, not land– French fur trappers needed

Indian hunters / guides– French traded guns, alcohol

for furs• British allied with Iroquois

(why?)– Because French allied with

Ohio Valley Indians

French trapper and Ohio Indian

Page 19: Native Americans:  Cahokia and Iroquois

Conflict between Indians, Conflict between Indians, EuropeansEuropeans

• Why is it that EVERY contact between Europeans, Indians resulted in bloodshed?

• Pattern to contacts– Initial cooperation– Dispute over resources

based on different perspectives towards those resources

• European ultimatum: move or die vs. Indians we’re not moving and we’ll kill you