The agriculture and mythology of a culture has a large influence on the traditions and the way in which a culture behaves. Both agriculture and mythology play huge roles in every day lives of the community under which they thrive. Prior to the settlement of the thirteen colonies in the United States there were several differentiating groups of indigenous people that lived in communities through out the US. These people were the Native Americans and each tribe of these people had different ways of agriculture, mythology, and several other varying facets of life. The Cherokee is a tribe that still thrives currently and has 293,074 people in their population. The ways in which the Cherokee interact with their environment currently may be different but their values remain strong regardless of opposition. However, the agriculture of the Tennessee Cherokee and the overall mythology of the Cherokee nation will be explored and examined, resulting in a closer …show more content…
The women would make a type of bread out of the flour from dried persimmon and they would use the bark from the mulberry trees that would be used for weaving of baskets while the fruit was eaten. However, because the Cherokee people were hunter-gatherers in addition to the cultivators of various other crops, the plants that surrounded their settlements were used in various ways. Walnuts had a large impact on the diets of the Cherokee and were used in many ways. The ways in which walnuts were consumed was in eating: their inner “nutmeat,” they were made into a milk-like beverage and were even pounded and made into oil. The Cherokee also used the walnut tree bark for different purposes such as an antiseptic and an aid to cure a toothache. Several different types of nuts were used by the Cherokee to be either baked into bread or used as a dye for
Myths of the Cherokee, by James Mooney, is packed with wonderful Cherokee folklore tales. There are numerous fantastic legends dating back to the early Cherokee days, ranging from creation myths to wonder stories and beyond. Whilst each story is distinct and intriguing in its own right, the spotlight will be attracted to two in particular: “The First Fire” and “The Deluge”. "The First Fire" presents the tale of Kănăne′sk Amai′yh, a little water spider who accomplished what no other larger animal could. The water spider was able to restore fire to the animal community after the flame went out on a frigid night, which no other creature was able to do (Mooney 239).
The men and women had distinct roles. The men and older boys used nets to catch rabbits. They used spears to hunt deer, bison, bears, and wild sheep. The women and girls would gather roots, cactus flowers, pine nuts, pinyon nuts, amaranth, sunflower seeds, Indian rice grass, mustard seeds, and other plants. When they began farming, they grew corn (also known as maize), squash, beans, and pumpkins.
Native Americans gifted the first settlers with pumpkins. Instead of regifting, they put them to good use roughly 50 years after the first thanksgiving, when pumpkin pie appears. There are many forms of pumpkin pie before it settles into perfection. Early American settlers of plimoth plantation may have made pumpkin pies by making stewed pumpkins or by filling a hollowed out shell with milk, honey and spices, and then baking it in hot ashes. In 1651, Francois Pierre la Varenne’s cookbook features a pumpkin pastry recipe.
It was a type of spear thrower used to propel spears or darts. They used many types of knives as well. Food ate by the Pueblo tribe included meat obtained by the men who hunted. Farmers of the tribe produced crops such as corn, beans, sunflower seeds, and squash. They also raised sheep and goats, sometimes put up for trade.
Also they ate turkey, cornbread, deer meat, Indian pudding. Also clams and oysters potatoes pumpkin pie. Many tables are filled
The Cherokee have a really simply belief system that were followed by every day. Some of the Cherokees now still live by this belief system. Cherokees use nature into their belief system and religion. Trees are used in their ceremonies and in their medication. Cedar was the most sacred tree and was part of their funeral ritual.
During the Civil War from 1861 to 1865 food was scarce in the South. In the time of war rations had to be transported long distances, so the Commissary Departments relied on foods that could be preserved easily. Wheat flour was not one of these easily preserved food and therefore was quite scarce in the South. Due to the lack of wheat flour many soldiers baked bread from any available ingredients. One of these ingredients was white cornmeal, which the soldiers used to make shortbread.
A predominant Native American country, the Cherokee controlled unfathomable domains spreading transversely over Tennessee, Georgia and the Carolinas. The Cherokee were clever people who regarded nature and utilized all aspects of a creature after a killing, yet they were additionally superstitious. Deep-rooted techniques joined with community old stories and polytheistic religion prompted a profoundly novel arrangement of hunting traditions/rituals among the Cherokee. At the point when young men wished to be hunters they needed to converse with the minister, who was responsible for preparing them.
So even though the Navajo are considered to be fierce warriors, they are a peaceful people that live on their large large land. Since they don 't use the modern technology or creations we have and use, they make their own homes, food, tools, clothing, and
Also, a ‘holy man’ could be a man or woman. Men and woman had pretty equal rights. Whenever times were peaceful, the village had a ‘white leader’, and whenever there was war, there was a ’red leader’. Fishing was a big food source for the Cherokee, they would even use walnut bark to poison the water so the fish would be easier to catch.
Ranging from the south Alleghenies mountain range all the way down to the south of Georgia and far west of Alabama, lived the Cherokee Indians. They were a powerful detached tribe of the Iroquoian family and were commonly called Tsaragi which translates into "cave people. " This tribe was very prominent in what is now called the U.S, but over time has been split up or run out of their land because of social or political encounters with the new settlers from Europe. Despite the dispersion or the split amongst this tribe, they still obtained their core religious beliefs, practices and ceremonies. Their detailed belief system, fundamental beliefs, significant meanings, and their connection to song and dance make up their religious system.
The people lived at Ohlone tribe were mostly happy. Grapes, Olive ,fig and wheat were grown at Mission San Jose. They raised cattle, sheep and horses. They ate a variety of items including seeds, roots, grasses, berries, flower, acorn, insects, reptiles, bats, rabbit, birds, fish and larger animal like deer.
In the Cherokee Creation Story, the earth was only made up of water without any inhabitants (Andrews 196). The earth was connected to the sky with four strings where the animals once lived (Andrews 196). But eventually, the animals became too crowded in the sky and sent the Water Beetle along with the Grandfather Buzzard to explore and make room down on earth (Andrews 196). The beetle brought mud from the sea that created the land above (Andrews 196). The Grandfather Buzzard was later sent to check up on the land, and while flying above the land, the wind from his wings created the valleys of the earth (Andrews 196).
One interesting aspect about the Cherokee tribe is their different view on marriage and children. The wedding is a very special event and is informal most of the time. The couple gather at the womans household and exchange corn to symbolize their marriage and vows. After the ceremony ends, the man moves into his new wife’s family’s household. When married, the woman controlled the property and was the most dominant.
They are often labeled as uncivilized barbarians, which is a solely false accusation against them. This paper aims to address the similarities between Native American beliefs and the beliefs of other cultures based on The Iroquois Creation Story in order to defeat the stereotype that Natives are regularly defined by. Native Americans are commonly considered uncivilized, savage, and barbarian. Nevertheless, in reality the Natives are not characterized by any of those negative traits, but rather they inhabit positive characteristics such as being wise, polite, tolerant, civilized, harmonious with nature, etc. They have had a prodigious impact on the Puritans