Contributions to North American Ethnology: Vol. I-VII, IX.John Wesley Powell U.S. Government Printing Office, 1881 |
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Seite x
... Probably the " Seven Cities of Cibola ” of Coronado's Expedition - Reasons for supposition - The pueblos constructed gradually - Remarkable appear- ance of the valley when inhabited . CHAPTER VIII . HOUSES IN RUINS OF THE SEDENTARY ...
... Probably the " Seven Cities of Cibola ” of Coronado's Expedition - Reasons for supposition - The pueblos constructed gradually - Remarkable appear- ance of the valley when inhabited . CHAPTER VIII . HOUSES IN RUINS OF THE SEDENTARY ...
Seite xi
... Probably used for cremation of chiefs - Probable numbers of the Mound - Builders - Failure of attempt to transplant this type of village life to the Ohio Valley- Their withdrawal probably voluntary . CHAPTER X. HOUSES OF THE AZTECS OR ...
... Probably used for cremation of chiefs - Probable numbers of the Mound - Builders - Failure of attempt to transplant this type of village life to the Ohio Valley- Their withdrawal probably voluntary . CHAPTER X. HOUSES OF THE AZTECS OR ...
Seite 11
... probably older than the confederacy which was established more than four centuries ago . The amount of dif- ference in their composition , as to the gentes they contain , represents the vicissitudes through which each tribe has passed ...
... probably older than the confederacy which was established more than four centuries ago . The amount of dif- ference in their composition , as to the gentes they contain , represents the vicissitudes through which each tribe has passed ...
Seite 19
... probably required for their formation the time measured by three ethnical periods . New tribes , as well as new gentes , were constantly forming by natural growth , and the process was sensibly accelerated by the great expanse of the ...
... probably required for their formation the time measured by three ethnical periods . New tribes , as well as new gentes , were constantly forming by natural growth , and the process was sensibly accelerated by the great expanse of the ...
Seite 21
... probably , was but a repetition of that of the tribes of Asia , Europe , and Africa when they were in corresponding conditions . From the preceding observations it is apparent that an American Indian tribe is a very simple as well as ...
... probably , was but a repetition of that of the tribes of Asia , Europe , and Africa when they were in corresponding conditions . From the preceding observations it is apparent that an American Indian tribe is a very simple as well as ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adobe brick adobe mortar altepetlalli American aborigines ancient Animas River Aztecs calpulli Central America Chaco Chaco Cañon Chiapas chiefs Cibola communism in living confederacy constructed council council of chiefs court cultivated dinner doorways edifices embankments entered ESTUFA ESTUFA ESTUFA families federacy feet high feet long feet wide five floor four gens gentes gentile ground ground-plan Herrera hospitality hundred feet Indian tribes inhabitants Iroquois joint-tenement houses ladders land large households lintels lodge long-houses main building maize Mandan masonry ment Mexicans Mexico Middle Status miles Moki Montezuma MORGAN Mound-Builders occupied Ojibwa Onondaga Palenque period persons phratry poles present principle probably Pueblo Bonito Pueblo Indians Pueblo Pintado remains remarks roof rooms row of apartments ruins sachems San Juan side society Spaniards Spanish Status of barbarism structures Taos terrace twenty usages Uxmal valley Village Indians walls wing Yucatan Zuñi
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 109 - ... a single house, because the whole is under one roof ; otherwise it would seem more like a range of buildings, as it is divided into seven distinct apartments, each thirty feet square, by means of broad boards set on end from the floor to the roof.
Seite 64 - No matter how many children, or whatever goods he might have in the house, he might at any time be ordered to pick up his blanket and budge...
Seite 69 - As these families gradually expand into bands or tribes or nations, the paternal authority is represented by the chief of each association. This chieftain, however, is not hereditary...
Seite 50 - They now set before them a small piece of buffaloe meat, some dried salmon, berries, and several kinds of roots. Among these last is one which is round and much like an onion in appearance, and sweet to the taste : it is called quamash, and is eaten either in its natural state, or boiled into a kind of soup, or made into a cake, which is then called pasheco.
Seite 122 - ... feet, raised a foot above the passage by a long sapling, hewed square, and fitted with joists that go from it to the back of the house; on these joists they lay large pieces of bark, and on extraordinary occasions spread...
Seite 156 - ... with alternate beds of large and small stones, the regularity of the combination producing a very pleasing effect. The ceiling of this room is also more tasteful than any we have seen — the transverse beams being smaller and more numerous. and the longitudinal pieces which rest upon them only about an inch in diameter, and beautifully regular.
Seite 88 - Vol. II, Lib. Ill, cap. VIII, p. 50): Nearly all the old authors describe the public buildings as surrounded by pleasure-grounds or ornamental gardens. It is very striking that, the pueblo having been founded in 1325, and nearly a century having been spent in adding sufficient artificial sod to the originally small solid expanse settled, the Mexicans could have been ready so soon to establish purely decorative parks within an area, every inch of which was valuable to them for subsistence alone !...
Seite 237 - Daily his larder and winecellar were open to all who wished to eat and drink. The meals were served by three or four hundred youths, who brought on an infinite variety of dishes ; indeed, whenever he dined or supped, the table was loaded with every kind of flesh, fish, fruits, and vegetables, that the . country produced.
Seite 164 - After this they returned to their houses and suddenly, the next day, they packed up their goods and property, their women and children, and fled to the hills, leaving their towns deserted, with only some few remaining in them.
Seite 26 - Tribes, and with the Chiefs of these Tribes formed the Council of each, which was supreme over all matters pertaining to the Tribe exclusively. V. Unanimity in the Council of the Confederacy was made essential to every public act. VI. In the General Council the Sachems voted by Tribes, which gave to each Tribe a negative upon the others. VII. The Council of each Tribe had power to convene the General Council; but the latter had no power to convene itself.