The Siouan Indians by McGee, W. J. (William John), 1853-1912
The Siouan Indians by McGee, W. J. (William John), 1853-1912
The Siouan Indians by McGee, W. J. (William John), 1853-1912
[pg 157]
Contents 1
THE SIOUAN INDIANS
A PRELIMINARY SKETCH1
BY W.J. McGEE
DEFINITION
Out of some sixty aboriginal stocks or families found in North America above the Tropic of Cancer, about
five-sixths were confined to the tenth of the territory bordering Pacific ocean; the remaining nine-tenths of the
land was occupied by a few strong stocks, comprising the Algonquian, Athapascan, Iroquoian, Shoshonean,
Siouan, and others of more limited extent.
The Indians of the Siouan stock occupied the central portion of the continent. They were preeminently plains
Indians, ranging from Lake Michigan to the Rocky mountains, and from the Arkansas to the Saskatchewan,
while an outlying body stretched to the shores of the Atlantic. They were typical American barbarians, headed
by hunters and warriors and grouped in shifting tribes led by the chase or driven by battle from place to place
over their vast and naturally rich domain, though a crude agriculture sprang up whenever a tribe tarried long
in one spot. No native stock is more interesting than the great Siouan group, and none save the Algonquian
and Iroquoian approach it in wealth of literary and historical records; for since the advent of white men the
Siouan Indians have played striking rôles on the stage of human development, and have caught the eye of
every thoughtful observer.
The term Siouan is the adjective denoting the "Sioux" Indians and cognate tribes. The word "Sioux" has been
variously and vaguely used. Originally it was a corruption of a term expressing enmity or contempt, applied to
a part of the plains tribes by the forest-dwelling Algonquian Indians. According to Trumbull, it was the
popular appellation of those tribes which call themselves Dakota, Lakota, or Nakota[pg 158] ("Friendly,"
implying confederated or allied), and was an abbreviation of Nadowessioux, a Canadian-French corruption of
Nadowe-ssi-wag ("the snake-like ones" or "enemies"), a term rooted in the Algonquian nadowe ("a snake");
and some writers have applied the designation to different portions of the stock, while others have rejected it
because of the offensive implication or for other reasons. So long ago as 1836, however, Gallatin employed
the term "Sioux" to designate collectively "the nations which speak the Sioux language," 2 and used an
alternative term to designate the subordinate confederacyâi.e., he used the term in a systematic way for the
first time to denote an ethnic unit which experience has shown to be well defined. Gallatin's terminology was
soon after adopted by Prichard and others, and has been followed by most careful writers on the American
Indians. Accordingly the name must be regarded as established through priority and prescription, and has been
used in the original sense in various standard publications.3
In colloquial usage and in the usage of the ephemeral press, the term "Sioux" was applied sometimes to one
but oftener to several of the allied tribes embraced in the first of the principal groups of which the stock is
composed, i.e., the group or confederacy styling themselves Dakota. Sometimes the term was employed in its
simple form, but as explorers and pioneers gained an inkling of the organization of the group, it was often
compounded with the tribal name as "Santee-Sioux," "Yanktonnai-Sioux," "Sisseton-Sioux," etc. As
acquaintance between white men and red increased, the stock name was gradually displaced by tribe names
until the colloquial appellation "Sioux" became but a memory or tradition throughout much of the territory
formerly dominated by the great Siouan stock. One of the reasons for the abandonment of the name was
undoubtedly its inappropriateness as a designation for the confederacy occupying the plains of the upper
Missouri, since it was an alien and opprobrious designation for a people bearing a euphonious appellation of
their own. Moreover, colloquial usage was gradually influenced by the usage of scholars, who accepted the
native name for the Dakota (spelled Dahcota by Gallatin) confederacy, as well as the tribal names adopted by
Gallatin, Prichard, and others. Thus the ill-defined term "Sioux" has dropped out of use in the substantive
form, and is retained, in the adjective form only, to designate a great stock to which no other collective name,
either intern or alien, has ever been definitely and justly applied.
The earlier students of the Siouan Indians recognized the plains tribes alone as belonging to that stock, and it
has only recently been shown that certain of the native forest-dwellers long ago encountered by English
colonists on the Atlantic coast were closely akin to the[pg 159] plains Indians in language, institutions, and
beliefs. In 1872 Hale noted a resemblance between the Tutelo and Dakota languages, and this resemblance
was discussed orally and in correspondence with several students of Indian languages, but the probability of
direct connection seemed so remote that the affinity was not generally accepted. Even in 1880, after extended
comparison with Dakota material (including that collected by the newly instituted Bureau of Ethnology), this
distinguished investigator was able to detect only certain general similarities between the Tutelo tongue and
the dialects of the Dakota tribes. 4 In 1881 Gatschet made a collection of linguistic material among the
Catawba Indians of South Carolina, and was struck with the resemblance of many of the vocables to Siouan
terms of like meaning, and began the preparation of a comparative Catawba-Dakota vocabulary. To this the
Tutelo, ¢egiha, ÊÉiwe´re, and Hotcañgara (Winnebago) were added by Dorsey, who made a critical
examination of all Catawba material extant and compared it with several Dakota dialects, with which he was
specially conversant. These examinations and comparisons demonstrated the affinity between the Dakota and
Catawba tongues and showed them to be of common descent; and the establishment of this relation made easy
the acceptance of the affinity suggested by Hale between the Dakota and Tutelo.
Up to this time it was supposed that the eastern tribes "were merely offshoots of the Dakota;" but in 1883 Hale
observed that "while the language of these eastern tribes is closely allied to that of the western Dakota, it bears
evidence of being older in form," 5 and consequently that the Siouan tribes of the interior seem to have
migrated westward from a common fatherland with their eastern brethren bordering the Atlantic.
Subsequently Gatschet discovered that the Biloxi Indians of the Gulf coast used many terms common to the
Siouan tongues; and in 1891 Dorsey visited these Indians and procured a rich collection of words, phrases,
and myths, whereby the Siouan affinity of these Indians was established. Meantime Mooney began researches
among the Cherokee and cognate tribes of the southern Atlantic slope and found fresh evidence that their
ancient neighbors were related in tongue and belief with the buffalo hunters of the plains; and he has recently
set forth the relations of the several Atlantic slope tribes of Siouan affinity in full detail.6 Through the addition
of these eastern tribes the great Siouan stock is augmented in extent and range and enhanced in interest; for
the records of a group of cognate tribes are thereby increased so fully as to afford historical perspective and to
indicate, if not clearly to display, the course of tribal differentiation.
According to Dorsey, whose acquaintance with the Siouan Indians was especially close, the main portion of
the Siouan stock, occupying the continental interior, comprised seven principal divisions (including[pg 160]
the Biloxi and not distinguishing the Asiniboin), each composed of one or more tribes or confederacies, all
defined and classified by linguistic, social, and mythologic relations; and he and Mooney recognize several
additional groups, denned by linguistic affinity or historical evidence of intimate relations, in the eastern part
of the country. So far as made out through the latest researches, the grand divisions, confederacies, and tribes
of the stock,7 with their present condition, are as follows:
1. Dakota-Asiniboin
A. Â
A.  Omaha or U-man-han ("Upstream people"), located on Omaha reservation, Nebraska, comprising in
1819 (according to James)10â
a.  Honga-sha-no tribe, includingâ
1.  Wase-ish-ta band.
2.  Enk-ka-sa-ba band.
3.  Wa-sa-ba-eta-je ("Those who do not touch bears") band.
4.  Ka-e-ta-je ("Those who do not touch turtles") band.
5.  Wa-jinga-e-ta-je band.
6.  Hun-guh band.
7.  Kon-za band.
8.  Ta-pa-taj-je band.
b.  Ish-ta-sun-da ("Gray eyes") tribe, includingâ
1.  Ta-pa-eta-je band.
2.  Mon-eka-goh-ha ("Earth makers") band.
3.  Ta-sin-da ("Bison tail") band.
4.  Ing-gera-je-da ("Red dung") band.
5.  Wash-a-tung band.
B.  Ponka ("Medicine"?), mostly on Ponca reservation, Indian Territory, partly at Santee agency,
Nebraska.
C.  Kwapa, Quapaw, or U-Êa´-qpa ("Downstream people," a correlative of U-man´-han), the
"Arkansa" of early writers, mostly on Osage reservation, Oklahoma, partly on Quapaw reservation,
Indian Territory.
D.  (D) Osage or Wa-ca´-ce ("People"), comprisingâ
a.  Big Osage or Pa-he´-tsi ("Campers on the mountain"), on Osage reservation, Indian
Territory.
b.  Little Osage or U-ÊsÄɥ´-ta ("Campers on the lowland,") on Osage reservation, Indian
Territory.
c.  San-Êsu´-Ê¢in11 ("Campers in the highland grove") or "Arkansa band," chiefly on Osage
reservation, Indian Territory.
E.  Kansa or Kan´-ze (refers to winds, though precise significance is unknown; frequently called Kaw),
on Kansas reservation, Indian Territory.
3. ÊÉiwe´re ("People of this place")
A.  Iowa or Pá-qo-tce ("Dusty-heads"), chiefly on Great Nemaha reservation, Kansas and Nebraska,
partly on Sac and Fox reservation, Indian Territory.
B.  Oto or Wa-to´-ta ("Aphrodisian"), on Otoe reservation, Indian Territory.
C.  Missouri or Ni-u´-t'a-tci (exact meaning uncertain; said to refer to drowning of people in a stream;
possibly a corruption of Ni-shu´-dje, "Smoky water," the name of Missouri river); on Otoe
reservation, Indian Territory.
4. Winnebago
Mandan (their own name is questionable; Catlin says they called themselves See-pohs-kah-nu-mah-kah-kee,
"People of the pheasants;"13 Prince Maximilian says they called themselves Numangkake, "Men," adding
usually the name of their village, and that another name is Mahna-Narra, "The Sulky [Ones]," applied because
they separated from the rest of their nation;14 of the latter name their common appellation seems to be a
corruption); on Fort Berthold reservation, North Dakota, comprising in 1804 (according to Lewis and Clark15)
three villagesâ
a.  Matootonha.
b.  Rooptahee.
c.  __________(Eapanopa's village).
[pg 164]
6. Hidatsa
A.  Hidatsa (their own name, the meaning of which is uncertain, but appears to refer to a traditional
buffalo pannch connected with the division of the group, though supposed by some to refer to
"willows"); formerly called Minitari ("Cross the water," or, objectionally, Gros Ventres); on Fort
A.  Biloxi ("Trifling" or "Worthless" in Choctaw) or Ta-neks´ Han-ya-di´ ("Original people" in their
own language); partly in Rapides parish, Louisiana; partly in Indian Territory, with the Choctaw and
Caddo.
B.  Paskagula ("Bread people" in Choctaw), probably extinct.
C.  ?Moctobi (meaning unknown), extinct.
D.  ?Chozetta (meaning unknown), extinct.
8. Monakan
Monakan confederacy.
A. Â
The present population of the Siouan stock is probably between 40,000 and 45,000, including 2,000 or more
(mainly Asiniboin) in Canada.
TRIBAL NOMENCLATURE
In the Siouan stock, as among the American Indians generally, the accepted appellations for tribes and other
groups are variously derived. Many of the Siouan tribal names were, like the name of the stock, given by alien
peoples, including white men, though most are founded on the descriptive or other designations used in the
groups to which they pertain. At first glance, the names seem to be loosely applied and perhaps vaguely
defined, and this laxity in application and definition does not disappear, but rather increases, with closer
examination.
There are special reasons for the indefiniteness of Indian nomenclature: The aborigines were at the time of
discovery, and indeed most of them remain today, in the prescriptorial stage of culture, i.e., the stage in which
ideas are crystallized, not by means of arbitrary symbols, but by means of arbitrary associations,18 and in this
stage names are connotive or descriptive, rather than denotive as in the scriptorial stage. Moreover, among the
Indians, as among all other prescriptorial peoples, the ego is paramount, and all things are described, much
more largely than among cultured peoples, with reference to the describer and the position which he
occupiesâSelf and Here, and, if need be, Now and Thus, are the fundamental elements of primitive conception
and description, and these elements are implied and exemplified, rather than expressed, in thought and
utterance. Accordingly there is a notable paucity in names, especially for themselves, among the Indian tribes,
while the descriptive designations applied to a given group by neighboring tribes are often diverse.
[pg 167]
The principles controlling nomenclature in its inchoate stages are illustrated among the Siouan peoples. So far
as their own tongues were concerned, the stock was nameless, and could not be designated save through
integral parts. Even the great Dakota confederacy, one of the most extensive and powerful aboriginal
organizations, bore no better designation than a term probably applied originally to associated tribes in a
descriptive way and perhaps used as a greeting or countersign, although there was an alternative proper
descriptive term.â"Seven Council-fires"âapparently of considerable antiquity, since it seems to have been
originally applied before the separation of the Asiniboin. 19 In like manner the ¢egiha, ÊÉiwe're, and
Hotcañgara groups, and perhaps the Niya, were without denotive designations for themselves, merely
styling themselves "Local People," "Men," "Inhabitants," or, still more ambitiously, "People of the Parent
Speech," in terms which are variously rendered by different interpreters; they were lords in their own domain,
and felt no need for special title. Different Dakota tribes went so far as to claim that their respective habitats
marked the middle of the world, so that each insisted on precedence as the leading tribe,20 and it was the boast
of the Mandan that they were the original people of the earth.21 In the more carefully studied confederacies the
constituent groups generally bore designations apparently used for convenient distinction in the confederation;
sometimes they were purely descriptive, as in the case of the Sisseton, Wahpeton, Sans Arcs, Blackfeet, Oto,
and several others; again they referred to the federate organization (probably, possibly to relative position of
habitat), as in the Yankton, Yanktonai, and Huñkpapa; more frequently they referred to geographic or
topographic position, e.g., Teton, Omaha, Pahe'tsi, Kwapa, etc; while some appear to have had a figurative or
symbolic connotation, as Brulé, Ogalala, and Ponka. Usually the designations employed by alien peoples
were more definite than those used in the group designated, as illustrated by the stock name, Asiniboin, and
Iowa. Commonly the alien appellations were terms of reproach; thus Sioux, Biloxi, and Hohe (the Dakota
designation for the Asiniboin) are clearly opprobrious, while Paskagula might easily be opprobrious among
hunters and warriors, and Iowa and Oto appear to be derogatory or contemptuous expressions. The names
applied by the whites were sometimes taken from geographic positions, as in the case of Upper Yanktonai and
Cape Fearâthe geographic names themselves being frequently of Indian origin. Some of the current names
represent translations of the aboriginal terms either into English ("Blackfeet," "Two Kettles," "Crow,") or into
TRIBAL NOMENCLATURE 10
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Siouan Indians by W. J. McGee
French ("Sans Arcs," "Brulé"," "Gros Ventres"); yet most of the names, at least of the prairie tribes, are
simply corruptions of the aboriginal terms, though frequently the modification is so complete as to render
identification and interpretation difficultâit[pg 168] is not easy to find Waca'ce in "Osage" (so spelled by the
French, whose orthography was adopted and mispronounced by English-speaking pioneers), or Pa'qotce in
"Iowa."
The meanings of most of the eastern names are lost; yet so far as they are preserved they are of a kind with
those of the interior. So, too, are the subtribal names enumerated by Dorsey.
PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS
The Siouan stock is defined by linguistic characters. The several tribes and larger and smaller groups speak
dialects so closely related as to imply occasional or habitual association, and hence to indicate community in
interests and affinity in development; and while the arts (reflecting as they did the varying environment of a
wide territorial range) were diversified, the similarity in language was, as is usual, accompanied by similarity
in institutions and beliefs. Nearly all of the known dialects are eminently vocalic, and the tongues of the
plains, which have been most extensively studied, are notably melodious; thus the leading languages of the
group display moderately high phonetic development. In grammatic structure the better-known dialects are
not so well developed; the structure is complex, chiefly through the large use of inflection, though
agglutination sometimes occurs. In some cases the germ of organization is found in fairly definite
juxtaposition or placement. The vocabulary is moderately rich, and of course represents the daily needs of a
primitive people, their surroundings, their avocations, and their thoughts, while expressing little of the richer
ideation of cultured cosmopolites. On the whole, the speech of the Siouan stock may be said to have been
fairly developed, and may, with the Algonquian, Iroquoian, and Shoshonean, be regarded as typical for the
portion of North America lying north of Mexico. Fortunately it has been extensively studied by Riggs, Hale,
Dorsey, and several others, including distinguished representatives of some of the tribes, and is thus accessible
to students. The high phonetic development of the Siouan tongues reflects the needs and records the history of
the hunter and warrior tribes, whose phonetic symbols were necessarily so differentiated as to be intelligible
in whisper, oratory, and war cry, as well as in ordinary converse, while the complex structure is in harmony
with the elaborate social organization and ritual of the Siouan people.
Many of the Siouan Indians were adepts in the sign language; indeed, this mode of conveying intelligence
attained perhaps its highest development among some of the tribes of this stock, who, with other plains
Indians, developed pantomime and gesture into a surprisingly perfect art of expression adapted to the needs of
huntsmen and warriors.
Most of the tribes were fairly proficient in pictography; totemic and other designs were inscribed on bark and
wood, painted on skins,[pg 169] wrought into domestic wares, and sometimes carved on rocks. Jonathan
Carver gives an example of picture-writing on a tree, in charcoal mixed with bear's grease, designed to convey
information from the "Chipe'ways" (Algonquian) to the "Naudowessies,"22 and other instances of intertribal
communication by means of pictography are on record. Personal decoration was common, and was largely
symbolic; the face and body were painted in distinctive ways when going on the warpath, in organizing the
hunt, in mourning the dead, in celebrating the victory, and in performing various ceremonials. Scarification
and maiming were practiced by some of the tribes, always in a symbolic way. Among the Mandan and
PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS 11
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Siouan Indians by W. J. McGee
Hidatsa scars were produced in cruel ceremonials originally connected with war and hunting, and served as
enduring witnesses of courage and fortitude. Symbolic tattooing was fairly common among the westernmost
tribes. Eagle and other feathers were worn as insignia of rank and for other symbolic purposes, while bear
claws and the scalps of enemies were worn as symbols of the chase and battle. Some of the tribes recorded
current history by means of "winter counts" or calendaric inscriptions, though their arithmetic was meager and
crude, and their calendar proper was limited to recognition of the year, lunation, and dayâor, as among so
many primitive people, the "snow," "dead moon," and "night,"âwith no definite system of fitting lunations to
the annual seasons. Most of the graphic records were perishable, and have long ago disappeared; but during
recent decades several untutored tribesmen have executed vigorous drawings representing hunting scenes and
conflicts with white soldiery, which have been preserved or reproduced. These crude essays in graphic art
were the germ of writing, and indicate that, at the time of discovery, several Siouan tribes were near the
gateway opening into the broader field of scriptorial culture. So far as it extends, the crude graphic symbolism
betokens warlike habit and militant organization, which were doubtless measurably inimical to further
progress.
It would appear that, in connection with their proficiency in gesture speech and their meager graphic art, the
Siouan Indians had become masters in a vaguely understood system of dramaturgy or symbolized conduct.
Among them the use of the peace-pipe was general; among several and perhaps all of the tribes the definite
use of insignia was common; among them the customary hierarchic organization of the aborigines was
remarkably developed and was maintained by an elaborate and strict code of etiquette whose observance was
exacted and yielded by every tribesman. Thus the warriors, habituated to expressing and recognizing tribal
affiliation and status in address and deportment, were notably observant of social minutiæ, and this habit
extended into every activity of their lives. They were ceremonious among themselves and[pg 170] crafty
toward enemies, tactful diplomatists as well as brave soldiers, shrewd strategists as well as fierce fighters;
ever they were skillful readers of human nature, even when ruthless takers of human life. Among some of the
tribes every movement and gesture and expression of the male adult seems to have been affected or controlled
with the view of impressing spectators and auditors, and through constant schooling the warriors became most
consummate actors. To the casual observer, they were stoics or stupids according to the conditions of
observation; to many observers, they were cheats or charlatans; to scientific students, their eccentrically
developed volition and the thaumaturgy by which it was normally accompanied suggests early stages in that
curious development which, in the Orient, culminates in necromancy and occultism. Unfortunately this phase
of the Indian character (which was shared by various tribes) was little appreciated by the early travelers, and
little record of it remains; yet there is enough to indicate the importance of constantly studied ceremony, or
symbolic conduct, among them. The development of affectation and self-control among the Siouan tribesmen
was undoubtedly shaped by warlike disposition, and their stoicism was displayed largely in warâas when the
captured warrior went exultingly to the torture, taunting and tempting his captors to multiply their atrocities
even until his tongue was torn from its roots, in order that his fortitude might be proved; but the habit was
firmly fixed and found constant expression in commonplace as well as in more dramatic actions.
Since the arts of primitive people reflect environmental conditions with close fidelity, and since the Siouan
Indians were distributed over a vast territory varying in climate, hydrography, geology, fauna, and flora, their
industrial and esthetic arts can hardly be regarded as distinctive, and were indeed shared by other tribes of all
neighboring stocks.
The best developed industries were hunting and warfare, though all of the tribes subsisted in part on fruits,
nuts, berries, tubers, grains, and other vegetal products, largely wild, though sometimes planted and even
The chief implements and weapons were of stone, wood, bone, horn, and antler. According to Carver, the
"Nadowessie" were skillful bowmen, using also the "casse-tête"31 or warclub, and a flint scalping-knife.
Catlin was impressed with the shortness of the bows used by the prairie tribes, though among the
southwestern tribes they were longer. Many of the Siouan Indians used the lance, javelin, or spear. The
domestic utensils were scant and simple, as became wanderers and fighters, wood being the common material,
though crude pottery[pg 172] and basketry were manufactured, together with bags and bottles of skins or
animal intestines. Ceremonial objects were common, the most conspicuous being the calumet, carved out of
the sacred pipestone or catlinite quarried for many generations in the midst of the Siouan territory. Frequently
the pipes were fashioned in the form of tomahawks, when they carried a double symbolic significance,
standing alike for peace and war, and thus expressing well the dominant idea of the Siouan mind. Tobacco and
kinnikinic (a mixture of tobacco with shredded bark, leaves, etc32) were smoked.
Aboriginally the Siouan apparel was scanty, commonly comprising breechclout, moccasins, leggings, and
robe, and consisted chiefly of dressed skins, though several of the tribes made simple fabrics of bast, rushes,
and other vegetal substances. Fur robes and rush mats commonly served for bedding, some of the tribes using
rude bedsteads. The buffalo-hunting prairie tribes depended largely for apparel, bedding, and habitations, as
well as for food, on the great beast to whose comings and goings their movements were adjusted. Like other
Indians, the Siouan hunters and their consorts quickly availed themselves of the white man's stuffs, as well as
his metal implements, and the primitive dress was soon modified.
The woodland habitations were chiefly tent-shape structures of saplings covered with bark, rush mats, skins,
or bushes; the prairie habitations were mainly earth lodges for winter and buffalo-skin tipis for summer.
Among many of the tribes these domiciles, simple as they were, were constructed in accordance with an
elaborate plan controlled by ritual. According to Morgan, the framework of the aboriginal Dakota house
consisted of 13 poles;33 and Dorsey describes the systematic grouping of the tipis belonging to different gentes
and tribes. Sudatories were characteristic in most of the tribes, menstrual lodges were common, and most of
the more sedentary tribes had council houses or other communal structures. The Siouan domiciles were thus
adapted with remarkable closeness to the daily habits and environment of the tribesmen, while at the same
time they reflected the complex social organization growing out of their prescriptorial status and militant
disposition.
Most of the Siouan men, women, and children were fine swimmers, though they did not compare well with
neighboring tribes as makers and managers of water craft. The Dakota women made coracles of buffalo hides,
in which they transported themselves and their householdry, but the use of these and other craft seems to have
been regarded as little better than a feminine weakness. Other tribes were better boatmen; for the Siouan
Indian generally preferred land travel to journeying by water, and avoided the burden of vehicles by which
There are many indications and some suggestive evidences that the chief arts and certain institutions and
beliefs, as well as the geographic distribution, of the principal Siouan tribes were determined by a single
conspicuous feature in their environmentâthe buffalo. As Riggs, Hale, and Dorsey have demonstrated, the
original home of the Siouan stock lay on the eastern slope of the Appalachian mountains, stretching down
over the Piedmont and Coastplain provinces to the shores of the Atlantic between the Potomac and the
Savannah. As shown by Allen, the buffalo, "prior to the year 1800," spread eastward across the
Appalachians34 and into the priscan territory of the Siouan tribes. As suggested by Shaler, the presence of this
ponderous and peaceful animal materially affected the vocations of the Indians, tending to discourage
agriculture and encourage the chase; and it can hardly be doubted that the bison was the bridge that carried the
ancestors of the western tribes from the crest of the Alleghenies to the Côteau des Prairies and enabled them
to disperse so widely over the plains beyond. Certainly the toothsome flesh and useful skins must have
attracted the valiant huntsmen among the Appalachians; certainly the feral herds must have become constantly
larger and more numerous westward, thus tempting the pursuers down the waterways toward the great river;
certainly the vast herds beyond the Mississippi gave stronger incentives and richer rewards than the hunters of
big game found elsewhere; and certainly when the prairie tribes were discovered, the men and animals lived in
constant interaction, and many of the hunters acted and thought only as they were moved by their easy prey.
As the Spanish horse spread northward over the Llano Estacado and overflowed across the mountains from
the plains of the Cayuse, the Dakota and other tribes found a new means of conquest over the herds, and
entered on a career so facile that they increased and multiplied despite strife and imported disease.
The horse was acquired by the prairie tribes toward the end of the last century. Carver (1766-1768) describes
the methods of hunting among the "Naudowessie" without referring to the horse,35 though he gives their name
for the animal in his vocabulary,36 and describes their mode of warfare with "Indians that inhabit still farther
to the westward a country which extends to the South Sea," having "great plenty of horses."37 Lewis and Clark
(1804-1806) mention that the "Sioux of the Teton tribe ... frequently make excursions to steal horses" from the
Mandan,38 and make other references indicating that the horse[pg 174] was in fairly common use among some
of the Siouan tribes, though the animal was "confined principally to the nations inhabiting the great plains of
the Columbia,"39 and dogs were still used for burden and draft.40 Grinnell learned from an aged Indian that
horses came into the hands of the neighboring Piegan (Algonquian) about 1804-1806.41 Long's naturalists
found the horse, ass, and mule in use among the Kansa and other tribes,42 and described the mode of capture
of wild horses by the Osage;43 yet when, two-thirds of a century after Carver, Catlin (1832-1839) and Prince
Maximilian (1833-34) visited the Siouan territory, they found the horse established and in common use in the
chase and in war.44 It is significant that the Dakota word for horse (Åuk-taɲ'-ka or Åuɲ-ka'-wa-kaɲ) is
composed of the word for dog (Åuɲ'-ka), with an affix indicating greatness, sacredness, or mystery, so that
the horse is literally "great mysterious dog," or "ancient sacred dog," and that several terms for harness and
other appurtenances correspond with those used for the gear of the dog when used as a draft animal.45 This
terminology corroborates the direct evidence that the dog was domesticated by the Siouan aborigines long
before the advent of the horse.
Among the Siouan tribes, as among other Indians, amusements absorbed a considerable part of the time and
energy of the old and young of both sexes. Among the young, the gambols, races, and other sports were
chiefly or wholly diversional, and commonly mimicked the avocations of the adults. The girls played at the
building and care of houses and were absorbed in dolls, while the boys played at archery, foot racing, and
mimic hunting, which soon grew into the actual chase of small birds and animals. Some of the sports of the
elders were unorganized diversions, leaping, racing, wrestling, and other spontaneous expressions of
exuberance. Certain diversions were controlled by more persistent motive, as when the idle warrior occupied
his leisure in meaningless ornamentation of his garment or tipi, or spent hours of leisure in esthetic
modification of his weapon or ceremonial badge, and to this purposeless activity, which engendered design
Among many of the Siouan tribes, games of chance were played habitually and with great avidity, both men
and women becoming so absorbed as to forget avocations and food, mothers even neglecting their children;
for, as among other primitive peoples, the charm of hazard was greater than among the enlightened. The
games were not specially distinctive, and were less widely differentiated than in certain other Indian stocks.
The sport or game of chungke stood high in favor among the young men in many of the tribes, and was played
as a game partly of chance, partly of skill; but dice games (played with plum stones among the southwestern
prairie tribes) were generally preferred, especially by the women, children, and older men. The games were
partly, sometimes wholly, diversional, but generally they were in large part divinatory, and thus reflected the
hazardous occupations and low culture-status of the people. One of the evils resulting from the advent of the
whites was the introduction of new games of chance which tended further to pervert the simple Siouan mind;
but in time the evil brought its own remedy, for association with white gamblers taught the ingenuous
sortilegers that there is nothing divine or sacred about the gaming table or the conduct of its votaries.
The primitive Siouan music was limited to the chant and rather simple vocal melody, accompanied by rattle,
drum, and flute, the drum among the northwestern tribes being a skin bottle or bag of water.[pg 176] The
music of the Omaha and some other tribes has been most appreciatively studied by Miss Fletcher, and her
memoir ranks among the Indian classics.47 In general the Siouan music was typical for the aboriginal stocks of
the northern interior. Its dominant feature was rhythm, by which the dance was controlled, though melody was
inchoate, while harmony was not yet developed.
The germ of painting was revealed in the calendars and the seed of sculpture in the carvings of the Sionan
Indians. The pictographic paintings comprised not only recognizable but even vigorous representations of men
and animals, depicted in form and color though without perspective, while the calumet of catlinite was
sometimes chiseled into striking verisimilitude of human and animal forms in miniature. To the collector
these representations suggest fairly developed art, though to the Indian they were mainly, if not wholly,
symbolic; for everything indicates that the primitive artisan had not yet broken the shackles of fetichistic
symbolism, and had little conception of artistic portrayal for its own sake.
INSTITUTIONS
Among civilized peoples, institutions are crystallized in statutes about nuclei of common law or custom;
among peoples in the prescriptorial culture-stage statutes are unborn, and various mnemonic devices are
employed for fixing and perpetuating institutions; and, as is usual in this stage, the devices involve
associations which appear to be essentially arbitrary at the outset, though they tend to become natural through
the survival of the fittest. A favorite device for perpetuating institutions among the primitive peoples of many
districts on different continents is the taboo, or prohibition, which is commonly fiducial but is often of general
application. This device finds its best development in the earlier stages in the development of belief, and is
normally connected with totemism. Another device, which is remarkably widespread, as shown by Morgan, is
kinship nomenclature. This device rests on a natural and easily ascertained basis, though its applications are
arbitrary and vary widely from tribe to tribe and from culture-status to culture-status. A third device, which
found much favor among the American aborigines and among some other primitive peoples, may be called
ordination, or the arrangement of individuals and groups classified from the prescriptorial point of view of
Self, Here, and Now, with respect to each other or to some dominant personage or group. This device seems
to have grown out of the kin-name system, in which the Ego is the basis from which relation is reckoned. It
tends to develop into federate organization on the one hand or into caste on the other hand, according to the
attendant conditions.48 There are various other[pg 177] devices for fixing and perpetuating institutions or for
expressing the laws embodied therein. Some of these are connected with thaumaturgy and shamanism, some
are connected with the powers of nature, and the several devices overlap and interlace in puzzling fashion.
Among the Siouan Indians the devices of taboo, kin-names, and ordination are found in such relation as to
throw some light on the growth of primitive institutions. While they blend and are measurably involved with
thaumaturgic devices, there are indications that in a general way the three devices stand for stages in the
development of law. Among the best-known tribes the taboo pertained to the clan, and was used (in a much
more limited way than among some other peoples) to commemorate and perpetuate the clan organization;
kin-names, which were partly natural and thus normal to the clan organization, and at the same time partly
artificial and thus characteristic of gentile organization, served to commemorate and perpetuate not only the
family relations but the relations of the constituent elements of the tribe; while the ordination, expressed in the
camping circle, in the phratries, in the ceremonials, and in many other ways, served to commemorate
intertribal as well as intergentile relations, and thus to promote peace and harmonious action. It is significant
that the taboo was less potent among the Siouan Indians than among some other stocks, and that among some
tribes it has not been found; and it is especially significant that in some instances the taboo was apparently
inversely related to kin-naming and ordination, as among the Biloxi, where the taboo is exceptionally weak
and kin-naming exceptionally strong, and among the Dakota, where the system of ordination attained perhaps
its highest American development in domiciliary arrangement, while the taboo was limited in function; for the
relations indicate that the taboo was archaic or even vestigial. It is noteworthy also that among most of the
Siouan tribes the kin-name system was less elaborate than in many other stocks, while the system of
ordination is so elaborate as to constitute one of the leading characteristics of the stock.
At the time of the discovery, most of the Siouan tribes had apparently passed into gentile organization, though
vestiges of clan organization were foundâe.g., among the best-known tribes the man was the head of the
family, though the tipi usually belonged to the woman. Thus, as defined by institutions, the stock was just
above savagery and just within the lower stages of barbarism. Accordingly the governmental functions were
hereditary in the male line, yet the law of heredity was subject to modification or suspension at the will of the
group, commonly at the instance of rebels or usurpers of marked prowess or shrewdness. The property
regulations were definite and strictly observed; as among other barbarous peoples, the land was common to
the tribe or other group occupying it, yet was defended against alien invasion; the ownership of movable
property was a combination of communalism and individualism delicately adjusted to the needs and habits of
the several tribesâ[pg 178] in general, evanescent property, such as food and fuel, was shared in common
(subject to carefully regulated individual claims), while permanent property, such as tipis, dogs, apparel,
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weapons, etc, was held by individuals. As among other tribes, the more strictly personal property was usually
destroyed on the death of the owner, though the real reason for the customâthe prevention of disputeâwas
shrouded in a mantle of mysticism.
Although of primary importance in shaping the career of the Siouan tribes, the marital institutions of the stock
were not specially distinctive. Marriage was usually effected by negotiation through parents or elders; among
some of the tribes the bride was purchased, while among others there was an interchange of presents.
Polygyny was common; in several of the tribes the bride's sisters became subordinate wives of the husband.
The regulations concerning divorce and the punishment of infidelity were somewhat variable among the
different tribes, some of whom furnished temporary wives to distinguished visitors. Generally there were
sanctions for marriage by elopement or individual choice. In every tribe, so far as known, gentile exogamy
prevailedâi.e., marriage in the gens was forbidden, under pain of ostracism or still heavier penalty, while the
gentes intermarried among one another; in some cases intermarriage between certain tribes was regarded with
special favor. There seems to have been no system of marriage by capture, though captive women were
usually espoused by the successful tribesmen, and girls were sometimes abducted. In general it would appear
that intergentile and intertribal marriage was practiced and sanctioned by the sages, and that it tended toward
harmony and federation, and thus contributed much toward the increase and diffusion of the great Siouan
stock.
As set forth in some detail by Dorsey, the ordination of the Siouan tribes extended beyond the hierarchic
organization into families, subgentes, gentes, tribes, and confederacies; there were also phratries, sometimes
(perhaps typically) arranged in pairs; there were societies or associations established on social or fiducial
bases; there was a general arrangement or classification of each group on a military basis, as into soldiers and
two or more classes of noncombatants, etc. Among the Siouan peoples, too, the individual brotherhood of the
David-Jonathan or Damon-Pythias type was characteristically developed. Thus the corporate institutions were
interwoven and superimposed in a manner nearly as complex as that found in the national, state, municipal,
and minor institutions of civilization; yet the ordination preserved by means of the camping circle, the kinship
system, the simple series of taboos, and the elaborate symbolism was apparently so complete as to meet every
social and governmental demand.
BELIEFS
As explained by Powell, philosophies and beliefs may be seriated in four stages: The first stage is
hecastotheism; in this stage extranatural or mysterious potencies are imputed to objects both animate[pg 179]
and inanimate. The second stage is zootheism; within it the powers of animate forms are exaggerated and
amplified into the realm of the supernal, and certain animals are deified. The third stage is that of physitheism,
in which the agencies of nature are personified and exalted unto omnipotence. The fourth stage is that of
psychotheism, which includes the domain of spiritual concept. In general the development of belief coincides
with the growth of abstraction; yet it is to be remembered that this growth represents increase in definiteness
of the abstract concepts rather than augmentation in numbers and kinds of subjective impressions, i.e., the
advance is in quality rather than in quantity; indeed, it would almost appear that the vague and indefinite
abstraction of hecastotheism is more pervasive and prevalent than the clearer abstraction of higher stages.
Appreciation of the fundamental characteristics of belief is essential to even the most general understanding of
the Indian mythology and philosophy, and even after careful study it is difficult for thinkers trained in the
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higher methods of thought to understand the crude and confused ideation of the primitive thinker.
In hecastotheism the believer finds mysterious properties and potencies everywhere. To his mind every object
is endued with occult power, moved by a vague volition, actuated by shadowy motive ranging capriciously
from malevolence to benevolence; in his lax estimation some objects are more potent or more mysterious than
others, the strong, the sharp, the hard, and the swift-moving rising superior to the feeble, the dull, the soft, and
the slow. Commonly he singles out some special object as his personal, family, or tribal mystery-symbol or
fetich, the object usually representing that which is most feared or worst hated among his surroundings.
Vaguely realizing from the memory of accidents or unforeseen events that he is dependent on his
surroundings, he invests every feature of his environment with a capricious humor reflecting his own
disposition, and gives to each and all a subtlety and inscrutability corresponding to his exalted estimation of
his own craft in the chase and war; and, conceiving himself to live and move only at the mercy of his
multitudinous associates, he becomes a fatalistâkismet is his watchword, and he meets defeat and death with
resignation, just as he goes to victory with complacence; for so it was ordained.
Zootheism is the offspring of hecastotheism. As the primitive believer assigns special potency or mystery to
the strong and the swift, he gradually comes to give exceptional rank to self-moving animals; as his
experience of the strength, alertness, swiftness, and courage of his animate enemy or prey increases, these
animals are invested with successively higher and higher attributes, each reflecting the mental operations of
the mystical huntsman, and in time the animals with which the primitive believers are most intimately
associated come to be regarded as tutelary daimons of supernatural power and intelligence. At first the
animals, like the undifferentiated things of hecastotheism,[pg 180] are regarded in fear or awe by reason of
their strength and ferocity, and this regard grows into an incipient worship in the form of sacrifice or other
ceremonial; meanwhile, inanimate things, and in due season rare and unimportant animals, are neglected, and
a half dozen, a dozen, or a score of the well-known animals are exalted into a hierarchy of petty gods, headed
by the strongest like the bear, the swiftest like the deer, the most majestic like the eagle, the most cunning like
the fox or coyote, or the most deadly like the rattlesnake. Commonly the arts and the skill of the mystical
huntsman improve from youth to adolescence and from generation to generation, so that the later animals
appear to be easier snared or slain than the earlier; moreover, the accounts of conflicts between men and
animals grow by repetition and are gilded by imagination as memory grows dim; and for these and other
reasons the notion grows up that the ancient animals were stronger, swifter, slier, statelier, deadlier than their
modern representatives, and the hierarchy of petty gods is exalted into an omnipotent thearchy. Eventually, in
the most highly developed zootheistic systems, the leading beast-god is regarded as the creator of the lesser
deities of the earth, sun, and sky, of the mythic under-world and its real counterpart the ground or mid-world,
as well as the visionary upper-world, of men, and of the ignoble animals; sometimes the most exalted
beast-god is worshiped especially by the great man or leading class and incidentally by all, while other men
and groups choose the lesser beast-gods, according to their rank, for special worship. In hecastotheism the
potencies revered or worshiped are polymorphic, while their attributes reflect the mental operations of the
believers; in zootheism the deities worshiped are zoomorphic, and their attributes continue to reflect the
human mind.
Physitheism, in its turn, springs from zootheism. Through contemplation of the strong the idea of strength
arises, and a means is found for bringing the bear into analogy with thunder, with the sun, or with the
avalanche-bearing mountain; through contemplation of the swift the concept of swiftness is engendered, and
comparison of the deer with the wind or rushing river is made easy; through contemplation of the deadly
stroke of the rattlesnake the notion of death-dealing power assumes shape, and comparison of the snake bite
and the lightning stroke is made possible; and in every case it is inevitably perceived that the agency is
stronger, swifter, deadlier than the animal. At first the agency is not abstracted or dissociated from the parent
zootheistic concept, and the sun is the mightiest animal as among many peoples, the thunder is the voice of
the bear as among different woodland tribes or the flapping of the wings of the great ancient eagle as among
the Dakota and ¢egiha, while lightning is the great serpent of the sky as among the Zuñi. Subsequently the
zoic concept fades, and the constant association of human intellectual qualities engenders an anthropic
concept, when the sun becomes an anthropomorphic deity (perhaps bearing a dazzling mask, as among the
Zuñi), and thunder is[pg 181] the rumbling of quoits pitched by the shades of old-time giants, as among
different American tribes. Eventually all the leading agencies of nature are personified in anthropic form, and
retain the human attributes of caprice, love, and hate which are found in the minds of the believers.
Psychotheism is born of physitheism as the anthropomorphic element in the concept of natural agency
gradually fades; but since none of the aborigines of the United States had passed into the higher stage, the
mode of transition does not require consideration.
It is to be borne in mind that throughout the course of development of belief, from the beginning of
hecastotheism into the borderland of psychotheism, the dominant characteristic is the vague notion of
mystery. At first the mystery pervades all things and extends in all directions, representing an indefinite ideal
world, which is the counterpart of the real world with the addition of human qualities. Gradually the mystery
segregates, deepening with respect to animals and disappearing with respect to inanimate things; and at length
the slowly changing mysteries shape themselves into semiabstractions having a strong anthropic cast, while
the remainder of the earth and the things thereof gradually become real, though they remain under the spell
and dominion of the mysterious. Thus at every stage the primitive believer is a mysticâa fatalist in one stage, a
beast worshiper in another, a thaumaturgist in a third, yet ever and first of all a mystic. It is also to be borne in
mind (and the more firmly because of a widespread misapprehension) that the primitive believer, up to the
highest stage attained by the North American Indian, is not a psychotheist, much less a monotheist. His "Great
Spirit" is simply a great mystery, perhaps vaguely anthropomorphic, oftener zoomorphic, yet not a spirit,
which he is unable to conceive save by reflection of the white man's concept and inquiry; and his departed
spirit is but a shade, much like that of the ancient Greeks, the associate and often the inferior of animal shades.
While the four stages in development of belief are fundamentally distinct, they nevertheless overlap in such
manner as apparently, and in a measure really, to coexist and blend. Culture progress is slow. In biotic
development the effect of beneficial modification is felt immediately, and the modified organs or organisms
are stimulated and strengthened cumulatively, while the unmodified are enfeebled and paralyzed cumulatively
through inactivity and quickly pass toward atrophy and extinction. Conversely in demotic development, which
is characterized by the persistence of the organisms and by the elimination of the bad and the preservation of
the good among qualities only, there is a constant tendency toward retardation of progress; for in savagery and
barbarism as in civilization, age commonly produces conservatism, and at the same time brings responsibility
for the conduct of old and young, so that modification, howsoever beneficial, is[pg 182] measurably held in
check, and so that the progress of each generation buds in the springtime of youth yet is not permitted to fruit
until the winter of old age approaches. Accordingly the mean of demotic progress tends to lag far behind its
foremost advances, and modes of action and especially of thought change slowly. This is especially true of
beliefs, which, during each generation, are largely vestigial. So the stages in the evolution of mythologic
philosophy overlap widely; there is probably no tribe now living among whom zootheism has not yet taken
root, though hecastotheism has been found dominant among different tribes; there is probably no people in the
zootheistic stage who are completely divested of hecastotheistic vestiges; and one of the curious features of
even the most advanced psychotheism is the occasional outcropping of features inherited from all of the
earlier stages. Yet it is none the less important to discriminate the stages.
It was partly through pioneer study of the Siouan Indians that the popular fallacy concerning the aboriginal
"Great Spirit" gained currency; and it was partly through the work of Dorsey among the ¢egiha and Dakota
tribes, first as a missionary and afterward as a linguist, that the early error was corrected. Among these tribes
While the beliefs of many of the Siouan tribes are lost through the extinction of the tribesmen or transformed
through acculturation, it is fortunate that a large body of information concerning the myths and ceremonials of
several prairie tribes has been collected. The records of Carver, Lewis and Clark, Say, Catlin, and Prince
Maximilian are of great value when interpreted in the light of modern knowledge. More recent researches by
Miss Fletcher49 and by Dorsey50 are of especial value, not only as direct sources of information but as a means
of interpreting the earlier writings. From these records it appears that, in so far as they grasped the theistic
concept, the Siouan Indians were polytheists; that their mysteries or deities varied in rank and power; that
some were good but more were bad, while others combined bad and good attributes; that they assumed
various forms, actual and imaginary; and that their dispositions and motives resembled those found among
mankind.
The organization of the vague Siouan thearchy appears to have varied from group to group. Among all of the
tribes whose beliefs are known, the sun was an important wakanda, perhaps the leading one potentially,
though usually of less immediate consideration than certain others, such as thunder, lightning, and the cedar
tree; among the Osage the sun was invoked as "grandfather," and among various tribes there were sun
ceremonials, some of which are still maintained; among the Omaha and Ponka, according to Miss Fletcher,
the mythic thunder-bird plays a prominent, perhaps dominant rôle, and the cedar tree or pole is deified as its
tangible representative. The moon was wakanda among the Osage and the stars among the Omaha and Ponka,
yet they seem to have occupied subordinate positions; the winds and the four quarters were apparently given
higher rank; and, in individual cases, the mythic water-monsters or earth-deities seem to have occupied
leading positions. On the whole, it may be safe to consider the[pg 184] sun as the Siouan arch-mystery, with
the mythic thunder-bird or family of thunder-birds as a sort of mediate link between the mysteries and men,
possessing less power but displaying more activity in human affairs than the remoter wakanda of the heavens.
Under these controlling wakandas, other members of the series were vaguely and variably arranged.
Somewhere in the lower ranks, sacred animalsâespecially sports, such as the white buffalo cowâwere placed,
The Siouan thearchy was invoked and adored by means of forms and ceremonies, as well as through orisons.
The set observances were highly elaborate; they comprised dancing and chanting, feasting and fasting, and in
some cases sacrifice and torture, the shocking atrocities of the Mandan and Minitari rites being especially
impressive. From these great collective devotions the ceremonials graded down through war-dance and
hunting-feast to the terpsichorean grace extolled by Carver, and to individual fetich worship. In general the
adoration expressed fear of the evil rather than love of the goodâ but this can hardly be regarded as a
distinctive feature, much less a peculiar one.
Some of the mystery places were especially distinctive and noteworthy. Foremost among them was the sacred
pipestone quarry near Big Sioux river, whence the material for the wakanda calumet was obtained; another
was the far-famed Minne-wakan of North Dakota, not inaptly translated "Devil's lake;" a third was the
mystery-rock or medicine-rock of the Mandan and Hidatsa near Yellowstone river; and there were many
others of less importance. About all of these places picturesque legends and myths clustered.
The Siouan mythology is especially instructive, partly because so well recorded, partly because it so clearly
reflects the habits and customs of the tribesmen and thus gives an indirect reflection of a well-marked
environment. As among so many peoples, the sun is a prominent element; the ice-monsters of the north and
the rain-myths of the arid region are lacking, and are replaced by the frequent thunder and the trees shaken by
the storm-winds; the mythic creatures are shaped in the image of the indigenous animals and birds; the myths
center in the local rocks and waters; the mysterious thearchy corresponds with the tribal hierarchy, and the
attributes ascribed to the deities are those characteristic of warriors and hunters.
Considering the mythology in relation to the stages in development of mythologic philosophy, it appears that
the dominant beliefs, such as those pertaining to the sun and the winds, represent a crude physitheism, while
vestiges of hecastotheism crop out in the object-worship and place-worship of the leading tribes and in other
features. At the[pg 185] same time well-marked zootheistic features are found in the mythic thunder-birds and
in the more or less complete deification of various animals, in the exaltation of the horse into the rank of the
mythic dog father, and in the animal forms of the water-monsters and earth-beings; and the living application
of zootheism is found in the animal fetiches and totems. On the whole, it seems just to assign the Siouan
mythology to the upper strata of zootheism, just verging on physitheism, with vestigial traces of
hecastotheism.
SOMATOLOGY
The vigorous avocations of the chase and war were reflected in fine stature, broad and deep chests, strong and
clean limbs, and sound constitution among the Siouan tribesmen and their consorts. The skin was of the usual
coppery cast characteristic of the native American; the teeth were strong, indicating and befitting a largely
carnivorous diet, little worn by sandy foods, and seldom mutilated; the hands and feet were commonly large
and sinewy. The Siouan Indians were among those who impressed white pioneers by the parallel placing of
the feet; for, as among other walkers and runners, who rest sitting and lying, the feet assumed the pedestrian
attitude of approximate parallelism rather than the standing attitude of divergence forward. The hair was
luxuriant, stiff, straight, and more uniformly jet black than that of the southerly stocks; it was worn long by
the women and most of the men, though partly clipped or shaved in some tribes by the warriors as well as the
worthless dandies, who, according to Catlin, spent more time over their toilets than ever did the grande dame
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of Paris. The women were beardless and the men more or less nearly so; commonly the men plucked out by
the roots the scanty hair springing on their faces, as did both sexes that on other parts of the body. The crania
were seldom deformed artificially save through cradle accident, and while varying considerably in capacity
and in the ratio of length to width were usually mesocephalic. The facial features were strong, yet in no way
distinctly unlike those found among neighboring peoples.
Since the advent of white men the characteristics of the Siouan Indians, like those of other tribes, have been
somewhat modified, partly through infusion of Caucasian blood but chiefly through acculturation. With the
abandonment of hunting and war and the tardy adoption of a slothful, semidependent agriculture, the frame
has lost something of its stalwart vigor; with the adaptation of the white man's costume and the incomplete
assimilation of his hygiene, various weaknesses and disorders have been developed; and through imitation the
erstwhile luxuriant hair is cropped, and the beard, made scanty through generations of extirpation, is
commonly cultivated. Although the accultural condition of the Siouan survivors ranges from the essentially
primitive status of the Asiniboin to the practical civilization of the representatives of several tribes, it is fair to
consider the stock in a[pg 186] state of transition from barbarism to civilization; and many of the tribesmen
are losing the characteristics of activity and somatic development normal to primitive life, while they have not
yet assimilated the activities and acquired the somatic characteristics normal to peaceful sedentary life.
Briefly, certain somatic features of the Siouan Indians, past and present, may be traced to their causes in
custom and exercise of function; yet by far the greater number of the features are common to the American
people or to all mankind, and are of ill-understood significance. The few features of known cause indicate that
special somatic characteristics are determined largely or wholly by industrial and other arts, which are
primarily shaped by environment.
HABITAT
Excepting the Asiniboin, who are chiefly in Canada, nearly all of the Siouan Indians are now gathered on the
reservations indicated on earlier pages, most of these reservations lying within the aboriginal territory of the
stock.
At the advent of white men, the Siouan territory was vaguely defined, and its limits were found to vary
somewhat from exploration to exploration. This vagueness and variability of habitat grew out of the
characteristics of the tribesmen. Of all the great stocks south of the Arctic, the Siouan was perhaps least given
to agriculture, most influenced by hunting, and most addicted to warfare; thus most of the tribes were but
feebly attached to the soil, and freely followed the movements of the feral fauna as it shifted with climatic
vicissitudes or was driven from place to place by excessive hunting or by fires set to destroy the undergrowth
in the interests of the chase; at the same time, the borderward tribes were alternately driven and led back and
forth through strife against the tribes of neighboring stocks. Accordingly the Siouan habitat can be outlined
only in approximate and somewhat arbitrary fashion.
The difficulty in defining the priscan home of the Siouan tribes is increased by its vast extent and scant
peopling, by the length of the period intervening between discovery in the east and complete exploration in
the west, and by the internal changes and migrations which occurred during this period. The task of collating
the records of exploration and pioneer observation concerning the Siouan and other stocks was undertaken by
Powell a few years ago, and was found to be of great magnitude. It was at length successfully accomplished,
and the respective areas occupied by the several stocks were approximately mapped.51
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As shown on Powell's map, the chief part of the Siouan area comprised a single body covering most of the
region of the Great plains,[pg 187] stretching from the Rocky mountains to the Mississippi and from the
Arkansas-Red river divide nearly to the Saskatchewan, with an arm crossing the Mississippi and extending to
Lake Michigan. In addition there were a few outlying bodies, the largest and easternmost bordering the
Atlantic from Santee river nearly to Capes Lookout and Hatteras, and skirting the Appalachian range
northward to the Potomac; the next considerable area lay on the Gulf coast about Pascagoula river and bay,
stretching nearly from the Pearl to the Mobile; and there were one or two unimportant areas on Ohio river,
which were temporarily occupied by small groups of Siouan Indians during recent times.
There is little probability that the Siouan habitat, as thus outlined, ran far into the prehistoric age. As already
noted, the Siouan Indians of the plains were undoubtedly descended from the Siouan tribes of the east (indeed
the Mandan had a tradition to that effect); and reason has been given for supposing that the ancestors of the
prairie hunters followed the straggling buffalo through the cis-Mississippi forests into his normal
trans-Mississippi habitat and spread over his domain save as they were held in check by alien huntsmen,
chiefly of the warlike Caddoan and Kiowan tribes; and the buffalo itself was a geologically recentâindeed
essentially post-glacialâanimal. Little if any definite trace of Siouan occupancy has been found in the more
ancient prehistoric works of the Mississippi valley. On the whole it appears probable that the prehistoric
development of the Siouan stock and habitat was exceptionally rapid, that the Siouan Indians were a vigorous
and virile people that arose quickly under the stimulus of strong vitality (the acquisition of which need not
here be considered), coupled with exceptionally favorable opportunity, to a power and glory culminating
about the time of discovery.
ORGANIZATION
The demotic organization of the Siouan peoples, so far as known, is set forth in considerable detail in Mr
Dorsey's treatises52 and in the foregoing enumeration of tribes, confederacies, and other linguistic groups.
Like the other aborigines north of Mexico, the Siouan Indians were organized on the basis of kinship, and
were thus in the stage of tribal society. All of the best-known tribes had reached that plane in organization
characterized by descent in the male line, though many vestiges and some relatively unimportant examples of
descent in the female line have been discovered. Thus the clan system was obsolescent and the gentile system
fairly developed; i. e., the people were practically out of the stage of savagery and well advanced in the stage
of barbarism.
[pg 188]
Confederation for defense and offense was fairly defined and was strengthened by intermarriage between
tribes and gentes and the prohibition of marriage within the gens; yet the organization was such as to maintain
tribal autonomy in considerable degree; i.e., the social structure was such as to facilitate union in time of war
and division into small groups adapted to hunting in times of peace. No indication of feudalism has been
found in the stock.
The government was autocratic, largely by military leaders sometimes (particularly in peace) advised by the
elders and priests; the leadership was determined primarily by abilityâprowess in war and the chase and
wisdom in the council,âand was thus hereditary only a little further than characteristics were inherited; indeed,
excepting slight recognition of the divinity that doth hedge about a king, the leaders were practically
self-chosen, arising gradually to the level determined by their abilities. The germ of theocracy was fairly
developed, and apparently burgeoned vigorously during each period of peace, only to be checked and
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withered during the ensuing war when the shamans and their craft were forced into the background.
During recent years, since the tribes began to yield to the domination of the peace-loving whites, the
government and election are determined chiefly by kinship, as appears from Dorsey's researches; yet definite
traces of the militant organization appear, and any man can win name and rank in his gens, tribe, or
confederacy by bravery or generosity.
The institutional connection between the Siouan tribes of the plains and those of the Atlantic slope and the
Gulf coast is completely lost, and it is doubtful whether the several branches have ever been united in a single
confederation (or "nation," in the language of the pioneers), at least since the division in the Appalachian
region perhaps five or ten centuries ago. Since this division the tribes have separated widely, and some of the
bloodiest wars of the region in the historic period have been between Siouan tribes; the most extensive union
possessing the slightest claim to federal organization was the great Dakota confederacy, which was grown into
instability and partial disruption; and most of the tribal unions and coalitions were of temporary character.
Although highly elaborate (perhaps because of this character), the Siouan organization was highly unstable;
with every shock of conflict, whether intestine or external, some autocrats were displaced or slain; and after
each important eventâgreat battle, epidemic, emigration, or destructive floodânew combinations were formed.
The undoubtedly rapid development of the stock, especially after the passage of the Mississippi, indicates
growth by conquest and assimilation as well as by direct propagation (it is known that the Dakota and perhaps
other groups adopted aliens regularly); and, doubtless for this reason in part, there was a strong tendency
toward differentiation and dichotomy in the demotic growth. In some groups the history is too vague to
indicate this tendency with certainty; in others the tendency is clear.[pg 189] Perhaps the best example is
found in the Cegiha, which divided into two great branches, the stronger of which threw off minor branches in
the Osage and Kansa, and afterward separated into the Omaha and Ponka, while the feebler branch also
ramified widely; and only less notable is the example of the Winnebago trunk, with its three great branches in
the Iowa, Oto, and Missouri. This strong divergent tendency in itself suggests rapid, perhaps abnormally
rapid, growth in the stock; for it outran and partially concealed the tendency toward convergence and ultimate
coalescence which characterizes demotic phenomena.
The half-dozen eastern stocks occupying by far the greater part of North America contrast strongly with the
half-hundred local stocks covering the Pacific coast; and none of the strong Atlantic stocks is more
characteristic, more sharply contrasted with the limited groups of the western coast, or better understood as
regards organization and development, than the great Siouan stock of the northern interior. There is promise
that, as the demology of aboriginal America is pushed forward, the records relating to the Siouan Indians and
especially to their structure and institutions will aid in explaining why some stocks are limited and others
extensive, why large stocks in general characterize the interior and small stocks the coasts, and why the
dominant peoples of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries were successful in displacing the preexistent and
probably more primitive peoples of the Mississippi valley. While the time is not yet ripe for making final
answer to these inquiries, it is not premature to suggest a relation between a peculiar development of the
aboriginal stocks and a peculiar geographic conformation: In general the coastward stocks are small,
indicating a provincial shoreland habit, yet their population and area commonly increase toward those shores
indented by deep bays, along which maritime and inland industries naturally blend; so (confining attention to
eastern United States) the extensive Muskhogean stock stretches inland from the deep-bayed eastern Gulf
coast; and so, too, three of the largest stocks on the continent (Algonquian, Iroquoian, Siouan) stretch far into
the interior from the still more deeply indented Atlantic coast. In two of these cases (Iroquoian and Siouan)
history and tradition indicate expansion and migration from the land of bays between Cape Lookout and Cape
May, while in the third there are similar (though perhaps less definite) indications of an inland drift from the
northern Atlantic bays and along the Laurentian river and lakes.
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53
HISTORY
DAKOTA-ASINIBOIN
The Dakota are mentioned in the Jesuit Relations as early as 1639-40; the tradition is noted that the Ojibwa,
on arriving at the Great Lakes in an early migration from the Atlantic coast, encountered representatives[pg
190] of the great confederacy of the plains. In 1641 the French voyageurs met the Potawatomi Indians flying
from a nation called Nadawessi (enemies); and the Frenchmen adopted the alien name for the warlike prairie
tribes. By 1658 the Jesuits had learned of the existence of thirty Dakota villages west-northwest from the
Potawatomi mission St Michel; and in 1689 they recorded the presence of tribes apparently representing the
Dakota confederacy on the upper Mississippi, near the mouth of the St Croix. According to Croghan's History
of Western Pennsylvania, the "Sue" Indians occupied the country southwest of Lake Superior about 1759; and
Dr T.S. Williamson, "the father of the Dakota mission," states that the Dakota must have resided about the
confluence of the Mississippi and the Minnesota or St Peters for at least two hundred years prior to 1860.
According to traditions collected by Dorsey, the Teton took possession of the Black Hills region, which had
previously been occupied by the Crow Indians, long before white men came; and the Yankton and
Yanktonnai, which were found on the Missouri by Lewis and Clark, were not long removed from the region
about Minnesota river. In 1862 the Santee and other Dakota tribes united in a formidable outbreak in which
more than 1,000 whites were massacred or slain in battle. Through this outbreak and the consequent
governmental action toward the control and settlement of the tribes, much was learned concerning the
characteristics of the people, and various Indian leaders became known; Spotted Tail, Red Cloud, Crazy
Horse, Sitting Bull, American Horse, and Even-his-horse-is-feared (commonly miscalled
Man-afraid-of-his-horses) were among the famous Dakota chiefs and warriors, notable representatives of a
passing race, whose names are prominent in the history of the country. Other outbreaks occurred, the last of
note resulting from the ghost-dance fantasy in 1890-91, which fortunately was quickly suppressed. Yet, with
slight interruptions, the Dakota tribes in the United States were steadily gathered on reservations. Some 800 or
more still roam the prairies north of the international boundary, but the great body of the confederacy,
numbering nearly 28,000, are domiciled on reservations (already noted) in Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska,
North Dakota, and South Dakota.
The separation of the Asiniboin from the Wazi-kute gens of the Yanktonai apparently occurred before the
middle of the seventeenth century, since the Jesuit relation of 1658 distinguishes between the Poualak or
Guerriers (undoubtedly the Dakota proper) and the Assiuipoualak or Guerriers de pierre. The Asiniboin are
undoubtedly the Essanape (Essanapi or Assinapi) who were next to the Makatapi (Dakota) in the
Walam-Olum record of the Lenni-Lenape or Delaware. In 1680 Hennepin located the Asiniboin northeast of
the Issati (Isanyati or Santee) who were on Knife lake (Minnesota); and the Jesuit map of 1681 placed them
on Lake-of-the-Woods, then called "L. Assinepoualacs." La Hontan claimed to have visited the Eokoro
(Arikara)[pg 191] in 1689-90, when the Essanape were sixty leagues above; and Perrot's Mémoire refers to
the Asiniboin as a Sioux tribe which, in the seventeenth century, seceded from their nation and took refuge
among the rocks of Lake-of-the-Woods. Chauvignerie located some of the tribe south of Ounipigan
(Winnipeg) lake in 1736, and they were near Lake-of-the-Woods as late as 1766, when they were said to have
1,500 warriors. It is well known that in 1829 they occupied a considerable territory west of the Dakota and
north of Missouri river, with a population estimated at 8,000; and Drake estimated their number at 10,000
before the smallpox epidemic of 1838, which is said to have carried off 4,000. From this blow the tribe seems
never to have fully recovered, and now numbers probably no more than 3,000, mostly in Canada, where they
continue to roam the plains they have occupied for half a century.
HISTORY53 25
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¢EGIHA
According to tribal traditions collected by Dorsey, the ancestors of the Omaha, Ponka, Elwapa, Osage, and
Kansa were originally one people dwelling on Ohio and Wabash rivers, but gradually working westward. The
first separation took place at the mouth of the Ohio, when those who went down the Mississippi became the
Kwapa or Downstream People, while those who ascended the great river became the Omaha or Up-stream
People. This separation must have occurred at least as early as 1500, since it preceded De Soto's discovery of
the Mississippi.
The Omaha group (from whom the Osage, Kansa, and Ponka were not yet separated) ascended the Mississippi
to the mouth of the Missouri, where they remained for some time, though war and hunting parties explored the
country northwestward, and the body of the tribe gradually followed these pioneers, though the Osage and
Kansa were successively left behind. Some of the pioneer parties discovered the pipestone quarry, and many
traditions cling about this landmark. Subsequently they were driven across the Big Sioux by the Yankton
Indians, who then lived toward the confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi. The group gradually
differentiated and finally divided through the separation of the Ponka, probably about the middle of the
seventeenth century. The Omaha gathered south of the Missouri, between the mouths of the Platte and
Niobrara, while the Ponka pushed into the Black Hills country.
The Omaha tribe remained within the great bend of the Missouri, opposite the mouth of the Big Sioux, until
white men came. Their hunting ground extended westward and southwestward, chiefly north of the Platte and
along the Elkhorn, to the territory of the Ponka and the Pawnee (Caddoan); and in 1766 Carver met their
hunting parties on Minnesota river. Toward the end of the eighteenth century they were nearly destroyed by
smallpox, their number having been reduced from about 3,500 to but little over 300 when they were visited by
Lewis[pg 192] and Clark, their famous chief Blackbird being one of those carried off by the epidemic.
Subsequently they increased in numbers; in 1890 their population was about 1,200. They are now on
reservations, mostly owning land in severalty, and are citizens of the United States and of the state of
Nebraska.
Although the name Ponka did not appear in history before 1700 it must have been used for many generations
earlier, since it is an archaic designation connected with the social organization of several tribes and the secret
societies of the Osage and Kansa, as well as the Ponka. In 1700 the Ponka were indicated on De l'Isle's map,
though they were not then segregated territorially from the Omaha. They, too, suffered terribly from the
smallpox epidemic, and when met by Lewis and Clark in 1804 numbered only about 200. They increased
rapidly, reaching about 600 in 1829 and some 800 in 1842; in 1871, when they were first visited by Dorsey,
they numbered 747. Up to this time the Ponka and Dakota were amicable; but a dispute grew out of the
cession of lands, and the Teton made annual raids on the Ponka until the enforced removal of the tribe to
Indian Territory took place in 1877. Through this warfare, more than a quarter of the Ponka lost their lives.
The displacement of this tribe from lands owned by them in fee simple attracted attention, and a commission
was appointed by President Hayes in 1880 to inquire into the matter; the commission, consisting of Generals
Crook and Miles and Messrs William Stickney and Walter Allen, visited the Ponka settlements in Indian
Territory and on the Niobrara and effected a satisfactory arrangement of the affairs of the tribe, through which
the greater portion (some 600) remained in Indian Territory, while some 225 kept their reservation in
Nebraska.
When the ¢egiha divided at the mouth of the Ohio, the ancestors of the Osage and Kansa accompanied the
main Omaha body up the Mississippi to the mouth of Osage river. There the Osage separated from the group,
ascending the river which bears their name. They were distinguished by Marquette in 1673 as the "Ouchage"
DAKOTA-ASINIBOIN 26
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and "Autrechaha," and by Penicaut in 1719 as the "Huzzau," "Ous," and "Wawha." According to Croghan,
they were, in 1759, on "White creek, a branch of the Mississippi," with the "Grand Tuc;" but"White creek" (or
White water) was an old designation for Osage river, and "Grand Tuc" is, according to Mooney, a corruption
of "Grandes Eaux," or Great Osage; and there is accordingly no sufficient reason for supposing that they
returned to the Mississippi. Toward the close of the eighteenth century the Osage and Kansa encountered the
Comanche and perhaps other Shoshonean peoples, and their course was turned southward; and in 1817,
according to Brown, the Great Osage and Little Osage were chiefly on Osage and Arkansas rivers, in four
villages. In 1829 Porter described their country as beginning 25 miles west of the Missouri line and running to
the Mexican line of that date, being 50 miles wide; and he gave their number as 5,000. According to[pg 193]
Schoolcraft, they numbered 3,758 in April, 1853, but this was after the removal of an important branch known
as Black Dog's band to a new locality farther down Verdigris river. In 1850 the Osage occupied at least seven
large villages, besides numerous small ones, on Neosho and Verdigris rivers. In 1873, when visited by
Dorsey, they were gathered on their reservations in what is now Oklahoma. In 1890 they numbered 158.
The Kansa remained with the Up-stream People in their gradual ascent of the Missouri to the mouth of the
Kaw or Kansas, when they diverged westward; but they soon came in contact with inimical peoples, and, like
the Osage, were driven southward. The date of this divergence is not fixed, but it must have been after 1723,
when Bourgmont mentioned a large village of "Quans" located on a small river flowing northward thirty
leagues above Kaw river, near the Missouri. After the cession of Louisiana to the United States, a treaty was
made with the Kansa Indians, who were then on Kaw river, at the mouth of the Saline, having been forced
back from the Missouri by the Dakota; they then numbered about 1,500 and occupied about thirty earth
lodges. In 1825 they ceded their lands on the Missouri to the Government, retaining a reservation on the Kaw,
where they were constantly subjected to attacks from the Pawnee and other tribes, through which large
numbers of their warriors were slain. In 1846 they again ceded their lands and received a new reservation on
Neosho river in Kansas. This was soon overrun by settlers, when another reservation was assigned to them in
Indian Territory, near the Osage country. By 1890 their population was reduced to 214.
The Kwapa were found by De Soto in 1541 on the Mississippi above the mouth of the St Francis, and,
according to Marquette's map, they were partly east of the Mississippi in 1673. In 1681 La Salle found them
in three villages distributed along the Mississippi, and soon afterward Tonty mentioned four villages, one
(Kappa = UÊaqpaqti, "Real Kwapa") on the Mississippi and three (Toyengan = Tanwan-jiÊa, "Small Village";
Toriman = Ti-uad¢iman, and Osotonoy = Uzutiuwe) inland; this observation was verified by Dorsey in 1883
by the discovery that these names are still in use. In early days the Kwapa were known as "Akansa," or
Arkansa, first noted by La Metairie in 1682. It is probable that this name was an Algonquian designation
given because of confusion with, or recognition of affinity to, the Kansa or Kanze, the prefix "a" being a
common one in Algouquian appellations. In 1687 Joutel located two of the villages of the tribe on the
Arkansas and two on the Mississippi, one of the latter being on the eastern side. According to St Cosme, the
greater part of the tribe died of smallpox in October, 1699. In 1700 De l'Isle placed the principal "Acansa"
village on the southern side of Arkansas river; and, according to Gravier, there were in 1701 five villages, the
largest, Imaha (Omaha), being highest on the Arkansas. In 1805 Sibley placed the "Arkensa"[pg 194] in three
villages on the southern side of Arkansas river, about 12 miles above Arkansas post. They claimed to be the
original proprietors of the country bordering the Arkansas for 300 miles, or up to the confluence of the
Cadwa, above which lay the territory of the Osage. Subsequently the Kwapa affiliated with the Caddo Indians,
though of another stock; according to Porter they were in the Caddo country in 1829. As reservations were
established, the Kwapa were re-segregated, and in 1877 were on their reservation in northwestern Indian
Territory; but most of them afterward scattered, chiefly to the Osage country, where in 1890 they were found
to number 232.
¢EGIHA 27
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ÊÆIWE'RE
The ancestry and prehistoric movements of the tribes constituting this group are involved in considerable
obscurity, though it is known from tradition as well as linguistic affinity that they sprung from the
Winnebago.
Since the days of Marquette (1673) the Iowa have ranged over the country between the Mississippi and
Missouri, up to the latitude of Oneota (formerly upper Iowa) river,- and even across the Missouri about the
mouth of the Platte. Chauvignerie located them, in 1736 west of the Mississippi and (probably through error
in identification of the waterway) south of the Missouri; and in 1761 Jefferys placed them between Missouri
river and the headwaters of Des Moines river, above the Oto and below the Maha (Omaha). In 1805,
according to Drake, they dwelt on Des Moines river, forty leagues above its mouth, and numbered 800. In
1811 Pike found them in two villages on Des Moines and Iowa rivers. In 1815 they were decimated by
smallpox, and also lost heavily through war against the tribes of the Dakota confederacy. In 1829 Porter
placed them on the Little Platte, some 15 miles from the Missouri line, and about 1853 Schoolcraft located
them on Nemaha river, their principal village being near the mouth of the Great Nemaha. In 1848 they
suffered another epidemic of smallpox, by which 100 warriors, besides women and children, were carried off.
As the country settled, the Iowa, like the other Indians of the stock, were collected on reservations which they
still occupy in Kansas and Oklahoma. According to the last census their population was 273.
The Missouri were first seen by Tonty about 1670; they were located near the Mississippi on Marquette's map
(1673) under the name of Ouemessourit, probably a corruption of their name by the Illinois tribe, with the
characteristic Algonquian prefix. The name Missouri was first used by Joutel in 1687. In 1723 Bourgmont
located their principal village 30 leagues below Kaw river and 60 leagues below the chief settlement of the
Kansa; according to Groghan, they were located on Mississippi river opposite the Illinois country in 1759.
Although the early locations are somewhat indefinite, it seems certain that the tribe formerly dwelt on the
Mississippi about the mouth of[pg 195] the Missouri, and that they gradually ascended the latter stream,
remaining for a time between Grand and Chariton rivers and establishing a town on the left bank of the
Missouri near the mouth of the Grand. There they were found by French traders, who built a fort on an island
quite near their village about the beginning of the eighteenth century. Soon afterward they were conquered
and dispersed by a combination of Sac, Fox, and other Indians; they also suffered from smallpox. On the
division, five or six lodges joined the Osage, two or three took refuge with the Kansa, and most of the
remainder amalgamated with the Oto. In 1805 Lewis and Clark found a part of the tribe, numbering about
300, south of Platte river. The only known survivors in 1829 were with the Oto, when they numbered no more
than 80. In 1842 their village stood on the southern bank of Platte river near the Oto settlement, and they
followed the latter tribe to Indian Territory in 1882.
According to Winnebago tradition, the ÊÉiwe're tribes separated from that "People of the parent speech" long
ago, the Iowa being the first and the Oto the last to leave. In 1673 the Oto were located by Marquette west of
Missouri river, between the fortieth and fortyfirst parallels; in 1680 they were 130 leagues from the Illinois,
almost opposite the mouth of the Miskoncing (Wisconsin), and in 1687 they were on Osage river. According
to La Hontan they were, in 1690, on Otontas (Osage) river; and in 1698 Hennepin placed them ten days'
journey from Fort Crève CÅur. Iberville, in 1700, located the Iowa and Oto with the Omaha, between
Wisconsin and Missouri rivers, about 100 leagues from the Illinois tribe; and Charlevoix, in 1721, fixed the
Oto habitat as below that of the Iowa and above that of the Kansa on the western side of the Missouri. Dupratz
mentions the Oto as a small nation on Missouri river in 1758, and Jefferys (1761) described them as
occupying the southern bank of the Panis (Platte) between its mouth and the Pawnee territory; according to
Porter, they occupied the same position in 1829. The Oto claimed the land bordering the Platte from their
village to the mouth of the river, and also that on both sides of the Missouri as far as the Big Nemaha. In 1833
Catlin found the Oto and Missouri together in the Pawnee country; about 1841 they were gathered in four
villages on the southern side of the Platte, from 5 to 18 miles above its mouth. In 1880 a part of the tribe
ÊÆIWE'RE 28
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removed to the Sac and Fox reservation in Indian Territory, where they still remain; in 1882 the rest of the
tribe, with the remnant of the Missouri, emigrated to the Pouka, Pawnee, and Oto reservation in the present
Oklahoma, where, in 1890 they were found to number 400.
WINNEBAGO
Linguistically the Winnebago Indians are closely related to the ÊÉiwe're on the one side and to the Mandan on
the other. They were first mentioned in the Jesuit Relation of 1636, though the earliest[pg 196] known use of
the name Winnebago occurs in the Relation of 1640; Nicollet found them on Green bay in 1639. According to
Shea, the Winnebago were almost annihilated by the Illinois (Algonquian) tribe in early days, and the
historical group was made up of the survivors of the early battles. Cbauvignerie placed the Winnebago on
Lake Superior in 1736, and Jefferys referred to them and the Sac as living near the head of Green bay in 1761;
Carver mentions a Winnebago village on a small island near the eastern end of Winnebago lake in 1778. Pike
enumerated seven Winnebago villages existing in 1811; and in 1822 the population of the tribe was estimated
at 5,800 (including 900 warriors) in the country about Winnebago lake and extending thence southwestward
to the Mississippi. By treaties in 1825 and 1832 they ceded their lands south of Wisconsin and Fox rivers for a
reservation on the Mississippi above the Oneota; one of their villages in 1832 was at Prairie la Grosse. They
suffered several visitations of smallpox; the third, which occurred in 1836, carried off more than a quarter of
the tribe. A part of the people long remained widely distributed over their old country east of the Mississippi
and along that river in Iowa and Minnesota; in 1840 most of the tribe removed to the neutral ground in the
then territory of Iowa; in 1846 they surrendered their reservation for another above the Minnesota, and in
1856 they were removed to Blue Earth, Minnesota. Here they were mastering agriculture, when the Sioux war
broke out and the settlers demanded their removal. Those who had taken up farms, thereby abandoning tribal
rights, were allowed to remain, but the others were transferred to Crow creek, on Missouri river, whence they
soon escaped. Their privations and sufferings were terrible; out of 2,000 taken to Crow creek only 1,200
reached the Omaha reservation, whither most of them fled. They were assigned a new reservation on the
Omaha lands, where they now remain, occupying lands allotted in severalty. In 1890 there were 1,215
Winnebago on the reservation, but nearly an equal number were scattered over Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin,
and Michigan, where they now live chiefly by agriculture, with a strong predilection for hunting.
MANDAN
The Mandan had a vague tradition of emigration from the eastern part of the country, and Lewis and Clark,
Prince Maximilian, and others found traces of Mandan house-structures at various points along the Missouri;
thus they appear to have ascended that stream before the advent of the ¢egiha. During the historical period
their movements were limited; they were first visited in the upper Missouri country by Sieur de la Verendrye
in 1738. About 1750 they established two villages on the eastern side and seven on the western side of the
Missouri, near the mouth of Heart river. Here they were assailed by the Asiniboin and Dakota and attacked by
smallpox, and were greatly reduced; the two eastern villages consolidated, and the people[pg 197] migrated
up the Missouri to a point 1,430 miles above its mouth (as subsequently determined by Lewis and Clark); the
seven villages were soon reduced to five, and these people also ascended the river and formed two villages in
the Arikara country, near the Mandan of the eastern side, where they remained until about 1766, when they
also consolidated. Thus the once powerful and populous tribe was reduced to two villages which, in 1804,
were found by Lewis and Clark on opposite banks of the Missouri, about 4 miles below Knife river. Here for a
time the tribe waxed and promised to regain the early prestige, reaching a population of 1,600 in 1837; but in
that year they were again attacked by smallpox and almost annihilated, the survivors numbering only 31
WINNEBAGO 29
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according to one account, or 125 to 145 according to others. After this visitation they united in one village.
When the Hidatsa removed from Knife river in 1845, some of the Mandan accompanied them, and others
followed at intervals as late as 1858, when only a few still remained at their old home. In 1872 a reservation
was set apart for the Hidatsa and Arikara and the survivors of the Mandan on Missouri and Yellowstone rivers
in Dakota and Montana, but in 1886 the reservation was reduced. According to the census returns, the Mandan
numbered 252 in 1890.
HIDATSA
There has been much confusion concerning the definition and designation of the Hidatsa Indians. They were
formerly known as Minitari or Gros Ventres of the Missouri, in distinction from the Gros Ventres of the
plains, who belong to another stock. The origin of the term Gros Ventres is somewhat obscure, and various
observers have pointed out its inapplicability, especially to the well-formed Hidatsa tribesmen. According to
Dorsey, the French pioneers probably translated a native term referring to a traditional buffalo paunch, which
occupies a prominent place in the Hidatsa mythology and which, in early times, led to a dispute and the
separation of the Crow from the main group some time in the eighteenth century.
The earlier legends of the Hidatsa are vague, but there is a definite tradition of a migration northward, about
1765, from the neighborhood of Heart river, where they were associated with the Mandan, to Knife river. At
least as early as 1796, according to Matthews, there were three villages belonging to this tribe on Knife
riverâone at the mouth, another half a mile above, and the third and largest 3 miles from the mouth. Here the
people were found by Lewis and Clark in 1804, and here they remained until 1837, when the scourge of
smallpox fell and many of the people perished, the survivors uniting in a single village. About 1845 the
Hidatsa and a part of the Mandan again migrated up the Missouri, and established a village 30 miles by land
and 60 miles by water above their old home, within what is now Fort Berthold reservation. Their population
has apparently varied greatly, partly by[pg 198] reason of the ill definition of the tribe by different
enumerators, partly by reason of the inroads of smallpox. In 1890 they numbered 522.
The Crow people are known by the Hidatsa as Kihatsa (They-refused-the-paunch), according to Matthews;
and Dorsey points out that their own name, Absaruke, does not mean " crow," but refers to a variety of hawk.
Lewis and Clark found the tribe in four bands. In 1817 Brown located them on Yellowstone river. In 1829
they were described by Porter as ranging along Yellowstone river on the eastern side of the Bocky mountains,
and numbered at 4,000; while in 1834, according to Drake, they occupied the southern branch of the
Yellowstone, about the fortysixth parallel and one hundred and fifth meridian, with a population of 4,500. In
1842 their number was estimated at 4,000, and they were described as inhabiting the headwaters of the
Yellowstone. They have since been duly gathered on the Crow reservation in Montana, and are slowly
adopting civilization. In 1890 they numbered 2,287.
The history of the Monakan, Oatawba, Sara, Pedee, and Santee, and incidentally that of the Biloxi, has been
carefully reviewed in a recent publication by Mooney54 , and does not require repetition.
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GENERAL MOVEMENTS
On reviewing the records of explorers and pioneers and the few traditions which have been preserved, the
course of Siouan migration and development becomes clear. In general the movements were westward and
northwestward. The Dakota tribes have not been traced far, though several of them, like the Yanktonnai,
migrated hundreds of miles from the period of first observation to the end of the eighteenth century; then
came the Mandan, according to their tradition, and as they ascended the Missouri left traces of their
occupancy scattered over 1,000 miles of migration; next the ¢egiha descended the Ohio and passed from the
cis-Mississippi forests over the trans-Mississippi plainsâthe stronger branch following the Mandan, while the
lesser at first descended the great river and then worked up the Arkansas into the buffalo country until
checked and diverted by antagonistic tribes. So also the ÊÉiwe're, first recorded near the Mississippi, pushed
300 miles westward; while the Winnebago gradually emigrated from the region of the Great Lakes into the
trans-Mississippi country even before their movements were affected by contact with white men. In like
manner the Hidatsa are known to have flowed northwestward many scores of miles; and the Asiniboin swept
more rapidly across the plains from the place of their rebellion against the Yanktonnai, on the Mississippi,
before they found final resting place on the Saskatchewan[pg 199] plains 500 or 800 miles away. All of the
movements were consistent and, despite intertribal friction and strife, measurably harmonious. The lines of
movement, so far as they can be restored, are in full accord with the lines of linguistic evolution traced by
Hale and Dorsey and Gatschet, and indicate that some five hundred or possibly one thousand years ago the
tribesmen pushed over the Appalachians to the Ohio and followed that stream and its tributaries to the
Mississippi (though there are faint indications that some of the early emigrants ascended the northern
tributaries to the region of the Great Lakes); and that the human flood gained volume as it advanced and
expanded to cover the entire region of the plains. The records concerning the movement of this great human
stream find support in the manifest reason for the movement; the reason was the food quest by which all
primitive men are led, and its end was the abundant fauna of the prairieland, with the buffalo at its head.
While the early population of the Siouan stock, when first the huntsmen crossed the Appalachians, may not be
known, the lines of migration indicate that the people increased and multiplied amain during their long
journey, and that their numbers culminated, despite external conflict and internal strife, about the beginning of
written history, when the Siouan population may have been 100,000 or more. Then came war against the
whites and the still more deadly smallpox, whereby the vigorous stock was checked and crippled and the
population gradually reduced; but since the first shock, which occurred at different dates in different parts of
the great region, the Siouan people have fairly held their own, and some branches are perhaps gaining in
strength.
GENERAL MOVEMENTS 31
SOME FEATURES OF INDIAN SOCIOLOGY
As shown by Powell, there are two fundamentally distinct classes or stages in human societyâ(1) tribal society
and (2) national society. National society characterizes civilization; primarily it is organized on a territorial
basis, but as enlightenment grows the bases are multiplied. Tribal society is characteristic of savagery and
barbarism; so far as known, all tribal societies are organized on the basis of kinship. The transfer from tribal
society to national society is often, perhaps always, through feudalism, in which the territorial motive takes
root and in which the kinship motive withers.
All of the American aborigines north of Mexico and most of those farther southward were in the stage of
tribal society when the continents were discovered, though feudalism was apparently budding in South
America, Central America, and parts of Mexico. The partly developed transitional stage may, for the present,
be neglected, and American Indian sociology may be considered as representing tribal society or kinship
organization.
[pg 200]
The fundamental principles of tribal organization through kinship have been formulated by Powell; they are as
follows:55
I.  A body of kindred constituting a distinct body politic is divided into groups, the males into
groups of brothers and the females into groups of sisters, on distinctions of generations,
regardless of degrees of consanguinity; and the kinship terms used express relative age. In
civilized society kinships are classified on distinctions of sex, distinctions of generations,
and distinctions arising from degrees of consanguinity.
II.  When descent is in the female line, the brother-group consists of natal brothers, together
with all the materterate male cousins of whatever degree. Thus mother's sisters' sons and
mother's mother's sisters' daughters' sons, etc, are included in a group with natal brothers.
In like manner the sister-group is composed of natal sisters, together with all materterate
female cousins of whatever degree.
III.  When descent is in the male line, the brother-group is composed of natal brothers, together
with all patruate male cousins of whatever degree, and the sister-group is composed of
natal sisters, together with all patruate female cousins of whatever degree.
IV.  The son of a member of a brother-group calls each one of the group, father; the father of a
member of a brother-group calls each one of the group, son. Thus a father-group is
coextensive with the brother-group to which the father belongs. A brother-group may also
constitute a father-group and grandfather-group, a son-group and a grandson-group. It may
also be a patruate-group and an avunculate group. It may also be a patruate cousin-group
and an avunculate cousin-group; and in general, every member of a brother-group has the
same consanguineal relation to persons outside of the group as that of every other
member.
Two postulates concerning primitive society, adopted by various ethnologic students of other countries, have
been erroneously applied to the American aborigines; at the same time they have been so widely accepted as
to demand consideration.
The first postulate is that primitive men were originally assembled in chaotic hordes, and that organized
society was developed out of the chaotic mass by the segregation of groups and the differentiation of
functions within each group. Now the American aborigines collectively represent a wide range in
development, extending from a condition about as primitive as ever observed well toward the verge of
The second postulate, which may be regarded as a corollary of the first, is that the primary conjugal condition
was one of promiscuity, out of which different forms ot marriage were successively segregated. Now the wide
range in institutional development exemplified by the American Indians affords unprecedented opportunities
for testing this postulate also. The simplest demotic unit found among the aborigines is the clan or
mother-descent group, in which the normal conjugal relation is essentially monogamous,57 in which marriage
is more or less strictly regulated by a system of prohibitions, and in which the chief conjugal regulation is
commonly that of exogamy with respect to the clan; in higher groups, more deeply affected by contact with
neighboring peoples, the simple clan organization is sometimes found to be modified, (1) by the adoption and
subsequent conjugation of captive men and boys, and, doubtless more profoundly, (2) by the adoption and
polygamous marriage of female captives; and in still more highly organized groups the mother-descent is lost
and polygamy is regular and limited only by the capacity of the husband as a provider. The second and third
stages are commonly characterized, like the first,[pg 202] by established prohibitions and by clan exogamy;
though with the advance in organization amicable relations with certain other groups are usually established,
whereby the germ of tribal organization is implanted and a system of interclan marriage, or tribal endogamy,
is developed. With further advance the mother-descent group is transformed into a father-descent group, when
the clan is replaced by the gens; and polygamy is a common feature of the gentile organization. In all of these
stages the conjugal and consanguineal regulations are affected by the militant habits characteristic of primitive
groups; more warriors than women are slain in battle, and there are more female captives than male; and thus
the polygamy is mainly or wholly polygyny. In many cases civil conditions combine with or partially replace
the militant conditions, yet the tendency of conjugal development is not changed. Among the Seri Indians,
probably the most primitive tribe in North America, in which the demotic unit is the clan, there is a rigorous
marriage custom under which the would-be groom is required to enter the family of the girl and demonstrate
(1) his capacity as a provider and (2) his strength of character as a man, by a year's probation, before he is
finally acceptedâthe conjugal theory ofr the tribe being monogamy, though the practice, at least during recent
years, has, by reason of conditions, passed into polygyny. Among several other tribes of more provident and
less exclusive habit, the first of the two conditions recognized by the Seri is met by rich presents (representing
As implied in several foregoing paragraphs, and as clearly set forth in various publications by Powell, tribal
society falls into two classes or stagesâ (1) clan organization and (2) gentile organization, these stages
corresponding respectively to savagery and barbarism, strictly defined.
At the time of discovery, most of the American Indians were in the upper stages of savagery and the lower
stages of barbarism, as defined by organization; among some tribes descent was reckoned in the female line,
though definite matriarchies have not been discovered; among several tribes descent was and still is reckoned
in the male line, and among all of the tribes thus far investigated the patriarchal system is found.
In tribal society, both clan and gentile, the entire social structure is based on real or assumed kinship, and a
large part of the demotic devices are designed to establish, perpetuate, and advertise kinship relations. As
already indicated, the conspicuous devices in order of development are the taboo with the prohibitions
growing out of it, kinship nomenclature and regulations, and a system of ordination by which incongruous
things are brought into association.
Among the American Indians the taboo and derivative prohibitions are used chiefly in connection with
marriage and clan or gentile organization. Marriage in the clan or gens is prohibited; among many tribes a
vestige of the inferential primitive condition is found in the curious[pg 204] prohibition of communications
between children-in-law and parents-in-law; the clan taboos are commonly connected with the tutelar
beast-god, perhaps represented by a totem.
The system of ordination, like that of kinship, is characterized by reckoning from the ego and by adventitious
associations. It may have been developed from the kinship system through the need for recognition and
assignment of adopted captives, collective property, and other things pertaining to the group; yet it bears
traces of influence by the taboo system. Its ramifications are wide: In some cases it emphasizes kinship by
assigning members of the family group to fixed positions about the camp-fire or in the house; this function
develops into the placement of family groups in fixed order, as exemplified in the Iroquoian long-house and
the Siouan camping circle; or it develops into a curiously exaggerated direction-concept culminating in the
cult of the Four Quarters and the Here, and this prepares the way for a quinary, decimal, and vigesimal
numeration; this last branch sends off another in which the cult of the Six Quarters and the Here arises to
prepare the way for the mystical numbers 7, 13, and 7x7, whose vestiges come down to civilization; both the
four-quarter and the six-quarter associations are sometimes bound up with colors; and there are numberless
other ramifications. Sometimes the function and development of these curious concepts, which constitute
perhaps the most striking characteristic of prescriptorial culture, are obscure at first glance, and hardly to be
discovered even through prolonged research; yet, so far as they have been detected and interpreted, they are
especially adapted to fixing demotic relations; and through them the manifold relations of individuals and
groups are crystallized and kept in mind.
Thus the American Indians, including the Siouan stock, are made up of families organized into clans or
gentes, and combined in tribes, sometimes united in confederacies, all on a basis of kinship, real or assumed;
and the organization is shaped and perpetuated by a series of devices pertaining to the plane of prescriptorial
culture, whereby each member of the organization is constantly reminded of his position in the group.
Footnotes 36
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Siouan Indians by W. J. McGee
Ethnography and Philology of the Hidatsa Indiana; Miscel. Publ. No. 7, U.S. Geol. and Geog. Survey,
1877, p. 38.
17.
Siouan Tribes of the East, p. 37. Local names derived from the Saponi dialect were recognized and
interpreted by a Kwapa when pronounced by Dorsey.
18.
The leading culture stages are defined in the Thirteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology,
for 1891-92 (1896), p. xxiii et seq.
19.
Cf. Schoolcraft, "Information," etc, op. cit., pt. II, 1852, p. 169. Dorsey was inclined to consider the
number as made up without the Asiniboin.
20.
Riggs-Dorsey: "Dakota Grammar,Texts, and Ethnography," Cont. N.A. Eth., vol. IX, 1893, p. 164.
21.
Catlin: "Letters and Notes," op. cit., p. 80.
22.
Travels Through the Interior Parts of North America in the Years 1766, 1767, and 1768; London,
1778, p. 418.
23.
Op.cit., p.278.
24.
Op. cit., p. 445. Carver says, "The dogs employed by the Indians in hunting appear to be all of the
same species; they carry their ears erect, and greatly resemble a wolf about the head. They are
exceedingly useful to them in their hunting excursions and will attack the fiercest of the game they are
in pursuit of. They are also remarkable for their fidelity to their masters, but being ill fed by them are
very troublesome in their huts or tents."
25.
"Coues, "History of the Expedition," op. cit., vol. I, p. 140. A note adds, "The dogs are not large,
much resemble a wolf, and will haul about 70 pounds each."
26.
Narrative of an Expedition to the Source of St. Peter's River ... under the Command of Stephen H.
Long, U.S.T.E., by William H. Keating; London, 1825, vol. I, p. 451; vol. II, p. 44, et al. Account of
an Expedition from Pittsburgh to the Rocky Mountains ... under the Command of Major S.H. Long,
U.S.T.E., by Edwin James; London, 1823, vol. I, pp. 155, 182, et al.
Say remarks (James, loc. cit., p. 155) of the coyote(?), "This animal ... is probably the original of the
domestic dog, so common in the villages of the Indians of this region [about Council Bluffs and
Omaha], some of the varieties of which still retain much of the habit and manners of this species."
James says (loc. cit., vol. II, p. 13), "The dogs of the Konzas are generally of a mixed breed, between
our dogs with pendent ears and the native dogs, whose ears are universally erect. The Indians of this
nation seek every opportunity to cross the breed. These mongrel dogs are less common with the
Omawhaws, while the dogs of the Pawnees generally have preserved their original form."
27.
Travels in the Interior of North America; London, 1843. The Prince adds, "In shape they differ very
little from the wolf, and are equally large and strong. Some are of the real wolf color; others are black,
white, or spotted with black and white, and differing only by the tail being rather more turned up.
Their voice is not a proper barking, but a howl like that of the wolf, and they partly descend from
wolves, which approach the Indian huts, even in the daytime, and mix with the dogs" (cf. p. 203 et
al.). Writing at the Mandan village, he says, "The Mandans and Manitaries have not, by any means, so
many dogs as the Assiniboin, Crows, and Blackfeet. They are rarely of true wolf color, but generally
black or white, or else resemble the wolf, but here they are more like the prairie wolf (Canis latrans).
Footnotes 37
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Siouan Indians by W. J. McGee
We likewise found among these animals a brown race, descended from European pointers; hence the
genuine bark of the dog is more frequently heard here, whereas among the western nations they only
howl. The Indian dogs are worked very hard, have hard blows and hard fare; in fact, they are treated
just as this fine animal is treated among the Esquimaux" (p. 345).
28.
"Letters and Notes," etc, vol. I, p. 14; of. p. 230 et al. He speaks (p. 201) of the Minitari canines as
"semiloup dogs and whelps."
29.
Keating's "Narrative," op. cit., vol. II, p. 452; James' "Account," op. cit., vol. I, p.127 et al.
30.
According to Prince Maximilian, both the Mandan and Minitari kept owls in their lodges and regarded
them as soothsayers ("Travels," op. cit., pp. 383, 403), and the eagle was apparently tolerated for the
sake of his feathers.
31.
"Cassa Tate, the antient tomahawk" on the plate illustrating the objects ("Travels," op. cit., pl. 4, p.
298).
32.
Described by Coues, "History of the Expedition under the Command of Lewis and Clark," 1893, vol.
I, p. 139, note.
33.
"Houses and House-life of the American Aborigines," Cont. N.A. Eth., vol. IV. 1881, p. 114.
34.
"The American Bisons, Living and Extinct," by J.A. Allen; Memoirs of the Geol. Survey of
Kentucky, vol. 1, pt. ii, 1876, map; also pp. 55, 72-101, et al.
35.
Op. cit., p. 283 et seq.
36.
Ibid., p. 435.
37.
Ibid., p. 294.
38.
"History of the Expedition under the Command of Lewis and Clark," etc, by Elliott Coues, 1893 vol.
1, p. 175. It is noted that in winter the Mandan kept their horses in their lodges at night, and, fed them
on cottonwood branches. Ibid., pp. 220, 233, et al.
39.
Coues, Expedition of Lewis and Clark, vol. III, p. 839.
40.
Ibid., vol. I, p. 140.
41.
"The Story of the Indian," 1895, p. 237.
42.
James' "Account," op. cit., vol. I, pp. 126, 148; vol. II, p. 12 et al.
43.
Ibid., vol. III, p. 107.
44.
"Letters and Notes," op. cit., vol. I, pp. 142 (where the manner of lassoing wild horses is mentioned),
p. 251 et al.; "Travels," op. cit., p. 149 et al. (The Crow were said to have between 9,000 and 10,000
head, p. 174.)
45.
Keating in Long's Expedition, op. cit., vol. II, appendix, p. 152. Riggs' "Dakota-English Dictionary,"
Cont. N.A. Eth., vol. VII, 1890.
Footnotes 38
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Siouan Indians by W. J. McGee
46.
Op. cit., p. 265.
47.
"A study of Omaha Indian Music, by Alice C. Fletcher ... aided by Francis La Flesche, with a report
on the structural peculiarities of the music, by John Comfort Fillmore, A.M.;" Arch. and Eth. papers
of the Peabody Museum, vol. I, No. 5, 1893, pp. i-vi + 7-152 (=231-382).
48.
Ordination, as the term is here used, comprehends regimentation as defined by Powell, yet relates
especially to the method of reckoning from the constantly recognized but ever varying standpoint of
prescriptorial culture.
49.
Several of these are summarized in "The emblematic use of the tree in the Dakota group," Science,
n.s., vol. IV, 1896, pp. 475-487.
50.
Notably "A Study of Siouan Cults," Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology for 1889-0*0
(1894), pp. 351-544.
51.
Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, for 1885-86 (1891), pp. 1-142, and map.
52.
Chiefly "Omaha Sociology," Third Ann. Rep. Bur. Eth., for 1881-82 (1884), pp. 205-370; "A study of
Siouan cults," Eleventh Ann. Rep. Bur. Eth., for 1889-90 (1894), pp. 351-544, and that printed on the
following pages.
53.
Taken chiefly from notes and manuscripts prepared by Mr Dorsey.
54.
Sionan Tribes of the East, 1894.
55.
Third Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, for 1881-82 (1884), pp. xliv-xlv.
56.
Notably in "Relation of primitive peoples to environment, illustrated by American examples,"
Smithsonian Report for 1896, pp. 625-638, especially p. 635.
57.
Neither space nor present occasion warrants discussion of the curious aphrodisian cults found among
many peoples, usually in the barbaric stage of development; it may be noted merely that this is an
aberrant branch from the main stem of institutional growth. The subject is touched briefly in "The
beginning of marriage," American Anthropologist, vol. IX, pp. 371-383, Nov., 1896.
58.
The History of Human Marriage (London, 1891), especially chapters iv-vi, xiii-xv, xx-xxii.
Footnotes 39
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