Fr. 59.50

Cheyenne

English · Paperback / Softback

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Informationen zum Autor John H. Moore is Research Professor of Anthropology at the University of Florida! Gainesville. Klappentext This book provides a history and ethnography of the Cheyenne people from their prehistoric origins north of the Great Lakes to their present life in the reservations in Oklahoma. It is based on archaeological material, historical and linguistic evidence and draws vividly on the oral traditions of the Cheyenne themselves. After an investigation of Cheyenne origins, the author describes their settlement, around 500 BC on the plains of North Dakota. Here they hunted buffalo and antelope on foot, and gradually developed the means to cultivate the often arid ground. In a reverse of the typical European pattern, the reintroduction of the horse in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries allowed the Cheyenne to revert from settled horticultural communities to nomadic hunters across the American mid-west. The author describes the early French and British contacts with the Cheyenne and the beginnings of trade and Indian-settler politics. Early contacts were largely peaceful, and it was not until after Independence and when the Cheyenne became involved in the intricacies of the Civil War that full scale conflict broke out between them and the US Federal Army. The tragic massacre of Cheyenne women and children at Sand Creek was avenged two decades later at the Battle of Little Big Horn - but the scale and swiftness of Federal retaliation served ultimately to accelerate the driving of the Cheyenne from their traditional lands to reservations in the south. The author provides a detailed account of reservation life and shows how the dance ceremonies and oral traditions have largely survived the Cheyenne's enforced removal from their long-held homelands. He concludes with a critical examination of contemporary Cheyenne life and of the mixed results of the often inept intrusions of State and Federal bureaucracies. This is a vivid and readable history and ethnography of one of the most prominent of the American Indian peoples. Zusammenfassung This book provides a history and ethnography of the Cheyenne people from their prehistoric origins north of the Great Lakes to their present life in the reservations in Oklahoma. It is based on archaeological material! historical and linguistic evidence and draws vividly on the oral traditions of the Cheyenne themselves. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface. 1. Cheyenne Origins. 2. Cheyenne Migrations. 3. Pastoral Nomadism. 4. Trade and Politics. 5. Cheyenne Warfare. 6. Band and Tribal Structure. 7. Literature and Values. 8. Cosmology and Ceremonies. 9. Social Interactions. 10. Early Reservation Life. 11. Late Reservation Life. 12. Modern Times. Notes. References. Index. ...

Product details

Authors Moore, JH Moore, John H. Moore, Patrick Moore, MOORE JOHN H
Publisher Wiley, John and Sons Ltd
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 15.10.1999
 
EAN 9780631218623
ISBN 978-0-631-21862-3
No. of pages 352
Series Peoples of America
Peoples of America
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > General, dictionaries
Non-fiction book > History > Pre and early history, antiquity
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

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