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Native American Project

Published on Nov 19, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

NATIVE AMERICAN PROJECT: BLACKFEET AND NAVAJO TRIBES

BY: MATT BURNS, NATE GREGORY, TOM BECK,AND PAT BRADY
Photo by billmcdavid

BLACKFEET: GOVERNMENT

  • Leadership was non-hierarchical
  • Prior to the 1800s, they had a Government made up of 36 clans
  • In 1830, missionaries came and began the Blackfoot confederation
Photo by Thiophene_Guy

BLACKFEET: RELIGION

  • Main God was the Sun
  • Believed in a supernatural being called Napi (which means old man)
Photo by Daisy Days

BLACKFEET: PUBLIC WORKS

  • Only consisted of tipis used for housing
  • They did not have any interest in growing crops or creating irrigation systems
  • They only used tipis because they were easy to move since they moved frequently
  • They all lived in a village near herds of buffalo and sources of water
Photo by Tobyotter

BLACKFEET: WRITING SYSTEM

  • They used an Algonquin dialect as their religion
  • The dialect related to the languages of several plains and Eastern woodland tribes

BLACKFEET: ARCHITECTURE

  • They moved around a lot because bison became extinct where they lived
  • They lived in tipis so they could quickly move from one area to another
Photo by miss604

BLACKFEET: SOCIAL CLASSES

  • Tribes were led by a council of Chiefs
  • One chief was from each clan
  • They practiced consensus decision making
  • A decision was only made if the Chiefs accepted it
Photo by Tim Evanson

BLACKFEET: JOB SPECIALIZATIONS

  • Women cleaned and cooked; also took care of children and houses
  • Men hunted and gathered resources and food
  • Men also protected the village
  • Men and women would both tell stories and make medicines

NAVAJO: GOVERNMENT

  • In 1923, a tribal government was established
  • Was made to help meet the increasing desires of American oil
  • Oil companies leased Navajoland for exploration

NAVAJO: RELIGION

  • They believed in many Gods
  • They also believed in good and evil
  • Their main belief was that everything had a purpose
  • Their holy people were supernatural beings

NAVAJO: PUBLIC WORKS

  • They had public works such as housing, agricultural systems, and farming animals
  • They lived in groups rather than one village
  • Homes were called Hogans, which were huts made up of logs and earth
  • They also farmed crops and livestock
  • They stayed in one area instead of moving places

NAVAJO: LANGUAGE

  • The language they spoke was their traditional Navajo language
  • They created it and spoke it fluently

NAVAJO: ART AND ARCHITECTURE

  • Lived in Hogans, where they practiced their religion
  • They were made of wooden poles, tree bark, and mud
  • Navajo families still live in Hogans
  • They made silver jewelry

NAVAJO: SOCIAL CLASSES

  • There was no official ranking in the society
  • Social obligations were agreed on by kinship and residence
  • The father in each household was crowned as head
  • The father in the oldest household was crowned as head of the residence group

NAVAJO: JOB SPECIALIZATIONS

  • Men hunted and gathered materials and food
  • Women grew crops and took care of household activities
  • Both men and women took care of child
Photo by smithdan

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