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Native American Project
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Published on Nov 19, 2015
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1.
NATIVE AMERICAN PROJECT: BLACKFEET AND NAVAJO TRIBES
BY: MATT BURNS, NATE GREGORY, TOM BECK,AND PAT BRADY
Photo by
billmcdavid
2.
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
3.
BLACKFEET: RELIGION
Main God was the Sun
Believed in a supernatural being called Napi (which means old man)
Photo by
Daisy Days
4.
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
5.
BLACKFEET: WRITING SYSTEM
They used an Algonquin dialect as their religion
The dialect related to the languages of several plains and Eastern woodland tribes
Photo by
Ozgurmulazimoglu
6.
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
7.
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
8.
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
Photo by
Peggy2012CREATIVELENZ
9.
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
Photo by
Wolfgang Staudt
10.
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
Photo by
Donovan Shortey
11.
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
Photo by
Tekniska museet
12.
NAVAJO: LANGUAGE
The language they spoke was their traditional Navajo language
They created it and spoke it fluently
Photo by
Wolfgang Staudt
13.
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
Photo by
Wolfgang Staudt
14.
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
Photo by
Wolfgang Staudt
15.
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
16.
Untitled Slide
17.
Untitled Slide
Matt Burns
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