Northern Paiute people

The Northern Paiute people are a Numic people that has traditionally lived in the Great Basin region of the United States in what is now eastern California, western Nevada, and southeast Oregon. The Northern Paiute pre-contact lifestyle was well adapted to the harsh desert environment in which they lived. Each tribe or band occupied a specific territory, generally centered on a lake or wetland that supplied fish and waterfowl. Communal hunt drives, which often involved neighboring bands, would take rabbits and pronghorn from surrounding areas. Individuals and families appear to have moved freely among the bands.

Northern Paiute
Numu/Numa
Traditional lands of the Northern Paiute
Regions with significant populations
 United States
( California,  Nevada and  Oregon)
Languages
Northern Paiute
Religion
Traditional, Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Bannock and Mono
Chief Winnemucca, Chief of the Paiute. He was also named Poito.

Northern Paiute originally lived a nomadic lifestyle, moving from place to place following animal migration patterns and seasonal foods.[1] They lived in small, independent groups that consisted of a handful or so of different family units.[1] Upon arrival of foreigners into western Nevada, the Northern Paiute became sedentary in order to protect themselves and handle negotiations with the new settlers. Because of their change from a nomadic to a sedentary lifestyle, women were relied upon more heavily for both their full-time employment and at-home work.[2] In some modern Northern Paiute tribes, men work in "seasonal jobs on the ranches, in the mines, and as caretakers in the nearby motels" and women work "in the laundry, the bakery, in homes and motels as domestics, and in the country hospital".[2]

They gathered Pinyon nuts in the mountains in the fall as a critical winter food source. Women also gathered grass seeds and roots as important parts of their diet. The name of each band was derived from a characteristic food source. For example, the people at Pyramid Lake were known as the Cui Ui Ticutta (meaning "Cui-ui eaters", or trout eaters). The people of the Lovelock area were known as the Koop Ticutta, meaning "ground-squirrel eaters" and the people of the Carson Sink were known as the Toi Ticutta meaning "tule eaters". The Kucadikadi of Mono County, California are the "brine fly eaters".

Relations with other tribes and European settlers

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Sarah Winnemucca, Paiute writer and lecturer

Relations among the Northern Paiute and their Shoshone neighbors were generally peaceful. There is no sharp distinction between the Northern Paiute and Western Shoshone or Sosone. Relations with the Waasseoo or Washoe people, who were culturally and linguistically very different, were not so peaceful. These differences in lifestyle and language could be because Northern Paiute may have moved from southern regions to the Nevada/California area in which they currently reside. They also may have overthrown and destroyed other Indian tribes in order to inhabit their current lands.[3] For example, the Paiute were almost "continually at war" with the Klamath south and west of them.[3] "The Achomawi, south of the Klamath, also were enemies of the Northern Paiute, (so much so that) the earliest wars related in Achomawi oral tradition were (with) Northern Paiute".[3]

Sustained contact between the Northern Paiute and European Americans began in the early 1840s, although the first contact may have occurred as early as the 1820s. Although the Paiute had adopted the use of horses from other Great Plains tribes, their culture was otherwise then largely unaffected by European influences. As Euro-American settlement of the area progressed, competition for scarce resources increased. Several violent confrontations took place, including the Pyramid Lake War of 1860, Owens Valley Indian War 1861–1864,[4] Snake War 1864–1868; and the Bannock War of 1878. These incidents generally began with a disagreement between settlers and the Paiute (singly or in a group) regarding property, retaliation by one group against the other, and finally counter-retaliation by the opposite party, frequently culminating in the armed involvement of the U.S. Army. Fatalities were much higher among the Paiute due to newly introduced Eurasian infectious diseases, such as smallpox, which were endemic among the Europeans. The Natives had no acquired immunity. Sarah Winnemucca's book Life Among the Piutes (1883)[5] gives a first-hand account of this period.

The US government first established the Malheur Reservation for the Northern Paiute in eastern Oregon. It intended to concentrate the Northern Paiute there, but its strategy did not work. Because of the distance of the reservation from the traditional areas of most of the bands, and because of its poor environmental conditions, many Northern Paiute refused to go there. Those that did, soon left. They clung to their traditional lifestyle as long as possible. When environmental degradation of their lands made that impossible, they sought jobs on white farms, ranches or in cities. They established small Indian colonies, where they were joined by many Shoshone and, in the Reno area, Washoe people.

Later, the government created larger reservations at Pyramid Lake and Duck Valley, Nevada. By that time the pattern of small de facto reservations near cities or farm districts, often with mixed Northern Paiute and Shoshone populations, had been established. Starting in the early 20th century, the federal government began granting land to these colonies. Under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, several individual colonies gained federal recognition as independent tribes.

Mythology

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Humans have inhabited the area between the West and Northwest of the United States for over 11,000 years.[6]

One version of how the Northern Paiute people came to be is that a bird, the Sagehen (also known as the Centrocercus), was the only bird that survived a massive flood. The Sagehen made a fire and cared for it until the fire grew bigger and bigger. The water from the flood dried, and a man "happened."[7] This man was called Nűműzóho,[8] who was a cannibal. The Cannibals (as he and his kind were called) killed all the Native people, except for a woman who was able to escape. This woman kept herself alive by traveling from place to place in the region, meeting and staying with different characters. She then found a man living in the mountains whom she married. They bore four children: two Paiute (one brother, one sister) and two Pit Rivers (one brother, one sister). The two sets of children fought frequently because they were from different tribes. Their father (some think he was a Wolf) threw them in different waters.[9] This caused them to go their separate ways while continuing to fight and quarrel whenever they came in contact with each other again. And thus the Paiute were created and their homes established in Nevada, California, and Oregon.[7]

Another version of the creation story tells of a man and a woman who heard a voice from within a bottle. They dumped the contents of the bottle out, and four beings dropped out: two boys and two girls. The 4 people were divided by good and evil. The two good people (Paiute) were to be protected and cared for by the woman while the two bad people were subject to the man. The two sets of pairs (good and bad) left the man and woman. Each pair created fire: the two good people made a fire with minimal smoke, the two bad people made a fire with thick smoke. This made them enemies, even before foreigners plotted them against each other later on.[7] War and strife have existed ever since.

While several other variations of these stories are told, they all share some similar events and characters. Namely Nűműzóho the Cannibal who kills almost all of the Indians but not the woman;[9] Coyote is "the one who fixed things,"[8] mentioned briefly in many of the origin stories; a man and a woman who meet and bear four children; the four children who are paired off into different tribes and quarrel with the other pair.[7]

The creativity in which the stories were told is part of the reason for such an array of versions. These epic stories were first told long ago to large groups gathered around a fire. The season for story-telling in the American West was during the winter months.[10] The elderly members of the tribe would animatedly and humorously tell the tale from their memory as told to them by previous elders and family members.[10] They were told “as a way to pass on tribal visions of the animal people and the human people, their origins and values, their spiritual and natural environment, and their culture and daily lives.”[10]

The stories were often poems that were performed musically, called "song-poems." Members of the tribe chanted and acted out the stories to the beat of a drum with people dancing.[9] The Northern Paiute origin story, among many other important and formative legends, was passed on orally from tribal elders to younger tribe members and from grandmothers and grandfathers to grandchildren.[10] Many of their stories and much of their history is passed on orally even today.

Gender roles

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Gender roles among the Northern Paiute did not stand out in society. Men and women divided the work between each other the most traditional way: women made household tools, gathered fruit and seeds, cooked, cleaned, cared for the children, and made the clothing, while men hunted and protected their families. Men also taught their sons how to hunt and fish as a means to pass on a survival skill.[11] Both sexes took part in storytelling, artwork and medicine, and traditional medicine. As the Northern Paiute entered the 20th century, gender roles began to shift. Men worked in seasonal jobs and the women mainly worked in laundry and medicine. The shift happened because the men that worked seasonal jobs would not have work at the end of a given season, while women had consistent work. This made women a major provider in the family.[12] Another shift came in the shape of politics. While some women disrupted tribe meetings, Sarah Winnemucca became a figure in the eyes of the public by making claims of being a princess and using this attention to advocate for her people.[13]

Medicine culture and beliefs

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Shamanism is popular among most Native American tribes, including the Northern Paiute people. A shaman is a medicine man called a puhagim by Northern Paiute people.[14] The Northern Paiute believe in a force called puha that gives life to the physical world. It is the power that moves the elements, plants, and animals that are a part of that physical realm. Humans are seen to be very much a part of that world, not superior or inferior, simply another component.[15] The Northern Paiute people believe that "matter and places are pregnant in form, meaning, and relations to natural and human phenomena."[15] This belief gave credibility and placed necessity in shamans, as it does today.

In order to draw upon the powers of nature and the universe, shamans would frequently visit sacred sites. These sites can be found throughout the Great Basin and the American West. They include "mountains, caves, waterways, and unique geological formations."[15] One such site is called the Parowan Gap and is sacred to the Paiute (see image). These sacred sites are where shamans performed many of their duties, including curing, rainmaking, warfare, fighting, or sorcery."[15] Shamans were and are an integral part of the Northern Paiute community.

The Northern Paiute believe that doctors/shaman retrieve the souls of those who have committed wrongdoings and re-establish them in to Native American society. They are the intermediaries between the evil acts of the sick and the goodness of the healthy tribe. For this reason, Northern Paiute do not perceive white doctors as capable of fully healing those in need because although they may be able to cure the outer shell, the inner shell will decay and be lost, leaving the person dead in reality.[14] A shaman, however, would take an ill person (physically or spiritually ill) and use the power from the universe to heal him. In many cases, a shaman will utilize various mediums, such as a rattle, smoke, and songs, to incite the power of the universe.[14]

Historic Northern Paiute and Mono bands

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Population

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Estimates for the pre-contact populations of most native groups in California have varied substantially. Alfred L. Kroeber thought that the 1770 population of the Northern Paiute within California was 500. He estimated their population in 1910 as 300.[20] Others[21] put the total Northern Paiute population in 1859 at about 6,000.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Ya (down, down below); hu (far off, in the distance, either visibly or so far as to be invisible); -kni (those of, people of), Anglicized as -kin instead of Klamath -kni. According to this etymology, ″Yahuskin″ would mean "People of far off down below", an apt name from the Klamath viewpoint.
  2. ^ They harvested the tiny black seeds of waada (Sueda depressa), a plant which grows along the shores of Harney Basin lakes.
  3. ^ Perhaps this was not a Northern Paiute band instead the Wiyimpihtikka (Buffalo Berry Eaters) of the Western Shoshone.

References

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  1. ^ a b "History: The Paiutes". Utah American Indian Digital Archive. Utah Department of Heritage and Arts.
  2. ^ a b Lynch, Robert N. (1986). "Women in Northern Paiute Politics". Signs. 11 (2): 352–366. doi:10.1086/494228. JSTOR 3174057. S2CID 143625747.
  3. ^ a b c Sutton, Mark Q. (1986). "Warfare and Expansion: An Ethnohistoric Perspective on the Numic". Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology. 8 (1): 65–82. JSTOR 27825257.
  4. ^ California and the Indian Wars, The Owens Valley Indian War, 1861-1865, The California Military Museum
  5. ^ Hopkins 1883.
  6. ^ Sigler, William F.; Vigg, Steven; Bres, Mimi (October 31, 1985). "Life History of the cui-ui, Chasmistes cujus Cope, in Pyramid Lake, Nevada: a review". Great Basin Naturalist. 45 (4). Brigham Young University. Article 1 – via Scholars Archive.
  7. ^ a b c d Kelly, Isabel T. (1938). "Northern Paiute Tales". The Journal of American Folklore. 51 (202): 363–438. doi:10.2307/535655. JSTOR 535655.
  8. ^ a b Diamond, Stanley (2017). In Search of the Primitive: A Critique of Civilization. Routledge.
  9. ^ a b c Lincoln, Kenneth (2009). Sing with the Heart of a Bear: Fusions of Native and American Poetry, 1890-1999. University of California Press.
  10. ^ a b c d Wewa, Wilson; Gardner, James A. (2017). Legends of the Northern Paiute. Oregon State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87071-900-4.
  11. ^ "Native Americans: Paiute Indian History and Culture". www.native-languages.org. Retrieved July 1, 2019.
  12. ^ Lynch, Robert N. (1986). "Women in Northern Paiute Politics". Signs. 11 (2): 352–366. doi:10.1086/494228. ISSN 0097-9740. JSTOR 3174057. S2CID 143625747.
  13. ^ Scherer, Joanna Cohan (1988). "The Public Faces of Sarah Winnemucca". Cultural Anthropology. 3 (2): 178–204. doi:10.1525/can.1988.3.2.02a00040. ISSN 0886-7356. JSTOR 656350.
  14. ^ a b c Olofson, Harold (1979). "Northern Paiute Shamanism Revisited". Anthropos. 74 (12): 11–24. JSTOR 40459950.
  15. ^ a b c d Venzor, Kathryn R.; Walker, William H. (2011). Contemporary Archaeologies of the Southwest. University Press of Colorado.
  16. ^ Klamath Tribes Language Project - Vocabulary
  17. ^ Omer C. Stewart: The Northern Paiute Bands, University of California Press, Berkeley, California, 1939, page 135
  18. ^ Summit Lake Paiute Tribe Archived 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ The Paiute and Shoshone of Fort McDermitt, Nevada
  20. ^ Kroeber 1925, p. 883.
  21. ^ Liljeblad & Fowler 1978, p. 457.