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Elements of the Pictorial System
The Toltec and Aztec system of Picture- Writing, compared with the North
American; its general agreement its peculiar traits and common figurative system
of the United States Tribes. Devices from a Tree on the Mamakagon River,
Wisconsin. Drawing from the Upper Mississippi, denoting a Peace-Mission. Signs
drawn on Grave-Posts. Sepulchral honors of the Chiefs Wabojeeg, and
Babasekundabee.
There has been no explanation of the Mexican system of Picture Writing, by which
it can be understood as a system, if we except the mode of distinguishing the
day, the division of the cycle called Tlalpilli, and the cycle itself. By the
devices for what may be designated the surnames of families or clans, which our
United States tribes call TOTEMS, the names of reigning caciques and dynasties
were also preserved. Figurative or representative signs described events. The
drowning of distinguished men was represented by a boat upsetting on the water.
Maces, arrows, flowers, quadrupeds, birds, and other animate and inanimate
objects, were employed as symbols. Compartments and colors gave uniformity and
attraction to the series of signs, many of which were derived from their fine
tropical vegetation and phenomena. In this respect, and in the mode of denoting
chronology, the Mexican picture writing was in advance of the ruder form of our
pictography. The latter is exclusively ideographic consisting of a series of
signs for whole ideas and sentences the chief or turning words of which are
typified, as affording aid to the memory. The signs are drawn from every
department of nature from the earth, the waters, and the atmosphere. With a
spiritual agency a subtle polytheism pervading all space, these signs are
supposed to effect and maintain relations to these objects of a mysterious and
miraculous character. A hunter has selected his personal spirit or manito from
the animal creation, and whenever he encounters that object, be it bird or
beast, in the forest, he regards it in the light of a protector, or harbinger of
luck. Even its tracks, if it be a quadruped, or its flight, if it be a bird, are
sufficient to animate his highest hopes or fears. A Meta or priest, and a
jossakeed, or a medical man, believes himself to have triumphed by his skill,
and is desirous, by his figurative or representative signs, to perpetuate the
knowledge of his success among his countrymen. Fame is as powerful a motive to
him as to the man of science, letters, or religion, in civil life. He believes
in the truth and efficacy of his system of polytheism, of spirit-power, of
incantations, of medical magic, of mythology, of his wild forest religion. And
that the observance of these rites, offerings, and ceremonies, in each
department, is indissolubly connected with the issues of life and death.
Stronger motives civilization and Christian hope could not supply. This will
denote the faith with which he practices his pictography. For their pictographic
devices the North American Indians have two terms, namely, Kekeewin, or such
things as are generally understood by the tribe; and Kelceenowin, or teachings
of the medas or priests, and jossakeeds or prophets. The knowledge of the latter
is chiefly confined to persons who are versed in their system of magic medicine,
or their religion, and may be deemed hieratic. The former consists of the common
figurative signs, such as are employed at places of sepulture, or by hunting or
travelling parties. It is also employed in the muzzinábiks, or rock-writings.
Many of the figures are common to both, and are seen in the drawings generally;
but it is to be understood that this results from the figure-alphabet being
precisely the same in both, while the devices of the nugamoons, or medicine,
wabino, hunting, and war songs, are known solely to the initiates who have
learned them, and who always pay high to the native professors for this
knowledge. Shawunipenais, or the South-bird, a member of the Chippewa tribe,
told me, (after he had become a member of the Baptist Church,) that he had paid
exorbitant prices, such as a gun for a song, in learning the magical hunting
songs. They were taught to him from the devices on scrolls of bark. He added,
that he had been a long time in learning them; that the information was
communicated secretly; and that, whenever he had mastered the songs, which
contained mysterious allusions, he fully understood, and could draw the devices.
The subjects to which the North American Indian applies his pictographic skill,
may be regarded as follows, namely:
| 1.
Kekeewin |
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A. Common signs
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Travelling |
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B. Adjidatigwun |
Sepulture |
| 2. Kekeenowin |
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C. Medawin |
Medicine |
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D. Minor
Jeesukáwin |
Necromancy |
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E. Wabino |
Revelry |
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F. Keossáwin |
Hunting |
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G. Higher
Jeesukáwin |
Prophecy |
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H. Nundobewunewun |
War |
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I. Sageawin |
Love |
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K. Muzzinabikon |
History |
Some observations on each of these topics may be made.
Common Kekeewin, Or Mode Of Writing By Representative And Symbolical Pictures.
A. The following pictograph is transcribed from the sides of a blazed tree, of
the species Pinus resinosa, found on the banks of the Namakagun, a tributary of
the River St. Croix, of the Upper Mississippi, at a spot where I landed in the
month of August 1831. (See A, Plate 49.)
The purport, as explained by an interpreter well versed in both this art and the
language and customs of the Chippewas, may be given in few words. Figure 3, on
the right, is the totem of a hunter, who had encamped at that spot. It
represents a fabulous animal, called the copper-tailed bear. The two parallel
lines beneath it, (figure 4,) curved at each end, represent the hunter s canoe.
The next sign, (figure 1,) on the same side, below, is the totem of his
companion, the mizi, or cat-fish, the parallel lines beneath (figure 2) also
representing his canoe. The upper figure, 5, on the left, represents the common
black bear; the six lower devices, figures 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11, denote six
fish of the cat-fish species. The interpretation is this: The two hunters, whose
totems were cat-fish and copper-tailed bear, while encamped at the spot, killed
a bear, and captured the expressed number of cat-fish in the river. The record
was designed to convey this piece of information to their people and kinsfolk
who should pass the locality. The state of society among them rendered such
information interesting; it was as much so to them, perhaps, as the generality
of the information of a personal character which is circulated by our diurnal
press; and the fact of the record itself may be regarded as a proof that the
system of the Kekeewin was generally understood.
The scroll containing this inscription (See
A, Plate 48,) was obtained above St.
Anthony s Falls, on a public expedition in 1820, which has been alluded to in a
prior place. It consisted of white birch bark, and the figures had been
carefully drawn. Number 1, denotes the flag of the Union; Number 2, the
cantonment, then recently established at Cold Spring, on the western side of the
cliffs, above the influx of the St. Peters. Number 4 is the symbol of the
commanding officer, (Colonel H. Leaven-worth,) under whose authority a mission
of peace had been sent into the Chippewa country. Number 11 is the symbol of
Chakope, or the Six, the leading Sioux chief, under whose orders the party
moved. Number 8 is the second chief, called Wamade'unka, or the Black Eagle. The
symbol of his name is Number 10. He has 14 lodges.
Captain Douglas, who had begun the study of this "bark-letter," as it was
called, thought this symbol denoted his descent from Chakope. Number 7 is a
chief, subordinate to Chakope, with 13 lodges, and a bale of goods (Number 9),
which was devoted, by the public, to the objects of the peace. The name of
Number 6, whose wigwam is Number 5, with 13 subordinate lodges, was not given.
The frame, or crossed poles of the entire 50 lodges composing this party, had
been left standing on the high, open prairie on the west bank of the
Mississippi, above Sauk River, and immediately opposite the point of Hornblende
Rocks, which the French call the Two Rocks. A high pole, split so as to receive
the scroll, was placed at the head of the camp, conspicuous to all who should
pass; and its sight actually produced a shout from Babesacundabe and a
delegation of Chippewas, who accompanied him on an errand of peace from the
sources of the Mississippi.
To these examples of the use of pictographic writing to subserve the purpose of
information, in travelling and in hunting, I add the following pictograph
respecting known historical events. It was transcribed from a tree on the banks
of the Muskingum River, Ohio, about 1780.1 The bark of the tree had been
removed about twelve inches square, to admit the inscription. The characters
were drawn with charcoal and bear s oil. (See B, Plate 47.)
It is known, historically, that, after the conquest of Canada, 1758-59, the
western Indians, who adhered to the French interest, formed an extensive
confederacy for retaking, simultaneously, all the military posts west of the
Alleghanies, This con federacy, which was headed by the celebrated chief
Pontiac, was so well ordered and planned that nine out of the twelve small
stockaded garrisons, held by the English troops, were actually surprised and
taken; and they were only resisted by the superior works of Pittsburg and
Detroit. It was not till the year 1763-64 that these formidable disturbances
were quelled, and the authority of the British crown finally established among
the dissatisfied tribes.
The inscription relates to these events. It depicts the part borne in this
confederate war by the Delawares of the Muskingum, under the conduct of the
noted chief Wingenund.
Number 1 represents the eldest and main branch of the Delaware tribe, by its
ancient symbol, the tortoise.
Number 2 is the totem, or armorial badge of Wingenund, denoting him to be the
actor.
Number 3 is the sun. The ten horizontal strokes beneath it denote the number of
war-parties in which this chief had participated.
Number 4 are men's scalps.
Number 5, women s scalps.
Number 6, male prisoners.
Number 7, female prisoners.
Number 8, a small fort situated on the banks of Lake Erie, which was taken by
the Indians in 1762, by a surprise.
Number 9 represents the fort at Detroit, which, in 1763, resisted a siege of
three months, under the command of Major Gladwyn.
Number 10 is Fort Pitt, denoted by its striking position on the extreme point of
land at the confluence of the Alleghany and the Monongahela rivers.
Number 11 denotes the incipient town near it. The eleven crosses or figures,
arranged below the tortoise, denote the number of persons who were either killed
or taken prisoners by this chief. The prisoners are distinguished from the slain
by the figure of a ball or circle above the cross-figure denoting a head. Those
devices with out this circle are symbols of the slain. But four, out of the
eleven, appear to have been women, and of these, two were retained as prisoners.
It appears that but two of the six men were led into captivity. The twenty-three
nearly vertical strokes, at the foot of the inscription, indicate the strength
of the chieftain s party. The inclination denotes the course they marched to
reach the scene of conflict. This course, in the actual position of the tribe,
and of the side of the tree chosen to depict it, was northward. As one of the
evidences which show the order and exactitude of these rude memorials in
recording facts, it is to be observed that the number of persons captured or
killed, in each expedition of the chief, is set on the left of the picture,
exactly opposite the symbolical mark of the expedition. Thus, in his first
war-party, he took nothing; in the second, he killed one man, and took his scalp
the sign is ideographic of one; in the third, he killed a male and female, and
took a female prisoner; in the fourth, he took a male prisoner; the fifth, he
accomplished nothing; the sixth, he took a male prisoner. Between this and his
next expedition some years elapsed, as denoted by the space. In the seventh, he
took a female prisoner; the eighth, he killed a man; the ninth, a woman; the
tenth, a man.
Here is a large amount of information conveyed by 51 symbolic or representative
characters. Its interpretation is due to a fellow-tribesman of the successful
warrior; the noted Delaware chief, Captain White Eyes, who was acquainted with
the circum stances, knew Wingenund, had participated in the incidents of the
war, and was well versed in this mode of pictorial writing.
These facts have been brought forward, as denoting a starting point in the
inquiry.
Adjedatigwun.2 The veneration of the Indian tribes for their dead, is well
known. Piety and affection, respect and remembrance, may have more costly and
splendid modes of obituary exhibition in civilized life; but it is questionable
if there be more sincerity, more true regret, more unaffected sorrow, than there
is often found among esteemed individuals of these simple bands. And if there be
anything sacred, in a life of so much change, vicissitude, and temptation to
degradation, as they have suffered, it is a sentiment of veneration for their
dead. This is a public sentiment, which has often been evinced, and is known to
have had force when they have parted with every species of landed possession,
and even territory containing the last cherished spot of their simple sepulture.
In such circumstances they have uniformly solicited much regard, and an
undisturbed repose, for the bones of their dead. One of the great merits
ascribed by the modern Indians to the era of the French supremacy in the land
is, that Frenchmen never disturbed the places of their dead.3 The cemeteries of
the Indian dead were always placed in the choicest scenic situations their
vicinage afforded; on some crowning hill, or gentle eminence in a secluded
valley. Airy or sylvan sites were always selected. Their taste in this respect
has often been noticed and admired. They were deficient in mechanical skill, in
wood and stone, but they have rarely been exceeded, perhaps never, by erratic
tribes, in the kind care and decent enwrapment and interment of their deceased.
Nothing that the dead possessed has ever been deemed too valuable to be interred
with the body. The most costly dress, arms, ornaments, and implements, are
deposited in the grave. Where the low state of these arts permitted no
architectural display in their simple tombs and bark-cenotaphs, nothing was more
natural than that they should heap piles of earth over the remains. In this
manner, the spot could be marked and kept in remembrance long after their frail
memorials of wood and bark, with their pictorial devices, had perished. This, it
is thought, was the origin and cause of by far the largest number of the mounds
and barrows which extend over so large an area of the western country, and which
have been, from time to time, the subject of much, and (may we not add?) some
very fanciful observation. That religious rites should connect themselves with
these rude mausoleii, and be offered on their summits, was a not less natural
than simple process, among such a people. It cannot be a subject of wonder,
that, without a revelation of the "more perfect way" spoken of by the Apostle,
these tribes should convert the altars of remembrance of their dead into altars
of propitiation for the prosperity of the living. The most pertinent point of
the inquiry here is, whether, in their efforts to perpetuate the memory of the
name and acts of the dead,
they may not in some cases have inscribed their "hieroglyphics" (as they are
improperly called) and figures upon them.
The most common and simple mode of the disposition of a dead body among these
tribes, was, after wrapping it in the best garments, to enclose it, with every
adjunct memorial, in outer .wrappers of skins and bark and, if possible, a
wooden shell, variously made, and thus to inter it. Among the Sioux and western
Chippewas, after the body has been wrapped in its best clothes and ornaments, it
is then placed on a scaffold, or in a tree, where it remains until the flesh is
entirely decayed; after which the bones are buried, and the grave-posts fixed.
At the head of the grave a tabular piece of cedar, or other wood, called the
adjedatig, is set. This grave-board contains the symbolic or representative
figures which record, if it be a warrior, his totem; that is to say, the symbol
of his family, or surname, and such arithmetical or, other devices as serve to
denote how many times the deceased has been in war parties, and how many scalps
he has taken from the enemy; two facts, from which his reputation is to be
essentially derived. It is seldom that more is attempted in the way of
inscription. Often, how ever, distinguished chiefs have, their war-flag, or, in
modern days, a small ensign of American fabric, displayed on a standard at the
head of, their graves, which is left to fly over the deceased till it is wasted
by the elements. Scalps of their enemies, feathers of the bald or black eagle,
the swallow-tailed falcon, or some carnivorous bird, are: also placed, in such
instances, on the adjedatig, or suspended, with offerings of various kinds, on a
separate staff. But the latter are super-additions of a religious character, and
belong to the class of the ke-ke-wa-o-win-au-tig, (ante, Number 4.) The building
of a funeral fire on recent graves, is also a rite which belongs to the
consideration of their religious faith."
The following figures (Plate 50) will convey a just idea of this kind of
pictographic record.
Number 1 is the adjedatig of Wabojeeg, a celebrated war-chief and ruler of his
tribe, who died on Lake Superior, about 1793. He was of the family or clan of
the addik, or American reindeer. This fact is symbolized by the figure of the
deer. The reverse position denotes death. His own personal name, which was the
White Fisher, is not noticed. The seven transverse marks on the left denote that
he had led seven war parties. The -three perpendicular lines below the totem,
represent three wounds received in battle. The figure of a moose s head, relates
to a desperate conflict with an enraged animal of this kind. The symbols of the
arrow and pipe, are drawn to indicate his influence in war and peace.
Number 2 is the record of a hunter of the Mukwau or bear clan, who had been a
member of three separate war parties.
Number 3 represents a chief who was of the tortoise totem, and has three marks
of honor. The closed cross is here an emblem of death; the totem being drawn
upright.
Number 4 is the record of a noted chief of the St. Mary s band, called
Shin-ga-ba-was-sin, or the Image-stone, who died on Lake Superior, in 1828. He
was of the totem of the crane, which is alone figured. Six marks of honor are
awarded to him on the right, and three on the left. The latter represent three
important general treaties of peace which he had attended at various times.4
Among the former marks are included his presence under Tecumseh, at the battle
of Moraviantown, where he lost a brother.
A few years ago, Ba-be-sa-kun-dib-a (man with curled hair), the ruling chief of
Sandy Lake band, on the Upper Mississippi, died and was committed to his grave,
after a long life of usefulness and honor. He was buried on a conspicuous
elevation, on the east bank of the river, where his grave, and the ensign which
waved over it, were conspicuous to all who navigated the stream. The following
inscriptions, (Figure 5) and decorations, were set up. They are thus explained:
The reversed bird denotes his family name, or clan, the crane. Four transverse
lines above it, signify that he had killed four of his enemies in battle. This
fact was declared, I was informed, by the funeral orator, at the time of his
interment. At the same moment, the orator dedicated the ghosts of these four
men, who had been killed by him in battle, and presented them to the deceased
chief, to accompany him to the land of spirits. The four lines to the right, and
four corresponding lines on the left of these central marks, represent eight
eagles feathers, and are commemorative of his bravery. Eight marks, made across
the edge of the inscription-board, signify that he had been a member of eight
war parties. The nine transverse marks below the totem, signify that the orator
who officiated at the funeral, and drew the inscription, had participated
himself in nine war parties.
Figure 6 is a grave-post of a Dacota. It was taken in a grove near Fort
Snelling, about seven miles above the mouth of the St. Peters. The inscription
denotes, that the deceased had killed, during his life, seven men, five women,
and four children. The figures being represented without heads, signify that
they were slain.
1 Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts relating to Antiquity; published by the
Society of Antiquarians of London, Vol. vi., 1782, page 159.
2 The import of the thought of this term is given by the expression,
death-stick. It is derived from the verb adjidj, to reverse, meaning that the
totem of the person interred is reversed. As this totem is the symbol of the
person, the ideographic import is, that the deceased has been returned to the
earth. Atig is the noun in this compound, denoting a tree, stick, board, or
post. The termination in wun, is the plural.
3. Historical and Scientific Sketches of Michigan. Detroit, 1834. 1 vol. pp. 65.
4. These treaties, and his attendance at them, are facts within my
personal knowledge. They were held at Prairie du Chien in 1825, at Fond du Lao
in 1826, and at Buttes des Morts, on Fox River, in 1827, all convened under the
auspices of the American Government.
Archives Of
Aboriginal Knowledge
Archives Of Aboriginal
Knowledge, Henry R. Schoolcraft, 1860
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