|
The Siouan Mythology
It was partly through pioneer study of the
Siouan Indians that the popular fallacy concerning the
aboriginal "Great Spirit" gained currency; and it was partly
through the work of Dorsey among the ¢egiha and Dakota
tribes, first as a missionary and afterward as a linguist,
that the early error was corrected. Among these tribes the
creation and control of the world and the things thereof are
ascribed to "wa-kan-da" (the term varying
somewhat from tribe to tribe), just as among the Algonquian
tribes omnipotence was assigned to "ma-ni-do" ("Manito the
Mighty" of "Hiawatha"); yet inquiry shows that wakanda
assumes various forms, and is rather a quality than a
definite entity. Thus, among many of the tribes the sun is
wakanda—not the wakanda or a wakanda,
but simply wakanda; and among the same tribes the
moon is wakanda, and so is thunder, lightning,
the stars, the winds, the cedar, and various other things;
even a man, especially a shaman, might be wakanda
or a wakanda. In addition the term was applied to
mythic monsters of the earth, air, and waters; according to
some of the sages the ground or earth, the mythic
under-world, the ideal upper-world, darkness, etc, were wakanda
or wakandas. So, too, the fetiches and the
ceremonial objects and decorations were wakanda
among different tribes. Among some of the groups various
animals and other trees besides the specially wakanda
cedar were regarded as wakandas; as already
noted, the horse, among the prairie tribes, was the wakanda
dog. In like manner many natural objects and places of
striking character were considered wakanda. Thus
the term was applied to all sorts of entities and ideas, and
was used (with or without inflectional variations)
indiscriminately as substantive and adjective, and with
slight modification as verb and adverb. Manifestly a term so
protean is not susceptible of translation into the more
highly differentiated language of civilization. Manifestly,
too, the idea expressed by the term is indefinite, and can
not justly be rendered into "spirit," much less into "Great
Spirit;" though it is easy to understand stand how the
superficial inquirer, dominated by definite spiritual
concept, handicapped by unfamiliarity with the Indian
tongue, misled by ignorance of the vague prescriptorial
ideation, and perhaps deceived by crafty native informants
or mischievous interpreters, came to adopt and perpetuate
the erroneous interpretation. The term may be translated
into "mystery" perhaps more satisfactorily than into any
other single English word, yet this rendering is at the same
time much too limited and much too definite. As used by the
Siouan Indian, wakanda vaguely connotes also
"power," "sacred," "ancient," "grandeur," "animate,"
"immortal," and other words, yet does not express with any
degree of fullness and clearness the ideas conveyed by these
terms singly or collectively—indeed, no English sentence of
reasonable length can do justice to the aboriginal idea
expressed by the term wakanda.
While the beliefs of many of the Siouan tribes are lost
through the extinction of the tribesmen or transformed
through acculturation, it is fortunate that a large body of
information concerning the myths and ceremonials of several
prairie tribes has been collected. The records of Carver,
Lewis and Clark, Say, Catlin, and Prince Maximilian are of
great value when interpreted in the light of modern
knowledge. More recent researches by Miss Fletcher1
and by Dorsey2 are of especial
value, not only as direct sources of information but as a
means of interpreting the earlier writings. From these
records it appears that, in so far as they grasped the
theistic concept, the Siouan Indians were polytheists; that
their mysteries or deities varied in rank and power; that
some were good but more were bad, while others combined bad
and good attributes; that they assumed various forms, actual
and imaginary; and that their dispositions and motives
resembled those found among mankind.
The organization of the vague Siouan thearchy appears to
have varied from group to group. Among all of the tribes
whose beliefs are known, the sun was an important wakanda,
perhaps the leading one potentially, though usually of less
immediate consideration than certain others, such as
thunder, lightning, and the cedar tree; among the Osage the
sun was invoked as "grandfather," and among various tribes
there were sun ceremonials, some of which are still
maintained; among the Omaha and Ponka, according to Miss
Fletcher, the mythic thunder-bird plays a prominent, perhaps
dominant rôle, and the cedar tree or pole is deified as its
tangible representative. The moon was wakanda
among the Osage and the stars among the Omaha and Ponka, yet
they seem to have occupied subordinate positions; the winds
and the four quarters were apparently given higher rank;
and, in individual cases, the mythic water-monsters or
earth-deities seem to have occupied leading positions. On
the whole, it may be safe to consider the sun as the Siouan
arch-mystery, with the mythic thunder-bird or family of
thunder-birds as a sort of mediate link between the
mysteries and men, possessing less power but displaying more
activity in human affairs than the remoter wakanda
of the heavens. Under these controlling wakandas,
other members of the series were vaguely and variably
arranged. Somewhere in the lower ranks, sacred
animals—especially sports, such as the white buffalo
cow—were placed, and still lower came totems and shamans,
which, according to Dorsey, were reverenced rather than
worshiped. It is noteworthy that this thearchic arrangement
corresponded in many respects with the hierarchic social
organization of the stock.
The Siouan thearchy was invoked and adored by means of forms
and ceremonies, as well as through orisons. The set
observances were highly elaborate; they comprised dancing
and chanting, feasting and fasting, and in some cases
sacrifice and torture, the shocking atrocities of the Mandan
and Minitari rites being especially impressive. From these
great collective devotions the ceremonials graded down
through war-dance and hunting-feast to the terpsichorean
grace extolled by Carver, and to individual fetich worship.
In general the adoration expressed fear of the evil rather
than love of the good—but this can hardly be regarded as a
distinctive feature, much less a peculiar one.
Some of the mystery places were especially distinctive and
noteworthy. Foremost among them was the sacred pipestone
quarry near Big Sioux river, whence the material for the
wakanda calumet was obtained; another was the
far-famed Minne-wakan of North Dakota, not
inaptly translated "Devil's lake;" a third was the
mystery-rock or medicine-rock of the Mandan and Hidatsa near
Yellowstone river; and there were many others of less
importance. About all of these places picturesque legends
and myths clustered.
The Siouan mythology is especially instructive, partly
because so well recorded, partly because it so clearly
reflects the habits and customs of the tribesmen and thus
gives an indirect reflection of a well-marked environment.
As among so many peoples, the sun is a prominent element;
the ice-monsters of the north and the rain-myths of the arid
region are lacking, and are replaced by the frequent thunder
and the trees shaken by the storm-winds; the mythic
creatures are shaped in the image of the indigenous animals
and birds; the myths center in the local rocks and waters;
the mysterious thearchy corresponds with the tribal
hierarchy, and the attributes ascribed to the deities are
those characteristic of warriors and hunters.
Considering the mythology in relation to the stages in
development of mythologic philosophy, it appears that the
dominant beliefs, such as those pertaining to the sun and
the winds, represent a crude physitheism, while vestiges of
hecastotheism crop out in the object-worship and
place-worship of the leading tribes and in other features.
At the same time well-marked zootheistic features are found
in the mythic thunder-birds and in the more or less complete
deification of various animals, in the exaltation of the
horse into the rank of the mythic dog father, and in the
animal forms of the water-monsters and earth-beings; and the
living application of zootheism is found in the animal
fetiches and totems. On the whole, it seems just to assign
the Siouan mythology to the upper strata of zootheism, just
verging on physitheism, with vestigial traces of
hecastotheism.
1 Several of
these are summarized in "The emblematic use
of the tree in the Dakota group," Science,
n.s., vol. IV, 1896, pp. 475-487.
2 Notably "A Study of Siouan
Cults," Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau
of Ethnology for 1889-0*0 (1894), pp.
351-544.
This site includes some historical
materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or
language of a particular period or place.
These items are presented as part of the
historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in
any way endorse the stereotypes implied.
The Siouan Indians, Fifteenth Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 1893 - 1894
Siouan IndiansFree
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy |
Siouan Indians
|
|