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Blackfeet
Tribe, Social Organization
The social organization of the Blackfeet is very
simple. The three tribes acknowledged a blood relationship with
each other, and, while distinct, still considered themselves a
nation. In this confederation, it was understood that there
should be no war against each other. However, between 1860 and
1870, when the whiskey trade was in its height, the three tribes
were several times at swords' points on account of drunken
brawls. Once, about sixty or seventy years ago, the Bloods and
Piegan had a quarrel so serious that men were killed on both
sides and horses stolen; yet this was hardly a real war, for
only a part of each tribe was involved, and the trouble was not
of long duration.
Each one of the Blackfoot tribes is subdivided
into gentes, a gens being a body of consanguineal kindred in the
male line. It is noteworthy that the Blackfeet, although
Algonquins, have this
system of subdivision, and it may be that among them the gentes
are of comparatively recent date. No special duties are assigned
to any one gens, nor has any gens, so far as I know, any special
"medicine" or "totem." Below is a list of the gentes of
each tribe.
Gentes:
Blackfeet (Sik'-si-kau)
| Puh-ksi-nah'-mah-yiks |
Flat Bows |
| Mo-tah'-tos-iks |
Many Medicines |
| Siks-in'-o-kaks |
Black Elks |
| E'-mi-tah-pahk-sai-yiks |
Dogs Naked |
| Sa'-yiks |
Liars |
| Ai-sik'-stuk-iks |
Biters |
| Tsin-ik-tsis'-tso-yiks |
Early Finished Eating |
| Ap'-i-kai-yiks |
Skunks |
Bloods (Kai'-nah)
| Siksin'-o-kaks |
Black Elks |
| Ah-kwo'-nis-tsists |
Many Lodge Poles |
| Ap-ut'-o-si'kai-nah |
North Bloods |
| Is-ts'-kai-nah |
Woods Bloods |
| In-uhk!-so-yi-stam-iks |
Long Tail Lodge Poles |
| Nit'-ik-skiks |
Lone Fighters |
| Siks-ah'-pun-iks |
Blackblood |
| Ah-kaik'-sum-iks |
|
| I-sis'-o-kas-im-iks |
Hair Shirts |
| Ak-kai'-po-kaks |
Many Children |
| Sak-si-nah'-mah-yiks |
Short Bows |
| Ap'-i-kai-yiks |
Skunks |
| Ahk-o'-tash-iks |
Many Horses |
Piegans (Pi-kun'-i)
| Ah'-pai-tup-iks |
Blood People |
| Ah-kai-yi-ko-ka'-kin-iks |
White Breasts |
| Ki'yis |
Dried Meat |
| Sik-ut'-si-pum-aiks |
Black Patched Moccasins |
| Sik-o-pok'-si-maiks |
Blackfat Roasters |
| Tsin-ik-sis'-tso-yiks |
Early Finished Eating |
| Kut'-ai-im-iks |
They Don't Laugh |
| I'-pok-si-maiks |
Fat Roasters |
| Sik'-o-kit-sim-iks |
Black Doors |
| Ni-taw'-yiks |
Lone Eaters |
| Ap'-i-kai-yiks |
Skunks |
| Mi-ah-wah'-pit-siks |
Seldom Lonesome |
| Nit'-ak-os-kit-si-pup-iks |
Obstinate |
| Nit'-ik-skiks |
Lone Fighters |
| I-nuks'-iks |
Small Robes |
| Mi-aw'-kin-ai-yiks |
Big Topknots |
| Esk'-sin-ai-tup-iks |
Worm People |
| I-nuk-si'-kah-ko-pwa-iks |
Small Brittle Fat |
| Kah'-mi-taiks |
Buffalo Dung |
| Kut-ai-sot'-si |
No Parfleche |
| Ni-tot'-si-ksis-stan-iks |
Kill Close By |
| Mo-twai'-naiks |
All Chiefs |
| Mo-kum'-iks |
Red Round Robes |
| Mo-tah'-tos-iks |
Many Medicines |
It will be readily seen from the
translations of the above that each gens takes its name from
some peculiarity or habit it is supposed to possess. It will
also be noticed that each tribe has a few gentes common to one
or both of the other tribes. This is caused by persons leaving
their own tribe to live with another one, but, instead of
uniting with some gens of the adopted tribe, they have preserved
the name of their ancestral gens for themselves and their
descendants.
The Blackfoot terms of relationship will be found
interesting. The principal family names are as follows:
| English |
Blackfeet |
English |
Blackfeet |
| My father |
Ni'-nah |
My uncle |
Nis'-ah |
| My mother |
Ni-kis'-ta |
My aunt |
Ni-kis'-ta |
| My elder brother |
Nis'-ah |
My cousin, male |
Same as brother |
| My younger brother |
Nis-kun' |
My cousin, female |
Same as sister |
| My older sister |
Nin'-sta |
My grandfather |
Na-ahks' |
| My younger sister |
Ni-sis'-ah |
My grandmother |
Na-ahks' |
| My father-in-law |
Na-ahks' |
My son |
No-ko'-i |
| My mother-in-law |
Na-ahks' |
My daughter |
Ni-tun' |
| My son-in-law |
Nis'-ah |
My daughter-in-law |
Ni-tot'-o-ke-man |
| My brother-in-law older than self
|
Nis-tum-o' |
My sister-in-law |
Ni-tot'-o-ke-man |
| My brother-in-law younger than self |
Nis-tum-o'-kun |
My second cousin |
Nimp'-sa |
| My wife |
Nit-o-ke'-man |
My husband |
No'-ma |
As the members of a gens were all
considered as relatives, however remote, there was a law
prohibiting a man from marrying within his gens. Originally this
law was strictly enforced, but like many of the ancient customs
it is no longer observed. Lately, within the last forty or fifty
years, it has become not uncommon for a man and his family, or
even two or three families, on account of some quarrel or some
personal dislike of the chief of their own gens, to leave it and
join another band. Thus the gentes often received outsiders, who
were not related by blood to the gens; and such people or their
descendants could marry within the gens. Ancestry became no
longer necessary to membership.
As a rule, before a young man could
marry, he was required to have made some successful expeditions
to war against the enemy, thereby proving himself a brave man,
and at the same time acquiring a number of horses and other
property, which would enable him to buy the woman of his choice,
and afterwards to support her.
Marriages usually took place at the instance of the
parents, though often those of the young man were prompted by
him. Sometimes the father of the girl, if he desired to have a
particular man for a son-in-law, would propose to the father of
the latter for the young man as a husband for his daughter.
The marriage in the old days was arranged after this
wise: The chief of one of the bands may have a marriageable
daughter, and he may know of a young man, the son of a chief of
another band, who is a brave warrior, of good character,
sober-minded, steadfast, and trustworthy, who he thinks will
make a good husband for his daughter and a good son-in-law.
After he has made up his mind about this, he is very likely to
call in a few of his close relations, the principal men among
them, and state to them his conclusions, so as to get their
opinions about it. If nothing is said to change his mind, he
sends to the father of the boy a messenger to state his own
views, and ask how the father feels about the matter.
On receiving this word, the boy's father probably calls
together his close relations, discusses the matter with them,
and, if the match is satisfactory to him, sends back word to
that effect. When this message is received, the relations of the
girl proceed to fit her out with the very best that they can
provide. If she is the daughter of well-to-do or wealthy people,
she already has many of the things that are needed, but what she
may lack is soon supplied. Her mother makes her a new cow skin
lodge, complete, with new lodge poles, lining, and back rests. A
chiefs daughter would already have plenty of good clothing, but
if the girl lacks anything, it is furnished. Her dress is made
of antelope skin, white as snow, and perhaps ornamented with two
or three hundred elk tushes. Her leggings are of deer skin,
heavily beaded and nicely fringed, and often adorned with bells
and brass buttons. Her summer blanket or sheet is an elk skin,
well tanned, without the hair and with the dew-claws left on.
Her moccasins are of deer skin, with parfleche soles and worked
with porcupine quills. The marriage takes place as soon as these
things can be provided.
During the days which intervene between the proposal
and the marriage, the young woman each day selects the choicest
parts of the meat brought to the lodge, the tongue, "boss ribs,"
some choice berry pemmican or what not, cooks these things in
the best style, and, either alone, or in company with a young
sister, or a young friend, goes over to the lodge where the
young man lives, and places the food before him. He eats some of
it, little or much, and if he leaves anything, the girl offers
it to his mother, who may eat of it. Then the girl takes the
dishes and returns to her father's lodge. In this way she
provides him with three meals a day, morning, noon, and night,
until the marriage takes place. Every one in camp who sees the
girl carrying the food in a covered dish to the young man's
lodge, knows that a marriage is to take place; and the girl is
watched by idle persons as she passes to and fro, so that the
task is quite a trying one for people as shy and bashful as
Indians are. When the time for the marriage has come, in other
words, when the girl's parents are ready, the girl, her mother
assisting her, packs the new lodge and her own things on the
horses, and moves out into the middle of the circle about which
all the lodges of the tribe are arranged and there the new lodge
is unpacked and set up. In front of the lodge are tied, let us
say, fifteen horses, the girl's dowry given by her father. Very
likely, too, the father has sent over to the young man his own
war clothing and arms, a lance, a fine shield, a bow and arrows
in otter-skin case, his war bonnet, war shirt, and war leggings
ornamented with scalps, his complete equipment. This is set up
on a tripod in front of the lodge. The gift of these things is
an evidence of the great respect felt by the girl's father for
his son-in-law. As soon as the young man has seen the
preparations being made for setting up the girl's lodge in the
centre of the circle, he sends over to his father-in-law's lodge
just twice the number of horses that the girl brought with her,
in this supposed case, thirty.
As soon as this lodge is set up, and the girl's mother
has taken her departure and gone back to her own lodge, the
young man, who, until he saw these preparations, had no
knowledge of when the marriage was to take place, leaves his
father's lodge, and, going over to the newly erected one, enters
and takes his place at the back of it. Probably during the day
he will order his wife to take down the lodge, and either move
away from the camp, or at least move into the circle of lodges;
for he will not want to remain with his young wife in the most
conspicuous place in the camp. Often, on the same day, he will
send for six or eight of his friends, and, after feasting them,
will announce his intention of going to war, and will start off
the same night. If he does so, and is successful, returning with
horses or scalps, or both, he at once, on arrival at the camp,
proceeds to his father-in-law's lodge and leaves there
everything he has brought back, returning to his own lodge on
foot, as poor as he left it.
We have supposed the proposal in this case to come from
the father of the girl, but if a boy desires a particular girl
for his wife, the proposal will come from his father; otherwise
matters are managed in the same way.
This ceremony of moving into the middle of the circle
was only performed in the case of important people. The custom
was observed in what might be called a fashionable wedding among
the Blackfeet. Poorer, less important people married more
quietly. If the girl had reached marriageable age without having
been asked for as a wife, she might tell her mother that she
would like to marry a certain young man, that he was a man she
could love and respect. The mother communicates this to the
father of the girl, who invites the young man to the lodge to a
feast, and proposes the match. The young man returns no answer
at the time, but, going back to his father's lodge, tells him of
the offer, and expresses his feelings about it. If he is
inclined to accept, the relations are summoned, and the matter
talked over. A favorable answer being returned, a certain number
of horses what the young man or his father, or both together,
can spare are sent over to the girl's father. They send as many
as they can, for the more they send, the more they are thought
of and looked up to. The girl, unless her parents are very poor,
has her outfit, a saddle horse and pack horse with saddle and
pack saddle, parfleches, etc. If the people are very poor, she
may have only a riding horse. Her relations get together, and do
all in their power to give her a good fitting out, and the
father, if he can possibly do so, is sure to pay them back what
they have given. If he cannot do so, the things are still
presented; for, in the case of a marriage, the relations on both
sides are anxious to do all that they can to give the young
people a good start in life. When all is ready, the girl goes to
the lodge where her husband lives, and goes in. If this lodge is
too crowded to receive the couple, the young man will make
arrangements for space in the lodge of a brother, cousin, or
uncle, where there is more room. These are all his close
relations, and he is welcome in any of their lodges, and has
rights there.
Sometimes, if two young people are fond of each other,
and there is no prospect of their being married, they may take
riding horses and a pack horse, and elope at night, going to
some other camp for a while. This makes the girl's father angry,
for he feels that he has been defrauded of his payments. The
young man knows that his father-in-law bears him a grudge, and
if he afterwards goes to war and is successful, returning with
six or seven horses, he will send them all to the camp where his
father-in-law lives, to be tied in front of his lodge. This at
once heals the breach, and the couple may return. Even if he has
not been successful in war and brought horses, which of course
he does not always accomplish, he from time to time sends the
old man a present, the best he can. Notwithstanding these
efforts at conciliation, the parents feel very bitterly against
him. The girl has been stolen. The union is no marriage at all.
The old people are ashamed and disgraced for their daughter.
Until the father has been pacified by satisfactory payments,
there is no marriage. Moreover, unless the young man had made a
payment, or at least had endeavored to do so, he would be little
thought of among his fellows, and looked down on as a poor
creature without any sense of honor.
The Blackfeet take as many wives as they wish; but
these ceremonies are only carried out in the case of the first
wife, the "sits-beside-him" woman. In the case of subsequent
marriages, if the man had proved a good, kind husband to his
first wife, other men, who thought a good deal of their
daughters, might propose to give them to him, so that they would
be well treated. The man sent over the horses to the new
father-in-law's lodge, and the girl returned to his, bringing
her things with her. Or if the man saw a girl he liked, he would
propose for her to her father.
Among the Blackfeet, there was apparently no form of
courtship, such as prevails among our southern Indians. Young
men seldom spoke to young girls who were not relations, and the
girls were carefully guarded. They never went out of the lodge
after dark, and never went out during the day, except with the
mother or some other old woman. The girl, therefore, had very
little choice in the selection of a husband. If a girl was told
she must marry a certain man, she had to obey.
She might cry, but her father's will was law, and she might be
beaten or even killed by him, if she did not do as she was
ordered. As a consequence of this severity, suicide was quite
common among the Blackfoot girls. A girl ordered to marry a man
whom she did not like would often watch her chance, and go out
in the brush and hang herself. The girl who could not marry the
man she wanted to was likely to do the same thing.
The man had absolute power over his wife. Her life was
in his hands, and if he had made a payment for her, he could do
with her about as he pleased. On the whole, however, women who
behaved themselves were well treated and received a good deal of
consideration. Those who were light-headed, or foolish, or
obstinate and stubborn were sometimes badly beaten. Those who
were unfaithful to their husbands usually had their noses or
ears, or both, cut off for the first offence, and were killed
either by the husband or some relation, or by the I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi
for the second. Many of the doctors of the highest reputation in
the tribe were women. It is a common belief among some of those
who have investigated the subject that the wife in Indian
marriage was actually purchased, and became the absolute
property of her husband. Though I have a great respect for some
of the opinions which have been expressed on this subject, I am
obliged to take an entirely different view of the matter. I have
talked this subject over many times with young men and old men
of a number of tribes, and I cannot learn from them, or in any
other way, that in primitive times the woman was purchased from
her father. The husband did not have property rights in his
wife. She was not a chattel that he could trade away. He had all
personal rights, could beat his wife, or, for cause, kill her,
but he could not sell her to another man.
All the younger sisters of a man's wife were regarded
as his potential wives. If he was not disposed to marry them,
they could not be disposed of to any other man without his
consent.
Not infrequently, a man having a marriageable daughter
formally gave her to some young man who had proved himself brave
in war, successful in taking horses, and, above all, of a
generous disposition. This was most often done by men who had no
sons to support them in their old age.
It is said that in the old days, before they had
horses, young men did not expect to marry until they had almost
reached middle life, from thirty-five to forty years of age.
This statement is made by Wolf Calf, who is now very old, almost
one hundred years, he believes, and can remember back nearly or
quite to the time when the Blackfeet obtained their first
horses. In those days, young women did not marry until they were
grown up, while of late years fathers not infrequently sell
their daughters as wives when they are only children.
The first woman a man marries is called his
sits-beside-him wife. She is invested with authority over all
the other wives, and does little except to direct the others in
their work, and look after the comfort of her husband. Her place
in the lodge is on his right-hand side, while the others have
their places or seats near the door-way. This wife is even
allowed at informal gatherings to take a whiff at the pipe, as
it is passed around the circle, and to participate in the
conversation.
In the old days, it was a very poor man who did not
have three wives. Many had six, eight, and some more than a
dozen. I have heard of one who had sixteen. In those times,
provided a man had a good-sized band of horses, the more wives
he had, the richer he was. He could always find young men to
hunt for him, if he furnished the mounts, and, of course, the
more wives he had, the more robes and furs they would tan for
him.
If, for any cause, a man wished to divorce himself from
a woman, he had but to send her back to her parents and demand
the price paid for her, and the matter was accomplished. The
woman was then free to marry again, provided her parents were
willing.
When a man dies, his wives become the potential wives
of his oldest brother. Unless, during his life, he has given
them outright horses and other property, at his death they are
entitled to none of his possessions. If he has sons, the
property is divided among them, except a few horses, which are
given to his brothers. If he has no sons, all the property goes
to his brothers, and if there are no brothers, it goes to the
nearest male relatives on the father's side.
The Blackfeet cannot be said to have been
slave-holders. It is true that the Cree call the Blackfeet women
"Little Slaves." But this, as elsewhere suggested, may refer to
the region whence they originally came, though it is often
explained that it is on account of the manner in which the
Blackfeet treat their women, killing them or mutilating their
features for adultery and other serious offences. Although a
woman, all her life, was subject to some one's orders, either
parent, relative, or husband, a man from his earliest childhood
was free and independent. His father would not punish him for
any misconduct, his mother dared not. At an early age he was
taught to ride and shoot, and horses were given to him. By the
time he was twelve, he had probably been on a war expedition or
two. As a rule in later times, young men married when they were
seventeen or eighteen years of age; and often they resided for
several years with their fathers, until the family became so
large that there was not room for them all in the lodge.
There were always in the camp a number of boys,
orphans, who became the servants of wealthy men for a
consideration; that is, they looked after their patron's horses
and hunted, and in return they were provided with suitable food
and clothing.
Among the Blackfeet, all men were free and equal, and
office was not hereditary. Formerly each gens was governed by a
chief, who was entitled to his office by virtue of his bravery
and generosity. The head chief was chosen by the chiefs of the
gentes from their own number, and was usually the one who could
show the best record in war, as proved at the Medicine Lodge,1
at which time he was elected; and for the ensuing year he was
invested with the supreme power. But no matter how brave a man
might have been, or how successful in war, he could not hope to
be the chief either of a gens or of the tribe, unless he was
kind-hearted, and willing to share his prosperity with the poor.
For this reason, a chief was never a wealthy man, for what he
acquired with one hand he gave away with the other. It was he
who decided when the people should move camp, and where they
should go. But in this, as in all other important affairs, he
generally asked the advice of the minor chiefs.
The I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi (All Comrades) were directly
under the authority of the head chief, and when any one was to
be punished, or anything else was to be done which came within
their province as the tribal police, it was he who issued the
orders. The following were the crimes which the Blackfeet
considered sufficiently serious to merit punishment, and the
penalties which attached to them.
Murder: A life for a life, or a heavy payment by the
murderer or his relatives at the option of the murdered man's
relatives. This payment was often so heavy as absolutely to
strip the murderer of all property.
Theft: Simply the restoration of the property.
Adultery: For the first offence the husband generally
cut off the offending wife's nose or ears; for the second
offence she was killed by the All Comrades. Often the woman, if
her husband complained of her, would be killed by her brothers
or first cousins, and this was more usual than death at the
hands of the All Comrades. However, the husband could have her
put to death for the first offence, if he chose.
Treachery (that is, when a member of the tribe went
over to the enemy or gave them any aid whatever): Death at
sight.
Cowardice: A man who would not fight was obliged to
wear woman's dress, and was not allowed to marry.
If a man left camp to hunt buffalo by himself, thereby
driving away the game, the All Comrades were sent after him, and
not only brought him back by main force, but often whipped him,
tore his lodge to shreds, broke his travois, and often took away
his store of dried meat, pemmican, and other food.
The tradition of the origin of the I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi
has elsewhere been given. This association of the All Comrades
consisted of a dozen or more secret societies, graded according
to age, the whole constituting an association which was in part
benevolent and helpful, and in part military, but whose main
function was to punish offences against society at large. All
these societies were really law and order associations. The
M[)u]t'-s[)i]ks, or Braves, was the chief society, but the
others helped the Braves.
A number of the societies which made up the I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi
have been abandoned in recent years, but several of them still
exist. Among the Pi-kun'-i, the list so far as I have it is as
follows, the societies being named in order from those of
boyhood to old age:
Societies of the all Comrades
Ts[)i]-st[=i]ks', Little Birds, includes boys from 15 to 20
years old.
K[)u]k-k[=u][=i]cks', Pigeons, men who have been to war several
times.
T[)u]is-k[)i]s-t[=i]ks, Mosquitoes, men who are constantly going
to war
M[)u]t'-s[)i]ks, Braves, tried warriors.
Kn[)a]ts-o-mi'-ta, All Crazy Dogs, about forty years old.
Ma-stoh'-pa-ta-k[=i]ks Raven Bearers.
E'-mi-taks, Dogs, old men. Dogs and Tails are different
societies
Is'-sui, Tails, but they dress alike and dance together and
alike.
[)E]ts-[=a]i'-nah, Horns, Bloods, obsolete among the Piegans,
Sin'-o-pah, Kit-foxes, Piegans, but still exists with Bloods.
[)E]-[)i]n'-a-ke, Catchers or Soldiers, obsolete for 25-30
years, perhaps longer.
St[)u]'m[=i]ks, Bulls, obsolete for 50 years.
There may be other societies of the All Comrades, but
these are the only ones that I know of at present. The M[=u]t'-s[)i]ks,
Braves, and the Knats-o-mi'-ta, All Crazy Dogs, still exist, but
many of the others are being forgotten. Since the necessity for
their existence has passed, they are no longer kept up. They
were a part of the old wild life, and when the buffalo
disappeared, and the Blackfeet came to live about an agency, and
to try to work for a subsistence, the societies soon lost their
importance. The societies known as Little Birds, Mosquitoes, and
Doves are not really bands of the All Comrades, but are
societies among the boys and young men in imitation of the
I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi, but of comparatively recent origin. Men not
more than fifty years old can remember when these societies came
into existence. Of all the societies of the I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi,
the Sin'-o-pah, or Kit-fox band, has the strongest medicine.
This corresponds to the Horns society among the Bloods. They are
the same band with different names. They have certain peculiar
secret and sacred ceremonies, not to be described here.
The society of the Stum'-[=i]ks, or Bulls, became
obsolete more than fifty years ago. Their dress was very fine,
bulls' heads and robes.
The members of the younger society purchased
individually, from the next older one, its rights and
privileges, paying horses for them. For example, each member of
the Mosquitoes would purchase from some member of the Braves his
right of membership in the latter society. The man who has sold
his rights is then a member of no society, and if he wishes to
belong to one, must buy into the one next higher. Each of these
societies kept some old men as members, and these old men acted
as messengers, orators, and so on.
The change of membership from one society to another
was made in the spring, after the grass had started. Two, three,
or more lodge coverings were stretched over poles, making one
very large lodge, and in this the ceremonies accompanying the
changes took place.
In later times, the Braves were the most important and
best known of any of the All Comrades societies. The members of
this band were soldiers or police. They were the constables of
the camp, and it was their duty to preserve order, and to punish
offenders. Sometimes young men would skylark in camp at night,
making a great noise when people wanted to sleep, and would play
rough practical jokes, that were not at all relished by those
who suffered from them. One of the forms which their high
spirits took was to lead and push a young colt up to the door of
a lodge, after people were asleep, and then, lifting the door,
to shove the animal inside and close the door again. Of course
the colt, in its efforts to get out to its mother, would run
round and round the lodge, trampling over the sleepers and
roughly awakening them, knocking things down and creating the
utmost confusion, while the mare would be whinnying outside the
lodge, and the people within, bewildered and confused, did not
know what the disturbance was all about.
The Braves would punish the young men who did such
things, if they could catch them, tearing up their blankets,
taking away their property, and sometimes whipping them
severely. They were the peace officers of the camp, like the
lari p[=u]k'[=u]s_ among the Pawnees.
Among the property of the Brave society were two
stone-pointed arrows, one "shield you don't sit down with," and
one rattle. The man who carried this rattle was known as Brave
Dog, and if it passed from one member of the society to another,
the new owner became known as Brave Dog. The man who received
the shield could not sit down for the next four days and four
nights, but for all that time was obliged to run about the camp,
or over the prairie, whistling like a rabbit.
The societies known as Soldiers and Bulls had passed
out of existence before the time of men now of middle age. The
pipe of the Soldier society is still in existence, in the hands
of Double Runner. The bull's head war bonnet, which was the
insignia of the Bulls society, was formerly in the possession of
Young Bear Chief, at present chief of the Don't Laugh band of
the Piegan. He gave it to White Calf, who presented it to a
recent agent.
In the old days, and, indeed, down to the time of the
disappearance of the buffalo, the camp was always arranged in
the form of a circle, the lodges standing at intervals around
the circumference, and in the wide inner space there was another
circle of lodges occupied by the chief of certain bands of the
I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi. When all the gentes of the tribe were
present, each had its special position in the circle, and always
occupied it. The lodge of the chief of the gens stood just
within the circle, and about it his people camped. The order
indicated in the accompanying diagram represents the Piegan camp
as it used to stand thirty-five or forty years ago. A number of
the gentes are now extinct, and it is not altogether certain
just what the position of those should be; for while all the
older men agree on the position to be assigned to certain of the
gentes, there are others about which there are differences of
opinion or much uncertainty. It is stated that the gentes known
as Seldom Lonesome, Dried Meat, and No Parfleche belong to that
section of the tribe known as North Piegan, which, at the time
of the first treaty, separated from the Pi-kun'-i, and elected
to live under British rule.
The lodges of the chiefs of the I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi which
were within the circle served as lounging and eating places for
such members of the bands as were on duty, and were council
lodges or places for idling, as the occasion demanded.
When the camp moved, the Blood gens moved first and was
followed by the White Breast gens, and so on around the circle
to number 24. On camping, the Bloods camped first, and the
others after them in the order indicated, number 24 camping last
and closing up the circle. Diagram of old-time piegan camp, say
1850 to 1855. Twenty-four lodges of chiefs of the gentes about
the outer circle.
The inner circle shows lodges of chiefs of certain
bands of the I-kun-uh'-kah-tsi.
1. [Footnote 1: See chapter on Religion.]
Gentes Of The Pi-Kun'-I
1. Blood People. 2. White Breasts. 3.
Dried Meat. 4. Black Patched Moccasins. 5. Black Fat Roasters.
6. Early Finished Eating. 7. Don't Laugh. 8. Fat Roasters. 9.
Black Doors. 10. Lone Eaters. 11. Skunks. 12. Seldom Lonesome.
13. Obstinate. 14. Lone Fighters. 15. Small Robes. 16. Big
Topknots. 17. Worm People. 18. Small Brittle Fat. 19. Buffalo
Dung. 20. No Parfleche. 21. Kill Close Bye 22. All Chiefs. 23.
Red Round Robes. 24. Many Medicines.
Bands of the I-Kun-Uh'-Kah-Tsi
a. All Crazy Dogs. b. Dogs. c. Tails.
d. Kit-foxes. e. Raven Bearers. f. Braves. g. Mosquitoes. h.
Soldiers. i. Doves.
The books presented are for their historical
value only and are not the opinions of the
Webmasters of the site.
Handbook of American Indians, 1906
Index of Tribes or Nations
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