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Society of the Tribe
Treason
Treason consists in revealing the secrets of
the medicine preparations or giving other
information or assistance to enemies of the
tribe, and is punished by death. The trial
is before the council of the tribe.
Witchcraft
Witchcraft is punished by death, stabbing,
tomahawking, or burning. Charges of
witchcraft are investigated by the grand
council of the tribe. When the accused is
adjudged guilty, he may appeal to
supernatural judgment. The test is by fire.
A circular fire is built on the ground,
through which the accused must run from east
and west and from north to south. If no
injury is received he is adjudged innocent;
if he falls into the fire he is adjudged
guilty. Should a person accused of having
the general reputation of practicing
witchcraft become deaf, blind, or have sore
eyes, earache, headache, or other diseases
considered loathsome, he is supposed to have
failed in practicing his arts upon others,
and to have fallen a victim to them himself.
Such cases are most likely to be punished.
Outlawry
The institution of outlawry exists among the
Wyandot in a peculiar form. An outlaw is one
who by his crimes has placed himself without
the protection of his clan. A man can be
declared an outlaw by his own clan, who thus
publish to the tribe that they will not
defend him in case he is injured by another.
But usually outlawry is declared only after
trial before the tribal council.
The method of procedure is analogous to that
in case of murder. When the person has been
adjudged guilty and sentence of outlawry
declared, it is the duty of the chief of the
Wolf clan to make known the decision of the
council. This he does by appearing before
each clan in the order of its encampment,
and declaring in terms the crime of the
outlaw and the sentence of outlawry, which
may be either of two grades.
In the lowest grade it is declared that if
the man shall thereafter continue in the
commission of similar crimes, it will be
lawful for any person to kill him; and if
killed, rightfully or wrongfully, his clan
will not avenge his death.
Outlawry of the highest degree makes it the
duty of any member of the tribe who may meet
with the offender to kill him.
Military
Government
The management of military affairs inheres
in the military council and chief. The
military council is composed of all the
able-bodied men of the tribe; the military
chief is chosen by the council from the
Porcupine gens. Each gentile chief is
responsible for the military training of the
youth under his authority. There is usually
one or more potential military chiefs, who
are the close companions and assistants of
the chief in time of war, and in case of the
death of the chief, take his place in the
order of seniority.
Prisoners of war are adopted into the tribe
or killed. To be adopted into the tribe, it
is necessary that the prisoner should be
adopted into some family. The warrior taking
the prisoner has the first right to adopt
him, and his male or female relatives have
the right in the order of their kinship. If
no one claims the prisoner for this purpose,
he is caused to run the gauntlet as a test
of his courage.
If at his trial he behaves manfully,
claimants are not wanting, but if he behaves
disgracefully he is put to death.
Fellowhood
There is an interesting institution found
among the Wyandot, as among some other of
our North American tribes, namely, that of
fellowhood. Two young men agree to be
perpetual friends to each other, or more
than brothers. Each reveals to the other the
secrets of his life, and counsels with him
on matters of importance, and defends him
from wrong and violence, and at his death is
chief mourner.
The government of the Wyandot, with the
social organization upon which it is based,
affords a typical example of tribal
government throughout North America. Within
that area there are several hundred distinct
governments. In so great a number there is
great variety, and in this variety we find
different degrees of organization, the
degrees of organization being determined by
the differentiation of the functions of the
government and the correlative
specialization of organic elements.
Much has yet to be done in the study of
these governments before safe
generalizations may be made. But enough is
known to warrant the following statement:
Tribal government in North America is based
on kinship in that the fundamental units of
social organization are bodies of
consanguineal kindred either in the male or
female line; these units being what has been
well denominated “gentes.”
These “gentes” are organized into tribes by
ties of relationship and affinity, and this
organization is of such a character that the
man’s position in the tribe is fixed by his
kinship. There is no place in a tribe for
any person whose kinship is not fixed, and
only those persons can be adopted into the
tribe who are adopted into some family with
artificial kinship specified. The fabric of
Indian society is a complex tissue of
kinship. The warp is made of streams of
kinship blood, and the woof of marriage
ties.
With most tribes military and civil affairs
are differentiated. The functions of civil
government are in general differentiated
only to this extent, that executive
functions are performed by chiefs and
sachems, but these chiefs and sachems are
also members of the council. The council is
legislature and court. Perhaps it were
better to say that the council is the court
whose decisions are law, and that the
legislative body properly has not been
developed.
In general, crimes are well defined.
Procedure is formal, and forms are held as
of such importance that error therein is
prima facie evidence that the subject-matter
formulated was false.
When one gens charges crime against a member
of another, it can of its own motion proceed
only to retaliation. To prevent retaliation,
the gens of the offender must take the
necessary steps to disprove the crime, or to
compound or punish it. The charge once made
is held as just and true until it has been
disproved, and in trial the cause of the
defendant is first stated. The anger of the
prosecuting gens must be placated.
In the tribal governments there are many
institutions, customs, and traditions which
give evidence of a former condition in which
society was based not upon kinship, but upon
marriage.
From a survey of the facts it seems highly
probably that kinship society, as it exists
among the tribes of North America, has
developed from connubial society, which is
discovered elsewhere on the globe. In fact,
there are a few tribes that seem scarcely to
have passed that indefinite boundary between
the two social states. Philologic research
leads to the same conclusion.
Nowhere in North America have a people been
discovered who have passed beyond tribal
society to national society based on
property, i. e., that form of society which
is characteristic of civilization. Some
peoples may not have reached kinship
society; none have passed it.
Nations with civilized institutions, art
with palaces, monotheism as the worship of
the Great Spirit, all vanish from the
priscan condition of North America in the
light of anthropologic research. Tribes with
the social institutions of kinship, art with
its highest architectural development
exhibited in the structure of communal
dwellings, and polytheism in the worship of
mythic animals and nature-gods remain.
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