Miwok

Miwok
/mee"wok/, n., pl. Miwoks, (esp. collectively) Miwok for 1.
1. a member of an American Indian people formerly living in several noncontiguous areas of California north of San Francisco Bay and eastward from the San Joaquin-Sacramento delta to the Sierras.
2. any of the Penutian languages spoken by the Miwok.

* * *

people
      California Indians speaking languages of Penutian stock and originally comprising seven dialectally and territorially discrete branches: the Coast Miwok in an area just north of what is now San Francisco; the Lake Miwok in the Clear Lake Basin; the Bay Miwok (or Saclan), living along the delta of the San Joaquin and Sacramento rivers; the Plains Miwok, living farther up the lower Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers; and, just eastward, three groups of Sierra Miwok—Northern, Central, and Southern—in the western foothills of the Sierra Nevada. The Sierra branches constituted the greatest number of Miwok individuals and had more than 100 villages at the time of European contact.

      Traditionally, the groups near and on the coast—the Coast, Lake, and Bay Miwok—gathered acorns, fished, and hunted deer and other game with bow and arrow. They lived in semisubterranean pole- and earth-covered lodges and produced watertight basketry ornamented with beads or feathers. The interior Miwok—those of the Sierra and Plains—resided in the foothills and lowlands and generally moved into the high sierras only for summer hunting. Their main abodes were also semisubterranean earth-covered houses, while their mountain shelters were temporary lean-tos of bark over a sapling framework. Their chief food staple was acorns, which were stored in basketlike granaries. The interior Miwok also partook in the Kuksu cult, which included various rituals, costumed dances using animal skins, and impersonations of spirits.

      Traditional Miwok society was organized into contrasting halves, or moieties, each with several lineages. The moieties controlled both kinship and politics, regulating such matters as descent, marriage, and relations with other tribes. Each moiety had chiefs and subchiefs, positions that were open to both men and women.

      Miwok descendants numbered more than 5,700 in the early 21st century.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Miwok — House, Yosemite National Park, California, USA …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Miwok — Les Miwok sont un peuple qui vivait dans le nord de l actuelle Californie, à l ouest des États Unis. Le mot Miwok signifie « peuple ». On distingue trois groupes miwok : les Miwok des plaines et de l ouest de la Sierra Nevada les… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Miwok — Infobox Ethnic group caption = A Sierra Miwok cedar bark umuucha cabin reproduction in Yosemite Valley. [Craig D. Bates Museum Anthropology 17(2):13 (June 1993)] group = Miwok People poptime = 1770: over 11,000 1910: 670 1930: 491 popplace =… …   Wikipedia

  • Miwok — Extensión de las lenguas miwok costanoano, poco antes del contacto con los colonizadores de origen europeo. Los miwok son una tribu india de California, del grupo lingüístico uti (miwok costanoano). También son llamados mokelumni, mewuk o meewok… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Miwok — noun 1. a member of the North American Indian people living in the central Sierra Nevada in California • Hypernyms: ↑Penutian 2. a Penutian language spoken by the Miwok • Syn: ↑Moquelumnan • Hypernyms: ↑Penutian …   Useful english dictionary

  • Miwok people — Total population 1770: over 11,000 1910: 670 1930: 491 current: 3,500[1] Regions with significant p …   Wikipedia

  • Miwok languages — Miwok Miw·yk Ethnicity: Miwok Geographic distribution: California, western slopes of Sierra Nevada Linguistic classification: Yok Utian …   Wikipedia

  • Miwok Airways — is a on demand short distance airline based in Burlingame, California. The business is to open by the end of October 2008. It is similar to an air taxi service, but instead of a flat charge per flight, Miwok charges per seat, with ticket prices… …   Wikipedia

  • Miwok mythology — A coyote. The mythology of the Miwok Native Americans are myths of their world order, their creation stories and how things came to be created. Miwok myths suggest their spiritual and philosophical world view. In several different creation… …   Wikipedia

  • Miwok de la côte — Coast miwok Coast miwok Parlée aux  États Unis Région  Californie …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”