Put the title of your tribe here - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

Put the title of your tribe here

Description:

The outside of the Hopi house is not regular but efficient, for the stone is ... A few Hopi villages were built many ... Weapons for Hunting and Fighting ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:32
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: jloe1
Category:
Tags: here | put | title | tribe

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Put the title of your tribe here


1
Hopi
The Word Hopi Means "Peaceful People"
By Ned
2
Homes and Villages
  • The Hopis homes are made up of mesa-rock that
    completely merges with the actual mesa.

3
Homes and Villages
  • The outside of the Hopi house is not regular but
    efficient, for the stone is laid with care and
    stably held by adobe mortar.
  • A few Hopi villages were built many centuries
    ago. The stone and mud villages can stand several
    stories high.

4
Food
  • The Hopis main food was corn, yet they also grew
    squash, pumpkin, gourds, and all sorts of beans.

5
Food
  • Corn was so important to the Hopi that some of
    their religious ceremonies revolved around it.
    The Hopi had 24 different types of corn. Corn was
    really important to the Hopi.

6
Food
  • When the Spanish arrived, the Hopi learned how
    to grow, and started growing more crops like
    onions, chilies, melons, and planted peach and
    apricot orchards.

7
Clothing
  • The Hopi mens outfit consists of a hair band,
    breechcloth, and moccasins. Over time, the men
    started wearing the calico-shirt.
  • Some Hopi men wore womens clothing and did the
    work a woman did.

8
Clothing
  • The Hopi women wore a blue blanket made of cotton
    with an embroidered belt tied around, a calico
    shawl, leggings, and, moccasins.

9
Location and Environment
  • The Hopi land is located in northeastern Arizona
    at the southern end of Black Mesa.
  • Three steep, flat topped mesas rise sharply above
    the desert floor.

10
Location and Environment
  • The mesas are named first mesa, second mesa, and
    third mesa.
  • Hopi villages, named pueblos, are scattered
    across the three mesas.

11
Weapons for Hunting and Fighting
  • The Hopi men would hunt for food using bows and
    arrows made out of wood, with stone arrow heads.

12
Weapons for Hunting and Fighting
  • The Hopi men had skill of hunting for rabbits and
    ground squirrels. They hunted rabbits by
    surrounding the rabbits and driving them into the
    middle of the hunters circle. Then they threw
    sticks at them to surprise them. After that, they
    killed them.

13
Customs, Beliefs, and Religion
  • The religious life of the Hopis revolve around
    kachinas. A kachina is a powerful ancestor
    spirit. The Hopis would call for them if they
    needed rain, if they were sick, or to make their
    crops grow.

14
Customs, Beliefs, and Religion
Kachina Doll
  • Kachina dancers paint their bodies and wear masks
    for religious ceremonies.

15
Roles of Men, Women, Children
  • The men and boys worked in the fields, gathering
    beans and corn.
  • The men cared for the livestock, collected wood,
    and wove wool and cotton into cloth.

16
Roles of Men, Women, Children
  • The Hopi women saved the seeds for next years
    planting. The women prepared food and stored it
    in baskets and pots after the men harvested it.

17
Roles of Men, Women, Children
  • Women and girls spent most of their time
    preparing corn for meals. They also spent many
    hours a day grinding corn into meal.

18
Leadership and Government
  • Similar to the Pueblos, each village dealt with
    its situations through spiritual leaders. There
    was not a single leader for every one of the Hopi
    villages.

19
Leadership and Government
  • In the Hopi villages, men were leaders of secret
    societies. The members would meet in the groups
    kiva, which is an underground rectangle-shaped
    room. The kiva is sacred. On particular days of
    the year, the kiva would be used for ceremonies.

20
Arts and Crafts
  • The arts and crafts made by the Hopi are divided
    well between the women and men.

21
Arts and Crafts
  • The Hopi men made moccasins and other leather
    articles. They wove textiles and did the
    embroidery. The men were the silversmiths, and
    they made the ubiquitously known Kachina dolls.

22
Interactions with Europeans
  • The first white men to see the Hopi land were
    Spanish soldiers with a lieutenant of Francisco
    Vasquez De Coronado named Don Pedro De Tovar.

23
Interactions with Europeans
  • Later on, Coronado sent Garcia Lopez De Cardenaz
    to the Hopi. The Hopi led him to the Grand
    Canyon.
  • Different explorers followed. The Hopi, fearing
    punishment, usually sent them with promises of
    riches farther away.

24
Bibliography
  • James, Harry C., The Hopi
  • Indians. Caldwell, Idaho
  • The Caxton Printers Ltd.,
  • 1956.

25
Bibliography
  • Tomechek, Ann Henrichs.
  • The Hopi. Chicago Children's
  • Press, 1992.

26
Bibliography
  • Hawk Sneve, Virginia Driving.
  • The Hopis. New York
  • Holiday House, 1995.

27
Bibliography
  • Sears, Brian P. The Hopi Indians.
  • Mexico Chelsea House
  • Publishers, 1994.

28
Bibliography
  • Grant, Bruce. American Indians Yesterday And
    Today.
  • New York E.P. Dutton Co., Inc., 1967.

29
THE END!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com