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Pawnee
Pawnee,
Native American tribe of the Caddoan language family and
of the Plains culture area.
At
the time of the early European explorations, the Pawnee
inhabited the region that is now Nebraska. They engaged
in frequent warfare with neighboring tribes, especially
their hereditary enemies, the Sioux.
The
Pawnee were never at war with the U.S. government
and, in fact, were allied with the whites in efforts
to control raids by other Native Americans.
The
Pawnee lived in earth lodges clustered in small villages.
Their
economy was based on intensive farming.
The
native religion involved visions and ceremonial rituals,
including the sacrifice of a young woman each year
to the morning-star deity.
Pawnee
myths and folklore were imaginative and richly symbolic.
Tribal
organization was characterized by four distinct bands,
each with its own chief.
In various treaties made in the 19th century, the
Pawnee ceded most of their land south of the Platte
River in Nebraska to the United States. Meanwhile,
severe smallpox epidemics and attacks by the Sioux
and other tribes constantly diminished their numbers.
In the late 19th century they gave up their remaining
lands in Nebraska in return for a reservation in Oklahoma.
At that time the Pawnee population numbered fewer
than 1000, and the tribe was in danger of extinction.
Today
most tribe members live on individual allotments of
land on their reservation. Most earn a subsistence
living by raising stock or cultivating small farms.
In 1990 Pawnee descendants numbered 2892.
Kansas
State Historical Society, Topeka
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Pawnee
Sacred Bundle
The
Pawnee was one of the Native American Plains peoples.
Shown here is a Pawnee sacred bundle. Bundles
such as this one contained religious tools and
symbols and were used as altars in rituals and
ceremonies. |
"Pawnee,"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000 http://encarta.msn.com
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