Winnebago Indian Social Organization

     <p> <b>Social Organization</b>.-The        Winnebago social organization is based on two phratries, known,        respectively, as the Upper or Air, and the Lower or Earth, divisions. The        Upper division contains four clans:<br />       Thunderbird, <br />       War People, <br />       Eagle, and <br />       Pigeon (extinct), and the <br />       Lower division eight clans: the <br />       Bear, <br />       Wolf, <br />       Water-spirit, <br />       Deer, <br />       Elk, <br />       Buffalo, <br />       Fish, and <br />       Snake. <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; An Upper individual must marry a Lower individual, and        vice versa. While there is no law restricting marriage between the clans        of the two phratries, there is some evidence showing a tendency of certain        clans to intermarry. The Thunderbird and Bear clans are regarded as the        leading clans of their respective phratries. Both have definite functions.        The lodge of the former is the peace lodge, over which the chief of the        tribe presides, and in which disputes between Indians are adjudicated. No        person could be killed in the lodge, and an offender or prisoner escaping        to it was protected as long as he was within its precincts. The lodge of        the Bear clan was the war or disciplinary lodge: prisoners were killed,        and offenders punished in its precincts.<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Besides these functions, the Bear clan possessed the        right of "soldier killing," and was in charge of both ends of the camping        circle during the hunt. Each clan has a large number of individual        customs, relating to birth, the naming feast, death, and the funeral wake.        The chief item of interest in this connection is the fact that a member of        one clan cannot be buried by the members of another clan of the same        phratry. (For details of the social organization, see Radin in Am. Anthr.,        xii, no. 2, 1910.)</p>       <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The gentes as given by Dorsey are        as follows: <br />       1. Shungikikarachada ('Wolf')<br />       2. Honchikikarachada ('Black Bear') <br />       3. Huwanikikarachada ('Elk') <br />       4. Wakanikikarachada('Snake') <br />       5. Waninkikikarachada ('Bird')<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp; (a) Hichakhshepara ('Eagle')<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp; (b) Ruchke ( 'Pigeon') <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp; (c) Kerechun ('Hawk')<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp; (d) Wakanchara ('Thunderbird')<br />       6. Cheikikarachada ('Buffalo')<br />       7. Chaikikarachada ('Deer')<br />       8. Wakchekhiikikarachada ('Water-monster')</p>                                <ul><li>                                        <p>                                         <b>Additional Winnebago Indian Resources</b></p><ul><li>                                        <p>                                         <b><a href="https://accessgenealogy.com/native/winnebago-tribe.htm">Winnebago                                       Indian History</a></b></p></li>                                         <li>                                        <p>                                         <b><a href="https://accessgenealogy.com/native/winnebago-indian-religion.htm">                                        Winnebago Indian Religion</a></b></p>                                       </li>                                       <li>                                        <p>                                         <b><a href="https://accessgenealogy.com/native/winnebago-indian-social-organization.htm">                                        Winnebago Indian Social Organization</a></b></p>                                        </li>                                       <li>                                        <p>                                         <b><a href="https://accessgenealogy.com/native/winnebago-indian-chiefs-and-leaders.htm">                                        Winnebago Indian Chiefs and Leaders</a></b></p>                                         </li>                                   </ul></li>                                  </ul>                                       The books presented are for their                                       historical value only and are not the                                       opinions of the Webmasters of the site.                                                                             &nbsp;                                                                          <em>Handbook                                        of American Indians, 1906</em>                <p><b><a href="/">                                    Index of Tribes or Nations</a></b></p>   

Collection

Hodge, Frederick Webb, Compiler. The Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico. Bureau of American Ethnology, Government Printing Office. 1906.

Topics:

Winnebago,

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