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November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #1880
Encyclopedia of American Indian Costume Page 33 gives good general descriptions of what our ancestors would have worn and what colors would have been most popular with them.
It states that the Southeastern Siouans ragalia would have been very similar to the Tuscarora. It further states that red and blue was the most popular cloth colors that the Southeastern Siouans prefered using in making breechclouts and shirts. Red pacoon was used in the hair and all over the body. Red was also used to fringe or border items. Black was used to circle one eye and white used to circle the other eye. They used turkey feathers and green mallard duck feathers and or heads to make mantles and matchcoats. So we can deduce that the main colors of the Southeastern Siouans would have been Red, Blue, Black, White, Green and of coarse various shades of Brown.
On tattooing it seems that the Southeastern Siouans didn’t generally tattoo, but rather painted their designs on the skin.
As for jewlery they wore alot of copper items.
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #17473Hey Collins great post, is there any more and can you post a link to the book if it’s available for sale on the web?
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #17475http://www.wwnorton.com/catalog/fall95/031382.htm
http://www.wwnorton.com/orders/wwn/031382.htm
This book used to cost 75.00 but I guess the price has gone down. Now it is only 25.00 so I am going to try and get one myself.
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #17477How many pages in the book pertain to us? Is there any way you could type in the text? Or scan the pages and send to me as readable image files and I’ll type it?
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #17480Josephine Patereck states in her book entitled Encyclopedia of American Indian Costume page 33 (there are addittional pages detailing other Southeastern Siouan tribes, can’t remember how many though), “Siouan-speaking tribes dominated the coastal areas south of the coastal Algonquians, and were also in the Piedmont regions of the Carolinas and Virginia. Major groups were the Catawba, Cheraw, Saponi, and Tutelo. The Tuscarora, an Iroquoian group, were very similar in their dress.”
She further states, ” Women wore two garments: these were often fashioned of cloth made from Spainish moss, the inner bark of the mulberry tree, or the softened bark of the basswood tree. One garment was a wraparound skirt, the other a shawl fastened on one shoulder, leaving the right arm uncovered. Deerskin, when available was worn by the wealthier people.”
On footwear she states that, ” The Siouan Indians of the Southeast usually went barefoot, but swamp moccasins were sometimes worn.”
When discussing garment decoration she states, ” their garments woven of mulberry bark and their girdles of opossum hair, the Siouan women added fringes dyed red with puccoon root.”
She names three sources for this particular page of information as follows:
W.J. McGee ” The Siouan Indians: A Preliminary Sketch.” Bureau of American Ethnology Annual Reports 15:153-204
James Mooney “The Siouan Tribes of the East” Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 99
Frank G. Speck “Siouan Tribes of the Carolinas as Known from Catawba, Tutelo, and Documentary Sources” American Anthropologist 37(2):201-225
This page is in the section/chapter entitled Southeast. She lists 11 catagories under Siouan as follows: Men’s Basic Dress, Women’s Basic Dress, Footwear, Outer Wear, Hair Styles, Headgear, Accessories, Jewelry, Garment Decoration, Face and Body Embellishment, and Transitional Dress.
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #17491Great! Thank you so much for this. Does she say anything more about the 11 categories? I’d like to get ahold of those original sources.
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #17621Page 33 Siouan Tribes of the East by James Mooney
On this page Mooney talks about animals that were used to designate usage. Tribes, clans, and people were given an animal designation based on the personality traits they showed most frequently such as the following:
Angry – this is the Serpant
Bloudy – this is the Wolf
Timid – this is the Deer
Faithfull – this is the Dog
What does Bloudy mean? I tried looking this word up and had no luck at all. Is it a mispelling of Bawdy or Bloody?
On colors here is a list of colors in English and then Saponi.
red – acutihiye
green – oto and otolako
black – asepi and lahoni
white – asa and wahkanaka
yellow – si and wasi
brown – acotate
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #17810Linda and Gang what are swamp moccasins?
Are those the knee high moccasins?
I was wondering about Tuscarora costume since some have mentioned that the Saponi and Tutelo dressed similar to them.
Also if some of the Pamunkey and Nansemond merged together with the Saponi and Tutelo is it possible that they may have adopted or adapted some of those costumes and culture?
I wanted to add an observation that in the description given about possum hair “girdles” couldn’ t that mean that they made those to be worn like a decorative waste band much like what is shown in the DeBry and White engravings?
In some Native costume I have seen wide clothe or leather belt-type sashes. Sometimes these are beaded or woven with designs. Could it be that these two objects were the same thing just a different and unique textile form?
Thanks
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #17987Thro’ time clothing styles have dratically changed what we see now as traditional is what people have kept from the late 1800 and possibly a bit earlier, but in the se, the styles are much different and often closely resemble euro American clothing made with cloth not hide.
In order to devlope an eastern souian style we should look at these available resources and combine late 1700s clothing styles or combine it with any any pre contact / archaeo. info. that we have, if your really interested this could be a great deal of fun and not that hard to do.
I’d like to see mambers from amny communities come together and try to define each communitites style and retain those throu. the populus. Gotta run….
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #18009Originally posted by collins
Linda and Gang what are swamp moccasins?
Are those the knee high moccasins?
Hi collins,
The glossary gives the definition for Swamp Moccasins as “a calf-high moccasin or boot of buckskin worn in the Southeast.”
On page 6, under the Southeast General Footwear section, it states: Both sexes normally went barefoot, but when they went into the swamps or forests they wore the ankle-high “swamp moccasin,” which was a one-piece affair of skin or hide laced up the back and at the toes with thongs. The back laces were left long so they could be tied about the ankles for security. Beverley, an early traveler, said that at times and extra piece was sewn on the bottom to make a heavier sole.
Stacey
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #18010Just to expand a little more on collins’ nice find…
Paterek, Josephine. Enclyclopedia of American Indian Costume. W. W. Norton & Company, New York. 1994. 516pgs.
This book is available through Amazon at:
New ones are listed at $16.47 and used ones are available from $15.00.
The book is divided into ten Chapters: Southeast, Northeast, Plains, Southwest, Great Basin, Plateau, California, Northwest Coast, Subartic, and Artic. Plus an Appendix of “Clothing Arts of the American Indians (furs, tanning, use of tanned hides, construction and sewing of skin garments, decoration of tanned hides, use of other animal parts, etc.) and a second Appendix with Glossary Definitions.
The section on the Southeast is on pages 5 to 38. The first three and a half pages are a general description of the Southeast and then that chapter is divided by tribes. The following tribes and page numbers are listed for the Southeast: Alabama, p. 8; Apalachee; Atakapa; Biloxi; Caddo, p.9; Calusa, p. 10; Catawba, p. 33; Cheraw, p. 33; Cherokee, p. 11; Chickahominy; Chickasaw, p. 15; Chitimacha; Choctaw, p. 16; Creek, p. 18; Cusabo; Guale; Houma; Mattaponi; Mobile; Monacan; Muskogee; Natchez, p. 20; Nottoway; Pamunkey; Poencioc(?-hard to read); Potomac; Powhatan, p. 22; Rappahannock; Saponi, p. 33; Secotan, p. 26; Seminole, p. 28; Siouan, p. 33; Taensa; Tekesta; Timucua, p. 34; Tunica; Tuscarora, p. 34; Tuskogee-Creek; Tutelo, p. 33; and Yuchi, p. 35.
pages 33 – 34
SIOUAN
Siouan-speaking tribes dominated the coastal areas south of the coastal Algonquians, and were also in the Piedmont regions of the Carolinas and Virginia. Major groups were the Catawba, Cheraw, Saponi, and Tutelo. The Tuscarora, an Iroquoian group, were very similar in their dress.
Men’s Basic Dress
Men wore the breechclout, said to be of a very soft deerskin, which they did not tan but rubbed hard between the hands and with fingernails that were grown long for that purpose. Leggings may have been worn for travel.
Women’s Basic Dress
Women wore two garments: These were often fashioned of cloth made from Spanish moss, the inner bark of the mulberry tree, or the softened bark of the basswood tree. One garment was a wraparound skirt, the other a shawl fastened on one shoulder, leaving the right arm uncovered. Deerskin, when available, was worn by the wealthier people.
Footwear
The Siouan Indians of the Southeast usually went barefoot, but swamp moccasins were sometimes worn.
Outer Wear
Matchcoats, or mantles, were made of fur or feathers, and, when available, deerskin. The feather cloaks were made of turkey feathers or the green part of mallard heads, sewn together with deer sinew or strands of silk grass. Lawson mentions the use of panther skins for robes.
Hair Styles
The men rolled the hair up on each ear, or sometimes made a roll on the top of the head or at the temples. Another style was to cut the hair on one side of the head within an inch or two of the roots, leaving it standing upright. Women let their hair grow long and coiled it into a long roll at the back, which they tied with thongs or strings of beads. Both sexes used bear grease and red dye to enhance the hair; the red came from puccoon roots, brought from the mountains.
Headgear
The Southeastern Siouans generally did not wear headgear.
Accessories
Girdles were woven of opossum hair in a finger-weaving technique.
Jewelry
Copper ornaments were extremely popular. The Tuscarora made frequent western trips to obtain the metal; it was made into hair ornaments and earrings, and into beads that were strung into loops for adorning the wrists and upper arms.
Garment Decoration
To their garments woven of mulberry bark and their girdles of opossum hair, the Siouan women added fringes dyed red with puccoon root.
Face and Body Embellishments
Tattooing seems to have been ignored by the Siouans in favor of painting on the face, breasts, biceps, and thighs. Commonly they would paint the face red, making a circle of black around one eye and a circle of what around the other. These colors came from lampblack, white clay, and cinnabar; the cinnabar was obtained from Chewaw territory. The Catawba, at one time the most powerful tribe in the Carolinas, were said to have flattened the heads of their infants, but this does not seem to have been common among the Siouans.
Transitional Dress
The Siouans were quick to adopt the trade cloth brought by the English, especially blue and red strouding, which was used to make a fine breechcloths and skirts. Woolen mantles and shawls were also adopted. The men began to wear trousers, shirts, and coats, the women to wear the long, full, cotton dresses, and tribal distinctions were quickly lost.
Key Sources
McGee, W.J. “The Siouan Indians: A Preliminary Sketch.” Bureau of American Ethnology Annual Reports 15:153-204
Mooney, James. “The Siouan Tribes of the East” Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 99
Speck, Frank G. “Siouan Tribes of the Carolinas as Known from Catawba, Tutelo, and Documentary Sources” American Anthropologist 37(2):201-225
I know Mooney’s book is online, but I will have to check on the other two and see what descriptions they give.
Stacey
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #18060I’m getting a clearer and clearer picture all the time. Thanks all.
I wonder what cloth woven of mulberry bark is like? Do you have any idea, Tom?
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #18066From what I have found, there are two ways to make cloth from mulberry bark either woven or pounded.
Woven
Excerpt taken from http://www.yvwiiusdinvnohii.net/Cherokee/WendellCochran/CCNotes-ClothingAdornment.htm …
…The earliest description of southeastern Indian clothing comes from the DeSoto narratives (Ranjel in Bourne, Vol. II. pp. 87-88). Although they refer to the Muskhogean tribes, it is very likely that most of the southern woodland Indians wore similar garments. Women wore two kinds of garments, one from the waist down like a short skirt, the other over the upper part draped over the left shoulder leaving the right arm uncovered. They wore woven materials made from thread coming from the inner bark of the mulberry tree.
The Payne Manuscripts describes the women’s skirts among the ancient Cherokees as resembling those described earlier by the Spaniards. The materials for the skirts in this case were woven from strips of inner bark from the roots of the mulberry tree. The strips varied from 1/8 to 1/2 inch wide and were woven like a basket weave, probably a simple over and under technique. The color was either yellow or red, or possibly a combination of the two colors.
The skirts were described as very pliable, so the strips must have been thin and soft. Wild hemp was also used in weaving these skirts, which were often trimmed with fringe of feathers. The women also wore short gowns (probably capes. Ed.) made from turkey feathers….
Pounded
Excerpt aken from http://www.pfaf.org/leaflets/fibplant.php …
The Paper Mulberry (Broussonetya papyrifera) is a small deciduous tree whose range extends from China to the tropical South Sea Islands and yet it is hardy in Britain if given a warm position and a fairly rich soil. When grown for its fibre it is usually coppiced on an annual basis (though perhaps less often if grown in our cooler climes). To make cloth from this plant the bark is usually cut into strips about 4 x 12 inches and laid out flat on a smooth wooden surface. It is then beaten with wooden mallets, the more it is beaten the thinner and finer it becomes. Size can be increased by overlapping other strips of bark and beating them together. Depending upon the degree of beating the resulting cloth can range from a thick material suitable for sacking to the very finest gossamer thin clothing. This plant also produces a delicious fruit but only a very small proportion of the structure is actually edible which makes it too fiddly to be very worthwhile.
Here is a picture of the pounded version…
http://www.molli.org.uk/bark/object_detail.asp?ID=127/2001/9
Some websites also called the pounded version “tapa”.
Stacey
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #18070Wow. These were some nice ‘threads,” if you’ll pardon the expression. This is so do-able.
November 14, 2005 at 9:56 pm #18073Tom, or anybody, what modern, relatively readily available material would be most like this fabric, assuming the skirts and tops were made from the finest thread the mulberry bark could make?
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