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The Ghost-dance religion and the Sioux outbreak of 1890 cover

The Ghost-dance religion and the Sioux outbreak of 1890

Chapter 2: ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

The work provides a detailed ethnographic account of a late nineteenth-century indigenous prophetic movement, tracing its roots in earlier native prophets, describing doctrines and ceremonies of contemporary messianic leaders, and documenting songs, ritual objects, and dance practices. It analyzes how the movement spread across regions, created tensions with United States authorities, and culminated in the violent Sioux crisis of 1890. The author compiles testimony, official reports, and visual material, compares the movement with other religious revivals and trance practices, and includes appendices with song texts, ethnographic notes, and firsthand statements on causes and aftermath.

ILLUSTRATIONS


Page
Plate LXXXV.
Map of the Indian reservations of the United States showing the approximate area of the Ghost dance
653
The prayer-stick
698
Chief Joseph
712
Map showing the distribution of the tribes of the upper Columbia
716
Smohalla and his priests
721
Smohalla church on Yakima reservation
723
Interior of Smohalla church
727
Winter view in Mason valley showing snow-covered sagebrush
769
Sioux ghost shirts from Wounded Knee battlefield
789
Sioux sweat-house and sacrifice pole
823
Map of the country embraced in the campaign against the Sioux
850
Map of Standing Rock agency and vicinity
855
Map of Wounded Knee battlefield
869
After the battle
873
Battlefield of Wounded Knee
875
Burying the dead
877
Grave of the dead at Wounded Knee
879
Battlefield after the blizzard
881
Arapaho ghost shirt, showing coloring
895
Arapaho ghost shirt—reverse
897
Black Coyote
898
Biäñk̔i, the Kiowa dreamer
908
Biäñk̔i’s vision
910
Kiowa summer shelter
913
The Ghost dance (buckskin painting)
915
Sacred objects from the Sioux Ghost dance
916
Sacred objects from the Sioux Ghost dance
918
The Ghost dance—small circle
921
The Ghost dance—larger circle
923
The Ghost dance—large circle
925
The Ghost dance—praying
927
The Ghost dance—inspiration
929
The Ghost dance—rigid
931
The Ghost dance—unconscious
933
The crow dance
935
Arapaho bed
962
The sweat-lodge: Kiowa camp on the Washita
981
Dog-soldier insignia
988
 
Figure 56.
Tenskwatawa the Shawano prophet, 1808 and 1831
670
Greenville treaty medal
671
Tecumtha
682
Harrison treaty pipe
688
Känakûk the Kickapoo prophet
693
Känakûk’s heaven
694
Onsawkie
698
Nakai′-doklĭ′ni’s dance-wheel
704
Smohalla’s flag
726
Charles Ike, Smohalla interpreter
728
Diagram showing arrangement of worshipers at Smohalla service
729
John Slocum and Louis Yowaluch
746
Shaker church at Mud bay
758
Wovoka
764
Navaho Indians
810
Vista in the Hopi pueblo of Walpi
812
A Sioux warrior—Weasel Bear
844
Red Cloud
846
Short Bull
851
Kicking Bear
853
Red Tomahawk
856
Sitting Bull the Sioux medicine-man
858
Sketch of the country of the Sitting Bull fight, December 15, 1890
859
Survivors of Wounded Knee—Blue Whirlwind and children
877
Survivors of Wounded Knee—Marguerite Zitkala-noni
878
Survivors of Wounded Knee—Jennie Sword
879
Survivors of Wounded Knee—Herbert Zitkalazi
880
Sitting Bull the Arapaho apostle
896
Two Kiowa prophecies (from a Kiowa calendar)
907
Poor Buffalo
908
Sitting Bull comes down (from a Kiowa calendar)
909
Ā′piatañ
912
Arapaho tipi and windbreak
957
Bed of the prairie tribes
963
Shinny stick and ball
964
Wakuna or head-feathers
964
The Thunderbird
969
Hummer and bull-roarer
974
Dog-soldier insignia—rattle and quirt
987
Diagram of awl game
1002
Sticks used in awl game
1003
Trump sticks used in awl game
1003
Baskets used in dice game
1004
Dice used in dice game
1005
Cheyenne camping circle
1026
Paiute wikiup
1049
Native drawings of Ghost dance—A, Comanche; B, Sioux
1060
Jerking beef
1066
Kiowa camping circle
1080
PL. LXXXV
JULIUS BIEN & CO. N.Y.
INDIAN RESERVATIONS
OF THE
UNITED STATES
IN 1890
Showing approximate area
of the Ghost Dance