Cherokee Tribe Beliefs

Words: 454
Pages: 2

games. Whistles, made from the leg bones of birds, were sometimes blown by warriors to produce their war call (often, a male wild turkey gobble)”. Voice is a critical character in Cherokee music and in many cases there is no harmony everyone sings in unison when responding to the call. Otherwise a song that does not require the call and response style remains a solo song that is sang by one person. In the eighteenth century new instruments such as the fiddle were introduced in Cherokee music. Due to the increase of the deerskin trade, Scottish and English traders introduced fiddle playing to the Cherokee. By the early nineteenth century, tribe members were learning Christian hymns from missionaries.
Men sang to lead a dance in various traditional
…show more content…
In the early twentieth century Cherokee fiddle playing influenced nearby white Appalachian fiddle traditions.
The roles of men and women in the Great Plains were well defined and they were crucial for the society to function. Men and women were respected in doing their jobs well even though early European Americans did not see it that way.
Early European Americans came from societies were women were treated as fragile and “needed to be protected”. In the Plains they saw that women worked hard and did a lot of work which contained clearing fields, planting, hoeing, and harvesting; digging cache pits and storing food; erecting and dismantling lodges and tipis; collecting wild plants and firewood; cooking, hauling water, and washing dishes; transporting possessions, generally on foot, on bison hunts; making household items, including pottery and clothing; and raising children. The work load increased in the nineteenth century because of the fur trading demand for clothes and robes. The early European Americans were only short time travellers and they saw that the men sitting around the village or camping, smoking, gambling, perhaps mending a weapon or caring