Table of Contents
- 1 What was the role of men in decision making in the Anishinabe?
- 2 How did the Anishinabe use the land?
- 3 What is Anishinabewaki?
- 4 What do Anishinaabe people eat?
- 5 How did the Anishinabe choose their leaders?
- 6 How did the people of Anishinabe make decisions?
- 7 How did the Anishinaabe deal with the Europeans?
What was the role of men in decision making in the Anishinabe?
2 Cards in this Set Men were the hunters, and protectors for the Anishinabe people. They also went to meetings and taught boys how to hunt.
What are the Anishinaabe known for?
Anishinaabe people have preserved their traditions to this day. They are known for their expertise in traditional medicine. Midewiwin is a community of health workers in the Anishinaabe society. Anishinaabe people are also famous for the ‘Fire Dance’, a celebratory performance done around the fire.
How did the Anishinabe use the land?
The Anishinabe gathered wild rice, they would fish at the near lakes, and would hunt at the forests. The Haudenosaunee farmed the land for various crops. The Mi`kmaq used the land differently from season to season. They would fish in the summer and hunt in the winter.
Who is the Anishinaabe leader?
Elder Fred Kelly on the Anishinaabe worldview and what it means to be an indigenous leader.
What is Anishinabewaki?
Country. Anishinaabewaki. The Anishinaabe are a group of culturally related indigenous peoples present in the Great Lakes region of Canada and the United States. They include the Ojibwe (including Saulteaux and Oji-Cree), Odawa, Potawatomi, Mississaugas, Nipissing and Algonquin peoples.
What are the 7 Anishinaabe clans?
Anishinaabeg dodems, or clans, dictate what one’s traditional role in the society would be. Dodems vary regionally. There are seven original clans: Crane, Loon, Bear, Fish, Marten, Deer and Bird. Cranes and loons are leaders, playing two different roles.
What do Anishinaabe people eat?
Along with fish, the Anishinabe hunted deer, ducks, pigeons, moose, fox, wolves, bears, rabbits, beavers, and other small game and waterfowl.
What are the 7 Ojibwe clans?
There are seven original clans: Crane, Loon, Bear, Fish, Marten, Deer and Bird. Cranes and loons are leaders, playing two different roles.
How did the Anishinabe choose their leaders?
Anishinabe leaders where chosen by their display of courage, skills and character. The leaders of the Loon and Crane clans had the responsibility for making decisions that effected the whole community. They also hunted like the men in the clan however they hunted smaller animals such as rabbits, birds and porcupines.
What are MI KMAQ people called?
Mi’kmaq (Mi’kmaw, Micmac or L’nu, “the people” in Mi’kmaq) are Indigenous peoples who are among the original inhabitants in the Atlantic Provinces of Canada. Alternative names for the Mi’kmaq appear in some historical sources and include Gaspesians, Souriquois and Tarrantines.
How did the people of Anishinabe make decisions?
They sat in a circle and used consensus to solve common issues that people had. This group was called the Grande Councile. The people who sat in the circles were whoever owned the house they lived in. You had to be an adult citizen to make decisions.
What was the social structure of the Anishinabe?
Social Structure. They made decisions through consensus. Both men and women were involved in decision making. Dodems: The anishinabe society had clans that each had different responsibilities. The Midewin society: The Midewin society where men and women who had special gifts as spiritual leaders and healers.
How did the Anishinaabe deal with the Europeans?
The Anishinaabe dealt with Europeans through the fur trade, intermarriage, and performance as allies. Europeans traded with the Anishinaabe for their furs in exchange for goods, and also hired the men as guides throughout the lands of North America. The Anishinaabeg women (as well as other Aboriginal groups)…
Who are the descendants of the Anishinaabe people?
The Anishinaabeg women (as well as other Aboriginal groups) began to intermarry with fur traders and trappers. Some of their descendants would later create a Métis ethnic group. Explorers]