Customs and Legends


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Legends
Long ago, perhaps in the days when Chickasaws still resided in the land of the setting sun.....

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Marriage Custom
When a Chickasaw man found a girl that suited his fancy, he sent his mother or sister with a gift. Perhaps, enough calico to make one or more dresses tied up in a shawl or handerchief with instructions to ask the father and mother of the girl to give their approval of the intention of the suitor.

If they gave consent, the bundle was handed to the girl. If she took it, the marriage bargain was considered made and the man's mother or sister took back the news.

The man then dressed himself head to foot in his best clothes, painted his face with vermillion and other paints and started for the residence of his intended wife. Upon reaching the house he was invited to rest on a cowhide, or the hide of any 'Varmint' generally used for seats in those days.

After general topics of the day were discussed, supper was announced. The visitor and the intended father-in-law took supper alone, always without the company of the intended wife or her mother. Some time after supper a bed commonly occupied by the girl was prepared for the young couple. She retired before he entered the room. When the groom came in he occupied the front side of the bed and they were man and wife.

"This, sir, was ancient marriage ceremony among the Chickasaws." (Excerpt from a letter written by Cyrus Harris in 1881, edited.) There were variations of the marriage ceremony, as there were with all traditions and customs. The ceremony performed, depended upon family and locality.




CHOCTAWS AND CHICKASAWS

Chatah and Chicksah, both influential chiefs, headed the migration that is supposed to have started from western Mexico. Adair, in his American Indians, says that the Choctaws and Chickasaws descended from a people called Chickamacaws, who were among the first inhabitants of the Mexican empire and at an early period wandered east with another tribe called Chockamaws. It may be easily inferred that the name Choctaw has its derivation from Chockamaws, and Chickasaw from Chickamacaws.

The traditions of the Choctaws and Chickasaws all point toward the time that their ancestors came from a country beyond the "Big Waters" far to the northwest; and the Muskogees, Shawnees, Cherokees and other tribes have the same traditions, that point beyond Behring straits, to Asia, as the land from which their forefathers came in past ages.


Cultural Characteristics
1.Non-verbal communication through body language, sign language, facial expressions, use of personal space, and silence.

2.Time is now and ever flowing, there is no need to hurry.

3.Respect for elders and other adults (teachers), is NOT to look away into their eyes, rather, glance away.

4.A unique relationship with nature as part of the circle of life, and entwined with the creator, mother earth, self and family (as a people). The indian way is to respect nature, given to them to use - not abuse, by the great spirit.

5.Lack of belief in ownership, so things such as the mother earth, nature and its natural resources, possessions, individual skills are to be shared among each other, not owned or fenced in, or kept from those in need, because all was given by the creator.

According to the 1990 U.S. census, there are about 21,000 Chickasaw. About 5,300 people of Chickasaw descent live in Oklahoma. A tribal government elected by the Chickasaw helps provide for the general welfare of the tribe.





Worth reading-Links
Worth a visit The Life and Customs of the Indian Territory

Worth a visitIndian Country Today

Worth a visitNativeWeb Search

Worth a visitFirst Inhabitants: The Indians

Worth a visitAnthropology Papers

Worth a visitMuskogean Language




 

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White Family 1607 to 1895