Читать книгу Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan Tribes West of the Mississippi - David I. Bushnell - Страница 10
(Bison americanus.)
ОглавлениеWith the practical extermination of the buffalo in recent years, and the rapid changes which have taken place in the general appearance of the country, it is difficult to picture it as it was two or more centuries ago. While the country continued to be the home of the native tribes game was abundant, and the buffalo, in prodigious numbers, roamed over the wide region from the Rocky Mountains to near the Atlantic. It is quite evident, and easily conceivable, that wherever the buffalo was to be found it was hunted by the people of the neighboring villages, principally to serve as food. But the different parts of the animal were made use of for many purposes, and, as related in an early Spanish narrative, one prepared nearly four centuries ago, when referring to "the oxen of Quivira ... Their masters have no other riches nor substance: of them they eat, they drink, they apparel, they shooe themselves: and of their hides they make many things, as houses, shooes, apparell and ropes: of their bones they make bodkins: of their sinews and haire, threed: of their hornes, maws, and bladders, vessels: of their dung, fire: and of their calves-skinnes, budgets, wherein they drawe and keepe water. To bee short, they make so many things of them as they neede of, or as many as suffice them in the use of this life." (Gomara, (1), p. 382.) A crude engraving of a buffalo made at that time is reproduced in figure 1.
Fig. 1.—The buffalo of Gomara, 1554
The preceding account describes the customs of the people then living in the southern part of the region treated in the present sketch, either a Caddoan or a neighboring tribe or group, and it suggests another reference to the great importance of the buffalo, but applying to the tribes of the north more than three centuries later.
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 77 PLATE 2
"A BUFFALO HUNT ON THE SOUTHWESTERN PRAIRIES" J. M. Stanley, 1845
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 77 PLATE 3
"BUFFALO HUNT" Carl Wimar, 1860
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 77 PLATE 4
"BUFFALO HUNTING ON THE FROZEN SNOW" Peter Rindisbacher, about 1825
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 77 PLATE 5