1 / 23

Arawak

A Presentation For Mrs. Saldanha-Kuncharam by Dana Rickle of the Class 2B in the Majestic year of 2011-2012 in the month of June. Arawak. History. Encountered by Christopher Columbus in 1492 Conflicts with Carib peoples Arawaks greeted Columbus peacefully

abram
Download Presentation

Arawak

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Presentation For Mrs. Saldanha-Kuncharam by Dana Rickle of the Class 2B in the Majestic year of 2011-2012 in the month of June. Arawak

  2. History • Encountered by Christopher Columbus in 1492 • Conflicts with Carib peoples • Arawaks greeted Columbus peacefully • 1748 first Arawak European style wedding

  3. Location • West Indies • Lesser Antilles • Guadeloupe • Greater Antilles • Bahamas • Trinidad • Eastern Coast of South America, as far south as present Brazil

  4. Climate • Tropical • South American region • Lived in Caribbean • Warm climate

  5. Resources • Live on islands and coast– lots of water • Sea provides them with fish and food • Stones used to kill birds for food • Sticks used to kill small mammals and lizards for food • Use what is available to them • Seashells, bones, gold, and stones all used for jewelry

  6. Economic Lifestyle • Horticultural • Semi-nomadic • Prevent soil erosion in conucos (large mounds of Earth for farming) • Large variety of crops • Cassava was main crop (grown in tropical climate) • Arawak in Amazon created rich soil by slow-burning fires

  7. Declining Status • Disease from Europeans caused death • Spanish policies of enslavement, family separation, resettlement (Encomienda System) • Attacks by Carib tribes • Harsh treatment by settlers • Society destroyed by Europeans • Bloodlines still exist in some settlers (African and Westerners) • Language still spoken in small Cuban populations

  8. Migration of Culture • Islands in the Caribbean • Move to South American continent • Spanish culture migrates to Arawak peoples and combines with them • Expelled from Lesser Antilles around 1,000 C.E. by Caribs

  9. Government • Defined social class • Centralized figure was a king • Patriarchal society • Little law and reinforcement because of dependence on one another • Nobles and council were made of elders– communication with other kingdoms • Songs and dances teach law

  10. Relationships • Inheritance passed down from father to son– patriarchal • Men fished and hunted while women took care of agriculture, etc… • Relationships with other kingdoms through tribal leaders and elders • Dependent on one-another so relatively peaceful people within their own society

  11. Culture • Made crafts, play games • Soccer-like game • Developed the hammock • Jewelry of gold, stone, bone, shell • Drank alcohol

  12. Contributions to Society/World • Invented the hammock as their form of a bed to sleep in • Sophisticated weaving style in the area– highly developed • Pottery style was sophisticated– no pottery wheel, but of high value

  13. Religion/Belief System • Gods called Zemi, control universe • Areyto, a game, involved in religious ceremonies • Tobacco in religious ceremonies • Animism • Medicine men– consult gods • Dance for thanks and petition to gods • Service acknowledge zemis’ power

  14. Music • Teach law and culture • Ceremonial drums in religious ceremonies • Sang about wars/peace, sad stories, and comedies • Music common in religious ceremonies– used to pray to gods

  15. Literature • Sang songs • Learned how to read and write after settlers arrived • After settlers– sang songs in German and Arawak • Taught each other English after settlers

  16. Art • Dance for religion– thanks and protest • Refined and valuable pottery • Weaving used to construct baskets and hammocks • Made jewelry out of gold, bone, stone, and sea shells

  17. Clothing • When first encounter by Columbus and Europeans, they were naked • Too much heat for clothing– Arawaks were used to the climate • Little or no clothing worn– short skirt for women to show status • Jewelry was common (gold, stone, shells, bone to make) • Ornaments– cotton cloth tied around arms

  18. Customs • Well-mannered • Respect highly valued– do not talk down to elders, and avoid eye contact when disrespectful • Act host-like at dinners, rise to receive and say good-bye to guests

  19. Cuisine • Made alcohol • Knew how to make cassava edible from poisonous plant • Seafood because of proximity to ocean • Small lizards and land mammals • Also killed and ate birds • Informal feasts were common • Feasts also used religiously

  20. Education • Taught laws through dance • Learned how to read upon arrival of Europeans– taught by Europeans • After learning to read, formed classes to teach others

  21. Technology • Sticks and stones to hunt small lizards and animals • Made pottery • Used canoes • Knew how to navigate

  22. Works Cited • http://www.cubaheritage.org/articles.asp?lID=1&artID=11 • http://caribbean-connection.org/arawaks/ • http://www.blackstudies.ucsb.edu/antillians/arawaks.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arawaks • http://www.my-island-jamaica.com/early_history_of_jamaica.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arawakan_languages • thelouvertureproject.org • http://www.haitianroots.com/mission/historyColumbus.html • pattyinglishms.hubpages.com • http://www.luketravels.com/saintlucia/ • http://www.probertencyclopaedia.com/photolib/people/Arawak%20Indians%20British%20Guiana%20c1935.htm

  23. Please imagine a beautiful and stunning illustration/visual/graph on this last page in order for me to receive the full five points for this section.

More Related