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Great Law of Peace

Among the Haudenosaunee (the "Six Nations," comprising the Mohawk, Onondaga, Oneida, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora peoples) the Great Law of Peace (Mohawk: Kaianere’kó:wa), also known as Gayanashagowa, is the oral constitution of the Iroquois Confederacy. The law was written on wampum belts, conceived by Dekanawidah, known as the Great Peacemaker, and his spokesman Hiawatha. The original five member nations ratified this constitution near modern-day Victor, New York, with the sixth nation (the Tuscarora) being added in 1722.

Flag of the Iroquois

The laws were first recorded and transmitted by means of wampum, shell-bead belts that encoded the message in a sequence of pictograms. Later, it was translated into English and other languages. The Great Law of Peace is presented as part of a narrative noting laws and ceremonies to be performed at prescribed times. The laws, called a constitution, are divided into 117 articles. The united Iroquois nations are symbolized by an eastern white pine tree, called the Tree of Peace. Each nation or tribe plays a delineated role in the conduct of government.

The exact date of the events is not known, but it is thought to date back to the late 12th century (c. 1190).[1]

Narrative, constitution, and ceremony edit

The narratives of the Great Law exist in the languages of the member nations, so spelling and usages vary. William N. Fenton observed that it came to serve a purpose as a social organization inside and among the nations, a constitution of the Iroquois Confederacy or League, ceremonies to be observed, and a binding history of peoples.[2] Fenton also observed some nine common points focusing more simply on the narrative story line,[2] though Christopher Vecsey identified 22 points shared across some two dozen versions of the narrative or parts of the narrative both direct and indirect:[3]

Narrative
  1. The Migration and Separation of the People (pre-history of the area)
  2. The Birth and Growth of Deganawida
  3. The Journey to the Mohawks, the Situation, and the Mission Explained
  4. The Mother of Nations Accepts Deganawida's Message
  5. The Cannibal Converts
  6. The Prophets Prove Their Power
  7. Tadadaho the Wizard Prevents Peace
  8. Hiawatha's Relatives Are Killed
  9. Hiawatha Mourns and Quits Onondaga
  10. Hiawatha Invents Wampum
  11. Hiawatha Gives the Mohawks Lessons in Protocol
  12. Deganawida Consoles Hiawatha
  13. Scouts Travel to Tadadaho
  14. Deganawida and Hiawatha Join Oneidas, Cayugas, and Senecas to Mohawks
  15. The Nations March to Tadadaho, Singing the Peace Hymn
  16. Deganawida and Hiawatha Transform Tadadaho
Constitution of the Confederacy and social order of the member peoples
  1. Deganawida and Hiawatha Establish Iroquois Unity and Law
  2. Deganawida and Hiawatha Establish League Chiefs and Council Polity
  3. The Confederacy Takes Symbolic Images
  4. The League Declares Its Sovereignty (the Constitutional laws of the Confederacy)
Ceremony
  1. The Condolence Maintains the Confederacy (a sequence of ceremonies for grieving over a deceased chief and appointing a new one)
  2. Deganawida Departs

Barbara Mann has gathered versions featuring conflicting but harmonized elements (who does what varies, but what happens is more consistent than not), or stories that tell distinct elements not shared in other versions, into a narrative she includes in the Encyclopedia of the Haudenosaunee published in 2000.[4]

Published accounts edit

Cayuga edit

An untranslated version has been posted by the Smithsonian Institution.[5] Another is mentioned being presented to Michael Foster.[6]

Mohawk edit

There are several Mohawk versions that made it into print and several of those were printed more than once. Horatio Hale published one in 1883 he traced somewhat earlier[7] which was reprinted by William N. Fenton, following Arthur Caswell Parker, in 1968.[8] J. N. B. Hewitt published one in 1928 based on a much earlier fragment.[9] Joseph Brant and John Norton commented on details of the narrative as early as 1801 and published since.[10][11] Dayodekane, better known as Seth Newhouse, arranged for some versions that were published differently near 1900 - first from 1885 included in a book by Paul A. W. Wallace in 1948,[12] and a second version published in 1910 by Arthur C. Parker.[13] Fenton discusses Newhouse' contributions in a paper in 1949.[14] Wallace also published a separate book without stating his source in 1946 called The Iroquois book of Life - White Roots of Peace, which was later revised and extended with endorsements by Iroqouis chiefs and Iroquoian historian John Mohawk in 1986 and 1994.[15]

Oneida edit

Oneida versions have been noted in various places. One from New York,[16] has been echoed/summarized by the Milwaukee Public Museum.[17] Another has been published by the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin in two sections.[18] Another account is also reported.[19] Paula Underwood, an oral historian who traces her history to an Oneida ancestor, was also related to Benjamin Franklin. Her familial oral history describing Shenandoah's close relationship and collaboration with Benjamin Franklin on the writing of the US Constitution was published in 1997.[20]

Onondaga edit

Parts of Horatio Hale's work The Iroquois Book of Rites is said to have Onondaga sources. J. N. B. Hewitt recorded Chief John Buck and included his presentation in 1892.[21] John Arthur Gibson shared several versions that have gathered notable awareness among scholars like Fenton and others. His first version was in 1899.[22] Gibson then participated in a collective version with many Chiefs from the Six Nations of the Grand River Reserve in 1900 which was reprinted a number of times: first in 1910/1,[23] and then included in another work.[24] A final version was offered to Alexander Goldenweiser but wasn't finished translated and published until 1992 by Hanni Woodbury.[25]

Seneca edit

Newspaper editor[26] William Walker Canfield published a book The Legends of the Iroquois in 1902[27] based on found notes he was given purporting to be written from comments of Cornplanter reportedly to an employee of the surveyor company Holland Land Company, perhaps John Adlum, known friend of Cornplanter.[28] It is the primary source of the mention of a solar eclipse. Another Seneca version was given by Deloe B. Kittle to Parker and was published in 1923.[29]

Tuscarora edit

The Tuscarora joined the Iroquois Confederacy in 1722.[30][31] There is a version of the Great Law of Peace attributed by Wallace "Mad Bear" Anderson of the Tuscarora published in 1987.[32] However, there is a claim this was borrowed.[33]

Influence on the United States Constitution edit

Some historians, including Donald Grinde, have claimed that the democratic ideals of the Kaianere’kó:wa provided a significant inspiration to Benjamin Franklin, James Madison and other framers of the U.S. Constitution. They contend that the federal structure of the U.S. constitution was influenced by the living example of the Iroquois confederation, as were notions of individual liberty and the separation of powers.[34] Grinde, Bruce Johansen and others[35] also identify Native American symbols and imagery that were adopted by the nascent United States, including the American bald eagle and a bundle of arrows.[34] However, eagles and bundles of arrows are common imagery in European heraldry, which is the more likely influence.[36] Their thesis argues the U.S. constitution was the synthesis of various forms of political organization familiar to the founders, including the Iroquois confederation.

Franklin circulated copies of the proceedings of the 1744 Treaty of Lancaster among his fellow colonists; at the close of this document, the Six Nations leaders offer to impart instruction in their democratic methods of government to the English. Franklin's Albany Plan is also believed to have been influenced by his understanding of Iroquois government. John Rutledge of South Carolina, delegate to the Constitutional Convention, is said to have read lengthy tracts of Six Nations law to the other framers, beginning with the words "We, the people, to form a union, to establish peace, equity, and order..."[37] In October 1988, the U.S. Congress passed Concurrent Resolution 331 to recognize the influence of the Iroquois Constitution upon the American Constitution and Bill of Rights.[38]

The extent of the influence of Six Nations law on the U.S. Constitution is disputed by other scholars.[39] Haudenosaunee historian Elisabeth J. Tooker has pointed to several differences between the two forms of government, notably that all decisions were made by a consensus of male chiefs who gained their position through a combination of blood descent and selection by female relatives, that representation was on the basis of the number of clans in the group rather than the size or population of the clans, that the topics discussed were decided by a single tribe. Tooker concluded there is little resemblance between the two documents, or reason to believe the Six Nations had a meaningful influence on the American Constitution, and that it is unclear how much impact Canassatego's statement at Lancaster actually had on the representatives of the colonies.[40] Stanford University historian Jack N. Rakove argued against any Six Nations influence, pointing to lack of evidence in U.S. constitutional debate records, and examples of European antecedents for democratic institutions.[41]

Journalist Charles C. Mann has noted other differences between The Great Law of Peace and the original U.S. Constitution, including the original Constitution's allowing denial of suffrage to women, and majority rule rather than consensus. Mann argues that the early colonists' interaction with Native Americans and their understanding of Iroquois government did influence the development of colonial society and culture and the Suffragette movement, but stated that "the Constitution as originally enacted was not at all like the Great Law."[41][42]

In Hierarchy in the Forest: The Evolution of Egalitarian Behavior political anthropologist Christopher Boehm considers the U.S. Constitution to be a counter dominance strategy that allows citizens to dominate their leader rather than the other way around. He also concludes that the Founding Fathers borrowed wisely from the Iroquois government in forming the Constitution.[full citation needed]

Other critics of the Iroquois-influence theory include Samuel Payne, who considered the Iroquois division of powers as seen by Adams as being unlike those in the U.S. Constitution;[43] William Starna and George Hamell, who described errors in Grinde's and Johansen's scholarship, particularly on Canassatego and the Lancaster Treaty;[44] and Philip Levy, who also wrote that Grinde and Johansen had misused Adams's material, stating that he was not describing the Iroquois Confederacy government separation of powers and model of government, but that he was instead describing England's structure.[45]

Example articles edit

§37: There shall be one war chief from each nation, and their duties shall be to carry messages for their chiefs, and to take up arms in case of emergency. They shall not participate in the proceedings of the Council of the League, but shall watch its progress and in case of an erroneous action by a chief, they shall receive the complaints of the people and convey the warnings of the women to him. The people who wish to convey messages to the chiefs of the League shall do so through the war chief of their nation. It shall always be his duty to lay the cases, questions, and propositions of the people before the council of the League.
§58: Any Chief or other person who submits to Laws of a foreign people is alienated and forfeits all claim in the Five Nations.
§101: It shall be the duty of the appointed managers of the Thanksgiving festivals to do all that is needful for carrying out the duties of the occasions. The recognized festivals of Thanksgiving shall be the Midwinter Thanksgiving, the Maple or Sugar-Making Thanksgiving, the Raspberry Thanksgiving, the Strawberry Thanksgiving, the Corn Planting Thanksgiving, the Corn Hoeing Thanksgiving, The Little Festival of Green Corn, the Great Festival of Ripe Corn, and the Complete Thanksgiving for the Harvest. Each nation's festivals shall be held in their Longhouses.
§107: A certain sign shall be known to all the people of the Five Nations which shall denote that the owner or occupant of a house is absent. A stick or pole in a slanting or leaning position shall indicate this and be the sign. Every person not entitled to enter the house by right of living within upon seeing such a sign shall not enter the house by day or by night, but shall keep as far away as his business will permit.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Cayuga Nation". Cayuga Nation. Retrieved December 24, 2020.
  2. ^ a b William Nelson Fenton (1998). The Great Law and the Longhouse: A Political History of the Iroquois Confederacy. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3003-3.
  3. ^ Christopher Vecsey (Spring 1986). "The Story and Structure of the Iroquois Confederacy". Journal of the American Academy of Religion. Oxford University Press. 54 (1): 79–106. doi:10.1093/jaarel/liv.1.79. JSTOR 1464101.
  4. ^ Barbara Alice Mann (1 January 2000). "The Second Epoch of Time: The Great Law Keeping". In Bruce Elliott Johansen; Barbara Alice Mann (eds.). Encyclopedia of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy). Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 265–284. ISBN 978-0-313-30880-2.
  5. ^ . Manuscript 1582, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution. 2014 [1890]. Archived from the original (pdf) on September 23, 2015.
  6. ^ Denis Foley (2010). (PDF). In Christine Sternberg Patrick (ed.). Preserving tradition and understanding the past: Papers from the Conference on Iroquois Research, 2001-2005 (PDF). The New York State Education Department. pp. 25–34. ISBN 978-1-55557-251-8. ISSN 2156-6178. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-26.
  7. ^ Horatio Hale (1883). "Okayondonghsera Yondennase / Ancient rites of the Condoling Council". In D.G. Brinton (ed.). The Iroquois Book of Rites. Library of aboriginal American literature. Vol. II. D.G. Brinton. pp. 116–145 (plus notes), (in Cayuga, Onondaga, and English){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  8. ^ Arthur Caswell Parker; William Nelson Fenton (1968) [1883]. "Book Three - The Constitution of the Five Nations". Parker on the Iroquois. Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-0115-9.
  9. ^ John Deserontyon; translated by J. N. B. Hewitt (1928). F. W. Hodge (ed.). A Mohawk Form of Ritual of Condolence, 1782. Indian Notes and Monographs. Vol. 10. Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. pp. 95–100.
  10. ^ Douglas W. Boyce (Aug 15, 1973). "A Glimpse of Iroquois Culture History Through the Eyes of Joseph Brant and John Norton". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. American Philosophical Society. 117 (4): 286–294. JSTOR 986696.
  11. ^ John Norton; Carl Frederick Klinck (1970). Carl Frederick Klink; James John Talman (eds.). The Journal of Major John Norton, 1816 (reprint). Publications of the Champlain Society. Vol. 72. Toronto: Champlain Society. pp. 98–105. ISBN 978-0-9810506-3-8.
  12. ^ Dayodekane - Seth Newhouse; Paul A. W. Wallace (October 1948). "The Return of Hiawatha by Wallace". New York History. New York State Historical Association. 29 (4): 385–403. ISSN 0146-437X. JSTOR 23149546.
  13. ^ Arthur C. Parker; Dayodekane - Seth Newhouse (April 1, 1916). "The Dekanawida Legend (1910)". The Constitution of the Five Nations. Albany, The University of the State of New York. pp. 14–60. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  14. ^ William N. Fenton (May 16, 1949). "Seth Newhouse's Traditional History and Constitution of the Iroquois Confederacy". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. American Philosophical Society. 93 (2): 141–158. JSTOR 3143434.
  15. ^ Paul A. W. Wallace (1994) [1946]. White Roots of Peace: The Iroquois Book of Life. Clear Light Publishers. ISBN 978-0-940666-30-6.
  16. ^ North American Indian Travelling College (1984). Traditional teachings. North American Indian Travelling College.
  17. ^ "Oneida Oral History (Adapted from "Our Traditional Teachings", 1984, North American Indian Traveling College: Cornwall Island, Ontario)". Milwaukee Public Museum.
  18. ^ - see Christopher Buck (1 April 2015). God & Apple Pie: Religious Myths and Visions of America. Educator's International Press. p. 391. ISBN 978-1-891928-26-0.
    • Robert Brown – Anahalihs ("Great Vines"); Clifford F. Abbott (Feb 11, 2013). Randy Cornelius (Tehahuko’tha) (ed.). (PDF). Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin. Archived from the original (PDF) on Sep 24, 2015. Retrieved Sep 25, 2015.
    • Robert Brown – Anahalihs ("Great Vines"); Clifford F. Abbott (Feb 11, 2013). Randy Cornelius (Tehahuko’tha) (ed.). (PDF). Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin. Archived from the original (PDF) on Sep 24, 2015. Retrieved Sep 25, 2015.
  19. ^ by Demus Elm, "An Oneida Account of Events Antecedant to the Establishment of the Great Peace" unpublished accounts from 1950 and 1971, translated by Floyd Lounsbury, circa 1990s ("preparing for publication" according to Woodbury in 1992 but Lounsbury died in 1998.)
  20. ^ Underwood, Paula; Franklin Listens When I Speak, published by A Tribe of Two Press, 1997.
  21. ^ J. N. B. Hewitt; Chief John Buck (April 1892). "Legend of the Founding of the Iroquois League". American Anthropologist. Washington D.C.: American Anthropological Association of Washington. 5 (2): 131–148. doi:10.1525/aa.1892.5.2.02a00030. Retrieved Sep 25, 2015.
  22. ^ * John Arthur Gibson; J.N.B. Hewitt (2012) [1899(1900)]. Abram Charles; John Buck Sr.; Joshua Buck (eds.). "Founding of the League; Deganawida tradition". Smithsonian. Retrieved Sep 25, 2015.
    • aka John Arthur Gibson; Translated by William N. Fenton and Simeon Gibson. ""The Deganawidah Legend: A Tradition of the Founding of the League of the Five Iroquois Tribes," as told to J.N.B Hewitt, ed., Abram Charles, John Buck Sr., and Joshua Buck (1900-1914) from the legend recorded in the 1890s". Smithsonian Institution: Bureau of American Ethnology Archives. 1517C. Retrieved Sep 25, 2015.
    • (Also at American Philosophical Society Library.)
  23. ^ Committee of Chiefs of the Six Nations of the Grand River Reserve; presented by Duncan Campbell Scott (1911). "Traditional history of the Confederacy of the Six Nations". Proceedings and Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada. 3. 5 (2): 195–246. Retrieved Sep 25, 2015.
  24. ^ Committee of Chiefs of the Six Nations of the Grand River Reserve (edited by Arthur C. Parker); Arthur C. Parker (April 1, 1916). "The Code of Dekanahwideh (together with) The Tradition of the origin of the Give Nations' League". The Constitution of the Five Nations. Albany, The University of the State of New York. pp. 14–60. {{cite book}}: |author1= has generic name (help); |journal= ignored (help)
  25. ^ John Arthur Gibson; Hanni Woodbury; Reginald Henry; Harry Webster; Alexander Goldenweiser (1992). series editor John D. Nichols; Associate Editor H. C. Wolfart (eds.). Concerning the League: The Iroquois League Tradition as Dictated in Onondaga by John Arthur Gibson. Algonquian and Iroquoian Linguistics. ISBN 0-921064-09-8. {{cite book}}: |editor1= has generic name (help)
  26. ^ "WILLIAM CANFIELD, Utica Editor, Dies". New York Times. Aug 28, 1937. Retrieved Sep 25, 2015.
  27. ^ Several versions online:
    • William Walker Canfield; Cornplanter (Seneca chief) (1902). The Legends of the Iroquois. A. Wessels Company. ISBN 9781404751576.
    • William Walker Canfield; Cornplanter (Seneca chief) (1902). The Legends of the Iroquois. Source books of American history. A. Wessels Company.
    • William Walker Canfield; Cornplanter (Seneca chief) (1902). The Legends of the Iroquois. A. Wessels Company.
  28. ^ Robert S. Cox; Philip Heslip (August 2009). "Finding aid for John Adlum Papers 1794-1808". Manuscripts Division, William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan. Retrieved Sep 25, 2015.
  29. ^ Couple versions online:
    • Deloe B. Kittle; Arthur Caswell Parker (1923). "The Origin of the Long House". In Frank H. Severance (ed.). Seneca Myths and Folk Tales. Buffalo Historical Society Publications. Vol. 27. Buffalo Historical Society. pp. 403–8.
    • Deloe B. Kittle; Arthur Caswell Parker (1989) [1923]. "The Origin of the Long House". Seneca Myths and Folk Tales. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 403–6. ISBN 0-8032-8723-2.
  30. ^ MacIntyre, James R. (2015). "Tuscorora". In Danver, S.L. (ed.). Native Peoples of the World: An Encyclopedia of Groups, Cultures and Contemporary Issues. Taylor & Francis. p. 501. ISBN 978-1-317-46400-6. Retrieved 28 June 2018.
  31. ^ Ray, C. (2014). The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Volume 6: Ethnicity. University of North Carolina Press. p. 243. ISBN 978-1-4696-1658-2. Retrieved 28 June 2018.
  32. ^ a couple version published:
    • Edmund Wilson; Leon Edel; Wallace "Mad Bear" Anderson (1 November 1987). "Deganawida's Prophecy". The Fifties: From Notebooks and Diaries of the Period. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 567–581. ISBN 978-0-374-52066-3.
    • Chiokoyhikoy; Robert Griffin; Donald A. Grinde (1997). Apocalypse de Chiokoyhikoy, Chef des Iroquois. Presses Université Laval. pp. 192–194. ISBN 978-2-7637-7449-7.
  33. ^ Edmund Wilson (1959). Apologies to the Iroquois. Syracuse University Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-8156-2564-3.
  34. ^ a b Bruce E. Johansen; Donald A. Grinde, Jr. (1991). Exemplar of liberty: native America and the evolution of democracy. [Los Angeles]: American Indian Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles. ISBN 0-935626-35-2.
  35. ^ Armstrong, VI (1971). I Have Spoken: American History Through the Voices of the Indians. Swallow Press. p. 14. ISBN 0-8040-0530-3. "The New Republic owed a substantial debt to its Native American heritage—for its distinctive American identity, for the concept of federalism, for the practice of state legislatures appointing senators, and for providing a model for unity without imperialism across a vast geographic expanse." p. 215
  36. ^ "On the Origins of America's Great Seal and Its Attributes: Eagle, Arrows, Olive Branch". www.leidenartsinsocietyblog.nl. 2019-07-04. Retrieved 2023-06-22.
  37. ^ Mee, CL (1987). The Genius of the People. New York: Harper & Row. p. 237. ISBN 0-06-015702-X.
  38. ^ "H. Con. Res. 331, October 21, 1988" (PDF). United States Senate. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  39. ^ Shannon, TJ (2000). Indians and Colonists at the Crossroads of Empire: The Albany Congress of 1754. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 6–8. ISBN 0-8014-8818-4.
  40. ^ Tooker E (1990). "The United States Constitution and the Iroquois League". In Clifton JA (ed.). The Invented Indian: cultural fictions and government policies. New Brunswick, N.J., U.S.A: Transaction Publishers. pp. 107–128. ISBN 1-56000-745-1.
  41. ^ a b Rakove, J (2005-11-07). "Did the Founding Fathers Really Get Many of Their Ideas of Liberty from the Iroquois?". George Mason University. Retrieved 2011-01-05.
  42. ^ Mann, Charles (2005-07-04). "The Founding Sachems". The New York Times. New York.
  43. ^ Payne, Samuel B. (1996). "The Iroquois League, the Articles of Confederation, and the Constitution". The William and Mary Quarterly. 53 (3): 605–620. doi:10.2307/2947207. ISSN 0043-5597. JSTOR 2947207.
  44. ^ Starna, William A.; Hamell, George R. (1996). "History and the Burden of Proof: The Case of Iroquois Influence on the U.S. Constitution". New York History. 77 (4): 427–452. ISSN 0146-437X. JSTOR 23182553.
  45. ^ Levy, Philip A. (1996). "Exemplars of Taking Liberties: The Iroquois Influence Thesis and the Problem of Evidence". The William and Mary Quarterly. 53 (3): 588–604. doi:10.2307/2947206. ISSN 0043-5597. JSTOR 2947206. S2CID 146842153.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Buck, Christopher (2015). "Deganawida, the Peacemaker". American Writers: A Collection of Literary Biographies. Farmington Hills, MI: Cengage Gale. XXVI: 81–100.
  • Morgan, Lewis H. (1870). Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Human Family.
  • Morgan, Lewis H. (1904). League of the Ho-dé-no-sau-nee or Iroquois. New York: Dodd, Mead.
  • Parker, Arthur C. (1916). The constitution of the Five nations. Albany, The University of the State of New York.

External links edit

  • U.S. Congress, H.Con.Res.331 "A concurrent resolution to acknowledge the contribution of the Iroquois Confederacy of Nations to the development of the United States Constitution and to reaffirm the continuing government-to-government relationship between Indian tribes and the United States established in the Constitution."
  • Text of U.S. Congressional Statute "Iroquois Confederacy and Indian Nations--Recognizing Contributions to the United States" PDF
  • The Iroquois Confederacy: Our Forgotten National Heritage 2008-08-08 at the Wayback Machine (Interview w/ Dr. Donald Grinde Jr.)
  • The Law

Ganienkeh Territory Council Fire, Onkwehonwe people

  • Exemplar of Liberty: Native America and the Evolution of Democracy by Donald Grinde & Bruce Johansen - see esp. Chapter 2 for a detailed description of Kaianerekowa or Great Law of Peace at the end of all this all the creators had a celebration to show it really was peace

great, peace, among, haudenosaunee, nations, comprising, mohawk, onondaga, oneida, cayuga, seneca, tuscarora, peoples, mohawk, kaianere, also, known, gayanashagowa, oral, constitution, iroquois, confederacy, written, wampum, belts, conceived, dekanawidah, know. Among the Haudenosaunee the Six Nations comprising the Mohawk Onondaga Oneida Cayuga Seneca and Tuscarora peoples the Great Law of Peace Mohawk Kaianere ko wa also known as Gayanashagowa is the oral constitution of the Iroquois Confederacy The law was written on wampum belts conceived by Dekanawidah known as the Great Peacemaker and his spokesman Hiawatha The original five member nations ratified this constitution near modern day Victor New York with the sixth nation the Tuscarora being added in 1722 Flag of the IroquoisThe laws were first recorded and transmitted by means of wampum shell bead belts that encoded the message in a sequence of pictograms Later it was translated into English and other languages The Great Law of Peace is presented as part of a narrative noting laws and ceremonies to be performed at prescribed times The laws called a constitution are divided into 117 articles The united Iroquois nations are symbolized by an eastern white pine tree called the Tree of Peace Each nation or tribe plays a delineated role in the conduct of government The exact date of the events is not known but it is thought to date back to the late 12th century c 1190 1 Contents 1 Narrative constitution and ceremony 2 Published accounts 2 1 Cayuga 2 2 Mohawk 2 3 Oneida 2 4 Onondaga 2 5 Seneca 2 6 Tuscarora 3 Influence on the United States Constitution 4 Example articles 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksNarrative constitution and ceremony editThe narratives of the Great Law exist in the languages of the member nations so spelling and usages vary William N Fenton observed that it came to serve a purpose as a social organization inside and among the nations a constitution of the Iroquois Confederacy or League ceremonies to be observed and a binding history of peoples 2 Fenton also observed some nine common points focusing more simply on the narrative story line 2 though Christopher Vecsey identified 22 points shared across some two dozen versions of the narrative or parts of the narrative both direct and indirect 3 NarrativeThe Migration and Separation of the People pre history of the area The Birth and Growth of Deganawida The Journey to the Mohawks the Situation and the Mission Explained The Mother of Nations Accepts Deganawida s Message The Cannibal Converts The Prophets Prove Their Power Tadadaho the Wizard Prevents Peace Hiawatha s Relatives Are Killed Hiawatha Mourns and Quits Onondaga Hiawatha Invents Wampum Hiawatha Gives the Mohawks Lessons in Protocol Deganawida Consoles Hiawatha Scouts Travel to Tadadaho Deganawida and Hiawatha Join Oneidas Cayugas and Senecas to Mohawks The Nations March to Tadadaho Singing the Peace Hymn Deganawida and Hiawatha Transform TadadahoConstitution of the Confederacy and social order of the member peoplesDeganawida and Hiawatha Establish Iroquois Unity and Law Deganawida and Hiawatha Establish League Chiefs and Council Polity The Confederacy Takes Symbolic Images The League Declares Its Sovereignty the Constitutional laws of the Confederacy CeremonyThe Condolence Maintains the Confederacy a sequence of ceremonies for grieving over a deceased chief and appointing a new one Deganawida DepartsBarbara Mann has gathered versions featuring conflicting but harmonized elements who does what varies but what happens is more consistent than not or stories that tell distinct elements not shared in other versions into a narrative she includes in the Encyclopedia of the Haudenosaunee published in 2000 4 Published accounts editCayuga edit An untranslated version has been posted by the Smithsonian Institution 5 Another is mentioned being presented to Michael Foster 6 Mohawk edit There are several Mohawk versions that made it into print and several of those were printed more than once Horatio Hale published one in 1883 he traced somewhat earlier 7 which was reprinted by William N Fenton following Arthur Caswell Parker in 1968 8 J N B Hewitt published one in 1928 based on a much earlier fragment 9 Joseph Brant and John Norton commented on details of the narrative as early as 1801 and published since 10 11 Dayodekane better known as Seth Newhouse arranged for some versions that were published differently near 1900 first from 1885 included in a book by Paul A W Wallace in 1948 12 and a second version published in 1910 by Arthur C Parker 13 Fenton discusses Newhouse contributions in a paper in 1949 14 Wallace also published a separate book without stating his source in 1946 called The Iroquois book of Life White Roots of Peace which was later revised and extended with endorsements by Iroqouis chiefs and Iroquoian historian John Mohawk in 1986 and 1994 15 Oneida edit Oneida versions have been noted in various places One from New York 16 has been echoed summarized by the Milwaukee Public Museum 17 Another has been published by the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin in two sections 18 Another account is also reported 19 Paula Underwood an oral historian who traces her history to an Oneida ancestor was also related to Benjamin Franklin Her familial oral history describing Shenandoah s close relationship and collaboration with Benjamin Franklin on the writing of the US Constitution was published in 1997 20 Onondaga edit Parts of Horatio Hale s work The Iroquois Book of Rites is said to have Onondaga sources J N B Hewitt recorded Chief John Buck and included his presentation in 1892 21 John Arthur Gibson shared several versions that have gathered notable awareness among scholars like Fenton and others His first version was in 1899 22 Gibson then participated in a collective version with many Chiefs from the Six Nations of the Grand River Reserve in 1900 which was reprinted a number of times first in 1910 1 23 and then included in another work 24 A final version was offered to Alexander Goldenweiser but wasn t finished translated and published until 1992 by Hanni Woodbury 25 Seneca edit Newspaper editor 26 William Walker Canfield published a book The Legends of the Iroquois in 1902 27 based on found notes he was given purporting to be written from comments of Cornplanter reportedly to an employee of the surveyor company Holland Land Company perhaps John Adlum known friend of Cornplanter 28 It is the primary source of the mention of a solar eclipse Another Seneca version was given by Deloe B Kittle to Parker and was published in 1923 29 Tuscarora edit The Tuscarora joined the Iroquois Confederacy in 1722 30 31 There is a version of the Great Law of Peace attributed by Wallace Mad Bear Anderson of the Tuscarora published in 1987 32 However there is a claim this was borrowed 33 Influence on the United States Constitution editSee also History of democracy Indigenous peoples of the Americas Some historians including Donald Grinde have claimed that the democratic ideals of the Kaianere ko wa provided a significant inspiration to Benjamin Franklin James Madison and other framers of the U S Constitution They contend that the federal structure of the U S constitution was influenced by the living example of the Iroquois confederation as were notions of individual liberty and the separation of powers 34 Grinde Bruce Johansen and others 35 also identify Native American symbols and imagery that were adopted by the nascent United States including the American bald eagle and a bundle of arrows 34 However eagles and bundles of arrows are common imagery in European heraldry which is the more likely influence 36 Their thesis argues the U S constitution was the synthesis of various forms of political organization familiar to the founders including the Iroquois confederation Franklin circulated copies of the proceedings of the 1744 Treaty of Lancaster among his fellow colonists at the close of this document the Six Nations leaders offer to impart instruction in their democratic methods of government to the English Franklin s Albany Plan is also believed to have been influenced by his understanding of Iroquois government John Rutledge of South Carolina delegate to the Constitutional Convention is said to have read lengthy tracts of Six Nations law to the other framers beginning with the words We the people to form a union to establish peace equity and order 37 In October 1988 the U S Congress passed Concurrent Resolution 331 to recognize the influence of the Iroquois Constitution upon the American Constitution and Bill of Rights 38 The extent of the influence of Six Nations law on the U S Constitution is disputed by other scholars 39 Haudenosaunee historian Elisabeth J Tooker has pointed to several differences between the two forms of government notably that all decisions were made by a consensus of male chiefs who gained their position through a combination of blood descent and selection by female relatives that representation was on the basis of the number of clans in the group rather than the size or population of the clans that the topics discussed were decided by a single tribe Tooker concluded there is little resemblance between the two documents or reason to believe the Six Nations had a meaningful influence on the American Constitution and that it is unclear how much impact Canassatego s statement at Lancaster actually had on the representatives of the colonies 40 Stanford University historian Jack N Rakove argued against any Six Nations influence pointing to lack of evidence in U S constitutional debate records and examples of European antecedents for democratic institutions 41 Journalist Charles C Mann has noted other differences between The Great Law of Peace and the original U S Constitution including the original Constitution s allowing denial of suffrage to women and majority rule rather than consensus Mann argues that the early colonists interaction with Native Americans and their understanding of Iroquois government did influence the development of colonial society and culture and the Suffragette movement but stated that the Constitution as originally enacted was not at all like the Great Law 41 42 In Hierarchy in the Forest The Evolution of Egalitarian Behavior political anthropologist Christopher Boehm considers the U S Constitution to be a counter dominance strategy that allows citizens to dominate their leader rather than the other way around He also concludes that the Founding Fathers borrowed wisely from the Iroquois government in forming the Constitution full citation needed Other critics of the Iroquois influence theory include Samuel Payne who considered the Iroquois division of powers as seen by Adams as being unlike those in the U S Constitution 43 William Starna and George Hamell who described errors in Grinde s and Johansen s scholarship particularly on Canassatego and the Lancaster Treaty 44 and Philip Levy who also wrote that Grinde and Johansen had misused Adams s material stating that he was not describing the Iroquois Confederacy government separation of powers and model of government but that he was instead describing England s structure 45 Example articles edit 37 There shall be one war chief from each nation and their duties shall be to carry messages for their chiefs and to take up arms in case of emergency They shall not participate in the proceedings of the Council of the League but shall watch its progress and in case of an erroneous action by a chief they shall receive the complaints of the people and convey the warnings of the women to him The people who wish to convey messages to the chiefs of the League shall do so through the war chief of their nation It shall always be his duty to lay the cases questions and propositions of the people before the council of the League 58 Any Chief or other person who submits to Laws of a foreign people is alienated and forfeits all claim in the Five Nations 101 It shall be the duty of the appointed managers of the Thanksgiving festivals to do all that is needful for carrying out the duties of the occasions The recognized festivals of Thanksgiving shall be the Midwinter Thanksgiving the Maple or Sugar Making Thanksgiving the Raspberry Thanksgiving the Strawberry Thanksgiving the Corn Planting Thanksgiving the Corn Hoeing Thanksgiving The Little Festival of Green Corn the Great Festival of Ripe Corn and the Complete Thanksgiving for the Harvest Each nation s festivals shall be held in their Longhouses 107 A certain sign shall be known to all the people of the Five Nations which shall denote that the owner or occupant of a house is absent A stick or pole in a slanting or leaning position shall indicate this and be the sign Every person not entitled to enter the house by right of living within upon seeing such a sign shall not enter the house by day or by night but shall keep as far away as his business will permit Notes edit Cayuga Nation Cayuga Nation Retrieved December 24 2020 a b William Nelson Fenton 1998 The Great Law and the Longhouse A Political History of the Iroquois Confederacy University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3003 3 Christopher Vecsey Spring 1986 The Story and Structure of the Iroquois Confederacy Journal of the American Academy of Religion Oxford University Press 54 1 79 106 doi 10 1093 jaarel liv 1 79 JSTOR 1464101 Barbara Alice Mann 1 January 2000 The Second Epoch of Time The Great Law Keeping In Bruce Elliott Johansen Barbara Alice Mann eds Encyclopedia of the Haudenosaunee Iroquois Confederacy Greenwood Publishing Group pp 265 284 ISBN 978 0 313 30880 2 Cayuga version of the Deganawida legend 1890 untranslated Manuscript 1582 National Anthropological Archives Smithsonian Institution 2014 1890 Archived from the original pdf on September 23 2015 Denis Foley 2010 Iroqouis Mourning and Condolence Installation Rituals A Pattern of Social Integration and Continuity PDF In Christine Sternberg Patrick ed Preserving tradition and understanding the past Papers from the Conference on Iroquois Research 2001 2005 PDF The New York State Education Department pp 25 34 ISBN 978 1 55557 251 8 ISSN 2156 6178 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 26 Horatio Hale 1883 Okayondonghsera Yondennase Ancient rites of the Condoling Council In D G Brinton ed The Iroquois Book of Rites Library of aboriginal American literature Vol II D G Brinton pp 116 145 plus notes in Cayuga Onondaga and English a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Arthur Caswell Parker William Nelson Fenton 1968 1883 Book Three The Constitution of the Five Nations Parker on the Iroquois Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 0115 9 John Deserontyon translated by J N B Hewitt 1928 F W Hodge ed A Mohawk Form of Ritual of Condolence 1782 Indian Notes and Monographs Vol 10 Museum of the American Indian Heye Foundation pp 95 100 Douglas W Boyce Aug 15 1973 A Glimpse of Iroquois Culture History Through the Eyes of Joseph Brant and John Norton Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society American Philosophical Society 117 4 286 294 JSTOR 986696 John Norton Carl Frederick Klinck 1970 Carl Frederick Klink James John Talman eds The Journal of Major John Norton 1816 reprint Publications of the Champlain Society Vol 72 Toronto Champlain Society pp 98 105 ISBN 978 0 9810506 3 8 Dayodekane Seth Newhouse Paul A W Wallace October 1948 The Return of Hiawatha by Wallace New York History New York State Historical Association 29 4 385 403 ISSN 0146 437X JSTOR 23149546 Arthur C Parker Dayodekane Seth Newhouse April 1 1916 The Dekanawida Legend 1910 The Constitution of the Five Nations Albany The University of the State of New York pp 14 60 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help William N Fenton May 16 1949 Seth Newhouse s Traditional History and Constitution of the Iroquois Confederacy Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society American Philosophical Society 93 2 141 158 JSTOR 3143434 Paul A W Wallace 1994 1946 White Roots of Peace The Iroquois Book of Life Clear Light Publishers ISBN 978 0 940666 30 6 North American Indian Travelling College 1984 Traditional teachings North American Indian Travelling College Oneida Oral History Adapted from Our Traditional Teachings 1984 North American Indian Traveling College Cornwall Island Ontario Milwaukee Public Museum see Christopher Buck 1 April 2015 God amp Apple Pie Religious Myths and Visions of America Educator s International Press p 391 ISBN 978 1 891928 26 0 Robert Brown Anahalihs Great Vines Clifford F Abbott Feb 11 2013 Randy Cornelius Tehahuko tha ed Kayanla ko The Great Law part 1 PDF Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin Archived from the original PDF on Sep 24 2015 Retrieved Sep 25 2015 Robert Brown Anahalihs Great Vines Clifford F Abbott Feb 11 2013 Randy Cornelius Tehahuko tha ed Kayanla ko The Great Law part 2 PDF Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin Archived from the original PDF on Sep 24 2015 Retrieved Sep 25 2015 by Demus Elm An Oneida Account of Events Antecedant to the Establishment of the Great Peace unpublished accounts from 1950 and 1971 translated by Floyd Lounsbury circa 1990s preparing for publication according to Woodbury in 1992 but Lounsbury died in 1998 Underwood Paula Franklin Listens When I Speak published by A Tribe of Two Press 1997 J N B Hewitt Chief John Buck April 1892 Legend of the Founding of the Iroquois League American Anthropologist Washington D C American Anthropological Association of Washington 5 2 131 148 doi 10 1525 aa 1892 5 2 02a00030 Retrieved Sep 25 2015 John Arthur Gibson J N B Hewitt 2012 1899 1900 Abram Charles John Buck Sr Joshua Buck eds Founding of the League Deganawida tradition Smithsonian Retrieved Sep 25 2015 aka John Arthur Gibson Translated by William N Fenton and Simeon Gibson The Deganawidah Legend A Tradition of the Founding of the League of the Five Iroquois Tribes as told to J N B Hewitt ed Abram Charles John Buck Sr and Joshua Buck 1900 1914 from the legend recorded in the 1890s Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Archives 1517C Retrieved Sep 25 2015 Also at American Philosophical Society Library Committee of Chiefs of the Six Nations of the Grand River Reserve presented by Duncan Campbell Scott 1911 Traditional history of the Confederacy of the Six Nations Proceedings and Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada 3 5 2 195 246 Retrieved Sep 25 2015 Committee of Chiefs of the Six Nations of the Grand River Reserve edited by Arthur C Parker Arthur C Parker April 1 1916 The Code of Dekanahwideh together with The Tradition of the origin of the Give Nations League The Constitution of the Five Nations Albany The University of the State of New York pp 14 60 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author1 has generic name help journal ignored help John Arthur Gibson Hanni Woodbury Reginald Henry Harry Webster Alexander Goldenweiser 1992 series editor John D Nichols Associate Editor H C Wolfart eds Concerning the League The Iroquois League Tradition as Dictated in Onondaga by John Arthur Gibson Algonquian and Iroquoian Linguistics ISBN 0 921064 09 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a editor1 has generic name help WILLIAM CANFIELD Utica Editor Dies New York Times Aug 28 1937 Retrieved Sep 25 2015 Several versions online William Walker Canfield Cornplanter Seneca chief 1902 The Legends of the Iroquois A Wessels Company ISBN 9781404751576 William Walker Canfield Cornplanter Seneca chief 1902 The Legends of the Iroquois Source books of American history A Wessels Company William Walker Canfield Cornplanter Seneca chief 1902 The Legends of the Iroquois A Wessels Company Robert S Cox Philip Heslip August 2009 Finding aid for John Adlum Papers 1794 1808 Manuscripts Division William L Clements Library University of Michigan Retrieved Sep 25 2015 Couple versions online Deloe B Kittle Arthur Caswell Parker 1923 The Origin of the Long House In Frank H Severance ed Seneca Myths and Folk Tales Buffalo Historical Society Publications Vol 27 Buffalo Historical Society pp 403 8 Deloe B Kittle Arthur Caswell Parker 1989 1923 The Origin of the Long House Seneca Myths and Folk Tales U of Nebraska Press pp 403 6 ISBN 0 8032 8723 2 MacIntyre James R 2015 Tuscorora In Danver S L ed Native Peoples of the World An Encyclopedia of Groups Cultures and Contemporary Issues Taylor amp Francis p 501 ISBN 978 1 317 46400 6 Retrieved 28 June 2018 Ray C 2014 The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture Volume 6 Ethnicity University of North Carolina Press p 243 ISBN 978 1 4696 1658 2 Retrieved 28 June 2018 a couple version published Edmund Wilson Leon Edel Wallace Mad Bear Anderson 1 November 1987 Deganawida s Prophecy The Fifties From Notebooks and Diaries of the Period Farrar Straus and Giroux pp 567 581 ISBN 978 0 374 52066 3 Chiokoyhikoy Robert Griffin Donald A Grinde 1997 Apocalypse de Chiokoyhikoy Chef des Iroquois Presses Universite Laval pp 192 194 ISBN 978 2 7637 7449 7 Edmund Wilson 1959 Apologies to the Iroquois Syracuse University Press p 21 ISBN 978 0 8156 2564 3 a b Bruce E Johansen Donald A Grinde Jr 1991 Exemplar of liberty native America and the evolution of democracy Los Angeles American Indian Studies Center University of California Los Angeles ISBN 0 935626 35 2 Armstrong VI 1971 I Have Spoken American History Through the Voices of the Indians Swallow Press p 14 ISBN 0 8040 0530 3 The New Republic owed a substantial debt to its Native American heritage for its distinctive American identity for the concept of federalism for the practice of state legislatures appointing senators and for providing a model for unity without imperialism across a vast geographic expanse p 215 On the Origins of America s Great Seal and Its Attributes Eagle Arrows Olive Branch www leidenartsinsocietyblog nl 2019 07 04 Retrieved 2023 06 22 Mee CL 1987 The Genius of the People New York Harper amp Row p 237 ISBN 0 06 015702 X H Con Res 331 October 21 1988 PDF United States Senate Retrieved 2008 11 23 Shannon TJ 2000 Indians and Colonists at the Crossroads of Empire The Albany Congress of 1754 Ithaca Cornell University Press pp 6 8 ISBN 0 8014 8818 4 Tooker E 1990 The United States Constitution and the Iroquois League In Clifton JA ed The Invented Indian cultural fictions and government policies New Brunswick N J U S A Transaction Publishers pp 107 128 ISBN 1 56000 745 1 a b Rakove J 2005 11 07 Did the Founding Fathers Really Get Many of Their Ideas of Liberty from the Iroquois George Mason University Retrieved 2011 01 05 Mann Charles 2005 07 04 The Founding Sachems The New York Times New York Payne Samuel B 1996 The Iroquois League the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution The William and Mary Quarterly 53 3 605 620 doi 10 2307 2947207 ISSN 0043 5597 JSTOR 2947207 Starna William A Hamell George R 1996 History and the Burden of Proof The Case of Iroquois Influence on the U S Constitution New York History 77 4 427 452 ISSN 0146 437X JSTOR 23182553 Levy Philip A 1996 Exemplars of Taking Liberties The Iroquois Influence Thesis and the Problem of Evidence The William and Mary Quarterly 53 3 588 604 doi 10 2307 2947206 ISSN 0043 5597 JSTOR 2947206 S2CID 146842153 References editMann Charles C 1491 New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus New York Alfred A Knopf 2005 ISBN 978 1 4000 4006 3Further reading editBuck Christopher 2015 Deganawida the Peacemaker American Writers A Collection of Literary Biographies Farmington Hills MI Cengage Gale XXVI 81 100 Morgan Lewis H 1870 Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Human Family Morgan Lewis H 1904 League of the Ho de no sau nee or Iroquois New York Dodd Mead Parker Arthur C 1916 The constitution of the Five nations Albany The University of the State of New York External links editU S Congress H Con Res 331 A concurrent resolution to acknowledge the contribution of the Iroquois Confederacy of Nations to the development of the United States Constitution and to reaffirm the continuing government to government relationship between Indian tribes and the United States established in the Constitution Text of U S Congressional Statute Iroquois Confederacy and Indian Nations Recognizing Contributions to the United States PDF nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Gayanashagowa The Iroquois Confederacy Our Forgotten National Heritage Archived 2008 08 08 at the Wayback Machine Interview w Dr Donald Grinde Jr The LawGanienkeh Territory Council Fire Onkwehonwe people Exemplar of Liberty Native America and the Evolution of Democracy by Donald Grinde amp Bruce Johansen see esp Chapter 2 for a detailed description of Kaianerekowa or Great Law of Peace at the end of all this all the creators had a celebration to show it really was peace Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Law of Peace amp oldid 1205473927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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