tha harvest dance
It was used in rituals and ceremonies.
There were a great many main jobs that the Pharaoh of Egypt was responsible for. This individual governed the people. (1) Control the Bureaucracy, (2) Protect the Subjects from Threats - foreign and domestic, and (3) Ritual Ceremonies designed to ensure prosperity.
The Eora people were the hunter-fisher-gatherers of the Sydney coastal basin. As coastal dwellers, they were skilled at harvesting food from the sea. As well as skilfully spearing fish and turtles from the sea, they developed fish traps which they used to herd fish into coastal waterways for easy capture. They navigated the coastal waterways in canoes cut from tree bark. The women were the gatherers, collecting eggs, fruits, nuts and berries. Rules were determined by women elders, but enforced by the male elders. Young boys were initiated in complex ceremonies in which they were scarred by cicatrices on their chest or back which then identified them as belonging to a particular clan. Corroborees celebrated initiations, or told of hunting exploits.
One who finds honor in the circle of birth, infancy, childhood, youth maturity and old age, can also find honor in death. Although the body undergoes physical transformations, the Spirit remains unchanged. When the body is no longer viable the spirit ascends into another realm. Separation from the body does not necessarily mean that all ties to people are disconnected. Two ceremonies, the Wake and Round Dance illustrate the Cree philosophy of death and its relationship between us and Spirits. The ceremony for delivering the body back to Mother Earth as well as the ceremony to commune with Spirits who have shed the body constitute part of the bereavement and healing process.
In ancient China, during the Han dynasty, there were educated degree-holders (such as xiucai, juren, or jinshi) and who would enjoy special privileges of dress, law and social position.As no more than 5% of them could become officials, the majority of the scholar-gentry stayed in local villages or cities as social leaders. The scholar-gentry carried out social welfare measures, taught in private schools, helped decide minor legal disputes, supervised community projects, maintained local law and order, conducted Confucian ceremonies, assisted in the government's collection of taxes, and preached Confucian moral teachings.As a class, these scholars represented morality and virtue. Although they received no official salary and were not government officials, their contributions and cooperation were much needed by the district magistrate in governing local areas.During the Han Dynasty, the Chinese government adopted Confucianism as their ideology more than anything. Confucius believed that rule should be by a class of "scholars" who were able to pass an exam, which would be open to everybody. these people were called scholar gentries.The poor were unable to afford the eduaction neede for the difficult exam and the rich were able to basically cheat their way through.
they have ceremonies when ppl died over the year
what do the gabrielino use to make things
Gabrielino, or Tongva, huts are called kiches.
The Gabrielino (Tongva) men wore skirts that were made out of woven bark or deer skin. The women also wore skirts made out of deer skin or cloth from furry animals (such as, deer skin, rabbit fur or bird skin). In ceremonies, their clothing are very bright with decorations such as feathers, furs, beads, etc.
Gabrielino High School was created in 1994.
The Gabrielino-Tongva Tribe ("Gabrielino Tribe"). is a state-recognized tribe in California. with well-documented ancestral ties to Los Angeles County.
Gabrielino High School's motto is 'Pride, Tradition, Honor'.
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Bruce W. Miller has written: 'The Gabrielino' -- subject(s): Gabrielino Indians
By shooting and hunting
hut
yes