Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-fwgfc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-11T04:27:30.688Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Calumet Ceremony in the Southeast and Its Archaeological Manifestations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Ian W. Brown*
Affiliation:
Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138

Abstract

An extremely important institution among the Indians of the Southeast in the historic period, the calumet ceremony was first recognized by French adventurers in the Upper Mississippi Valley and Great Lakes region in the mid-seventeenth century. By the end of the century the ceremony was universal among Lower Mississippi Valley groups. A major focus of calumet literature in recent years has been on the timing of and the mechanism for the introduction of this ceremony in the Eastern Woodlands. Some have argued for prehistoric roots, while others have supported a historic development. A study of the spatiotemporal distribution of catlinite pipes is one way to address these issues, because such pipes are the principal archaeological expression of the ceremony. This paper focuses on the two most common catlinite pipe forms: disk pipes and elbow pipes. Overall, both forms are rare in the Southeast, but relatively they are widespread. The disk type has the greatest range and is also the earlier of the two forms, primarily being found during the protohistoric period. It is proposed here, however, that calumet introduction was coincident with the elbow catlinite form that first appeared in the Southeast in the mid-to-late seventeenth century. It is believed that calumet ceremonialism was spreading into the southern portion of the Lower Mississippi Valley at about the same time as the first French explorers were entering the area from the north.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Reference Cited

Barber, E. A. 1883 Catlinite : Its Antiquity as a Material for Tobacco Pipes. American Naturalist 17 : 745764.Google Scholar
Bartram, W. 1853 Observations on the Creek and Cherokee Indians, by William Bartram 1789, with Prefatory and Supplementary Notes by E. G. Squier. Transactions of the American Ethnological Society Vol. 3, Pt. 1, Article 1. George P. Putnam, New York.Google Scholar
Bell, R. E. 1984 Protohistoric Wichita. In Prehistory of Oklahoma, edited by Bell, R. E., pp. 363-378. Academic Press, Orlando.Google Scholar
Blakeslee, D. J. 1975 The Plains Interband Trade System : An Ethnohistoric and Archaeological Investigation. Unpublished Ph. D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.Google Scholar
Blakeslee, D. J. 1981 The Origin and Spread of the Calumet Ceremony. American Antiquity 46 : 759768.Google Scholar
Bourne, E. G. (editor) 1904 Narratives of the Career of Hernando DeSoto. 2 vols. A. S. Barnes, New York.Google Scholar
Brain, J. P. 1975 The Archaeology of the Tunica (cont'd) : Trial on the Yazoo. National Geographic Society Research Report of Investigations Conducted by the Lower Mississippi Survey, Summer 1974 (NGS Grant No. 1340). Lower Mississippi Survey files, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Brain, J. P. 1976 From the Words of the Living : The Indian Speaks. In Clues to America's Past, edited by Breeden, R. L., pp. 75-103. National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Brain, J. P. 1979 Tunica Treasure. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Vol. 71. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Brain, J. P. 1988 Tunica Archaeology. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Vol. 78. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Brown, I. W. 1976 The Portland Site (22-M-12), an Early Eighteenth Century Historic Site in Warren County, Mississippi. Mississippi Archaeology 11(1) : 211.Google Scholar
Brown, I. W. 1979 Early 18th Century French-Indian Culture Contact in the Yazoo Bluffs Region of the Lower Mississippi Valley. Unpublished Ph. D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island.Google Scholar
Brown, I. W. 1985 Natchez Indian Archaeology : Culture Change and Stability in the Lower Mississippi Valley. Archaeological Report No. 15. Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Jackson.Google Scholar
Catlin, G. 1841 Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Condition of the North American Indians. 2 vols. Wiley and Putnam, New York.Google Scholar
Chapman, C. H. 1980 The Archaeology of Missouri, II. University of Missouri Press, Columbia.Google Scholar
Charlevoix, P. F. X. 1902 History and General Description of New France. 6 vols. Translated and edited by Shea, J. G.. Francis Edwards, London.Google Scholar
Cox, I. J. (editor) 1905 The Journeys of Rene Robert Cavelier Sieur DeLa Salle. 2 vols. A. S. Barnes, New York.Google Scholar
Delanglez, J. 1935 The French Jesuits in Lower Louisiana (1700-1763). Loyola University Press, New Orleans.Google Scholar
Delanglez, J. 1937 A Louisiana Poet-historian : Dumont dit Montigny. Mid-America 19 : 3149.Google Scholar
DeVoto, B. (editor) 1953 The Journals of Lewis and Clark. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, and Riverside Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Dowd, J. T., and Broster, J. B. 1972 Cockrills Bend Site 17c. Journal 1 : 8-19. Southeastern Indian Antiquities Survey, Nashville.Google Scholar
Montigny, Dumont de 1753 Memoires historiques sur la Louisiane. 2 vols. Paris.Google Scholar
Erickson, C. S. 1966 Catlinite. Central States Archaeological Journal 13 : 132136.Google Scholar
Ewers, J. C. 1963 Blackfoot Indian Pipes and Pipemaking. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 186 (64) : 29-60. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Ewers, J. C. 1968 The Indian Trade of the Upper Missouri Before Lewis and Clark. In Indian Life on the Upper Missouri, by Ewers, J. C., pp. 14-33. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman. Originally published 1954, The Missouri Historical Society Bulletin 10(4). St. Louis.Google Scholar
Ewers, J. C. 1979 Indian Art in Pipestone; George Catlin 's Portfolio in the British Museum. British Museum Publications, London, and Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Ewers, J. C. 1986 Plains Indian Sculpture : A Traditional Art from America's Heartland. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Fenton, W. N. 1953 The Iroquois Eagle Dance : An Offshoot of the Calumet Dance. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 156. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
French, B. F. (editor) 1869 Historical Collections of Louisiana and Florida. J. Sabin & Sons, New York.Google Scholar
Fundaburk, E. L., and Foreman, M. D. F. 1957 Sun Circles and Human Hands. Luverne, Alabama.Google Scholar
Good, M. E. 1972 Guebert Site : An 18th Century Historic Kaskaskia Indian Village in Randolph County, Illinois. Memoir No. 2. Central States Archaeological Societies, Wood River, Illinois.Google Scholar
Hall, R. L. 1977 An Anthropocentric Perspective for Eastern United States Prehistory. American Antiquity 42 : 499518.Google Scholar
Hall, R. L. 1983 The Evolution of the Calumet-pipe. In Prairie Archaeology : Papers in Honor of David A. Baerreis, edited by Gibbon, G. E., pp. 37-52. Publications in Anthropology No. 3. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.Google Scholar
Hall, R. L. 1987 Calumet Ceremonialism, Mourning Ritual, and Mechanisms of Inter-tribal Trade. In Mirror and Metaphor : Material and Social Construction of Reality, edited by Ingersoll, D. W. Jr., and Bronitsky, G., pp. 31-42. University Press of America, Lanham, Maryland.Google Scholar
Hamilton, H. W. 1952 The Spiro Mound. The Missouri Archaeologist Vol. 14. Missouri Archaeological Society, Columbia.Google Scholar
Hamilton, H. W. 1967 Tobacco Pipes of the Missouri Indians. Memoir No. 5. Missouri Archaeological Society, Columbia.Google Scholar
Henning, D. R. 1970 Development and Interrelationships ofOneota Culture in the Lower Missouri River Valley. The Missouri Archaeologist Vol. 32. Missouri Archaeological Society, Columbia.Google Scholar
Heye, G. G., Hodge, F. W., and Pepper, G. H. 1918 The Nacoochee Mound in Georgia. Contributions from the Museum of the American Indian Vol. 4, No. 3. Heye Foundation, New York.Google Scholar
Hiller, W. R. 1939 History and Mythology of the Red Pipestone Quarries. The Minnesota Archaeologist 5(1) : 920.Google Scholar
Holmes, W. H. 1919 Handbook of Aboriginal American Antiquities, pt. 1. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 60. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Hood, V. P., and Ball, D. B. 1974 Rejoinder to Rich and Jolly's “A Catlinite Pendant from East Tennessee. ” Tennessee Archaeologist 30 : 132137.Google Scholar
Jolly, F. Ill 1969 Evidence of Aboriginal Trade in Late Prehistoric Times. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 15 : 4147.Google Scholar
Jolly, F. Ill 1973 A Catlinite Disk Pipe and Associated Vessels from Lowland Eastern Arkansas. The Arkansas Archeologist 14 : 112.Google Scholar
Krebs, W. P., Futato, P., Futato, E. M., and Knight, V. J. Jr. 1986 Ten Thousand Years of Alabama Prehistory : A Pictorial Resume. Bulletin No. 8. Alabama State Museum of Natural History, University.Google Scholar
Lankford, G. E. III 1984 Saying Hello to the Timucua. Mid-America Folklore 12 : 723.Google Scholar
LePage du Pratz, A. S. 1758 Histoire de la Louisiane. 3 vols. Paris.Google Scholar
LeSueur, J. 1952 History of the Calumet and of the Dance. Contributions from the Museum of the American Indian Vol. 12, No. 5. Heye Foundation, New York.Google Scholar
Lewis, T. M. N. „ and Kneberg, M. 1946 Hiwasee Island : An Archaeological Account of Four Tennessee Indian Peoples. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Lilly, E. 1937 Prehistoric Antiquities of Indiana. Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis.Google Scholar
McGuire, J. D. 1899 Pipes and Smoking Customs of the American Aborigines Based on Material in the U. S. National Museum. Annual Report of the U. S. National Museum for 1897, pp. 351-645. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
McKusick, M., and Slack, C. 1962 Historic Sauk Indian Art and Technology. Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society Vol. 12, No. 1. Iowa City.Google Scholar
McWilliams, R. G. 1953 Flew de Lys and Calumet. Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge.Google Scholar
McWilliams, R. G. (translator and editor) 1981 Iberville's Gulf Journals. The University of Alabama Press, University.Google Scholar
Margry, P. 1879-1888 Mimoires et documents pour servir a I'histoire des origines francaises des pays d'outre-mer, decouvertes et etablissements des franqais dans I'ouest et dans le sud de I' Amerique septentrionale (1614-1698). 6 vols. Maisonneuve, Libraires-editeurs, Paris.Google Scholar
Mason, R. J. 1986 Rock Island : Historical Indian Archaeology in the Northern Lake Michigan Basin. Special Paper No. 6. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio.Google Scholar
Mellown, R. O. 1976 The Art of the Alabama Indians. University of Alabama Art Gallery, University.Google Scholar
Mereness, N. D. (editor) 1916 Travels in the American Colonies. Macmillan, New York.Google Scholar
Mooney, J. 1900 Myths of the Cherokee. Bureau of American Ethnology, Annual Report, 1897-1898, pt. 1, pp. 3-576. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Moore, C. B. 1911 Some Aboriginal Sites on Mississippi River. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 14 : 366-480. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Morse, D. F. (editor) 1973 Nodena : An Account of 75 Years of Archeological Investigation in Southeast Mississippi County, Arkansas. Research Series No. 4. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville.Google Scholar
Morse, D. F., and Morse, P. A. 1983 Archaeology of the Central Mississippi Valley. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Murray, R. A. 1962 A Brief Survey of the Pipes and Smoking Customs of the Indians of the Northern Plains. The Minnesota Archaeologist 24(1) : 441.Google Scholar
Nairne, T. 1708 Capt. Thomas Nairne's Journalls to the Chicasaw and Talapoosies. Additional Ms. 42, 559. British Library, London.Google Scholar
Neitzel, R. S. 1965 Archeology of the Fatherland Site : The Grand Village of the Natchez. Anthropological Papers Vol. 51, Pt. 1. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Rice, O. L. Jr., 1974 A Catlinite Disk Pipe Find : Salvage Archaeology at 40MR12. Central States Archaeological Journal 21 : 162170.Google Scholar
Rich, J., and Jolly, F. III 1973 A Catlinite Pendant from East Tennessee. Tennessee Archaeologist 29 : 5862.Google Scholar
Rich, J., and Jolly, F. III 1975 Reply to Hood and Ball's Rejoinder of “A Catlinite Pendant from East Tennessee.” Tennessee Archaeologist 31 : 210.Google Scholar
Ronda, J. P. 1984 Lewis and Clark among the Indians. University of Nebraska, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Rowland, D., and Sanders, A. G. (editors and translators) 1927 Mississippi Provincial Archives, 1729-1740, French Dominion, vol. 1. Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Jackson.Google Scholar
Salter, A. H. 1977 Catlinite Calumets : Artifactual Clues to Late Prehistoric and Historic Interactions in Eastern North America. Unpublished Honor's thesis, Department of Anthropology, Harvard College, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Sigstad, J. S. 1968 The Catlinite Age and Distribution Project. Museum Graphic 20(3) : 3-6, 11.Google Scholar
Springer, J. W. 1981 An Ethnohistoric Study of the Smoking Complex in Eastern North America. Ethnohistory 28 : 217235.Google Scholar
Swanton, J. R. 1911 Indian Tribes of the Lower Mississippi Valley and Adjacent Coast of the Gulf of Mexico. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 43. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Swanton, J. R. 1918 An Early Account of the Choctaw Indians. Memoirs of the American Anthropological Association Vol. 5, No. 2. New Era Printing, Lancaster, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Swanton, J. R. 1946 The Indians of the Southeastern United States. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 137. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Thruston, G. P. 1890 The Antiquities of Tennessee and the Adjacent States and the State of Aboriginal Society in the Scale of Civilization Represented by Them : A Series of Historical and Ethnological Studies. Robert Clarke, Cincinnati.Google Scholar
Thwaites, R. G. (editor) 1888 Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, vol. 11. Democrat Printing, Madison, Wisconsin.Google Scholar
Thwaites, R. G. (editor) 1896-1901 The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents : Travels and Explorations of the Jesuit Missionaries in New France, 1610-1791. 73 vols. The Burrows Brothers, Cleveland.Google Scholar
Thwaites, R. G. (editor) 1904-1905 Original Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806. 7 vols, and atlas. Dodd, Mead, New York.Google Scholar
Turnbaugh, W. A. 1975 Tobacco, Pipes, Smoking and Rituals among the Indians of the Northeast. Quarterly Bulletin of the Archeological Society of Virginia 30 : 5971.Google Scholar
Turnbaugh, W. A. 1977 Elements of Nativistic Pipe Ceremonialism in the Post-contact Northeast. Pennsylvania Archaeologist 47(4) : 17.Google Scholar
Turnbaugh, W. A. 1979 Calumet Ceremonialism as a Nativistic Response. American Antiquity 44 : 685691.Google Scholar
Turnbaugh, W. A. 1984 Cloudblowers and Calumets. In Plains Indian Seminar in Honor of Dr. John C. Ewers, edited by Horse Capture, G. P. and Ball, G., pp. 54-72. Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody, Wyoming.Google Scholar
Wedel, M. M. 1959 Oneota Sites on the Upper Iowa River. The Missouri Archaeologist Vol. 21, Nos. 2-4. Missouri Archaeological Society, Columbia.Google Scholar
Wedel, W. R. 1936 An Introduction to Pawnee Archaeology. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 112. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
West, G. A. 1905 The Aboriginal Pipes of Wisconsin. The Wisconsin Archeologist Vol. 4, Nos. 3-4. Democrat Printing, Madison, Wisconsin.Google Scholar
West, G. A. 1934 Tobacco, Pipes and Smoking Customs of the American Indians. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee Vol. 17, 2 Pts. Milwaukee.Google Scholar
Willey, G. R. 1966 An Introduction to American Archaeology : North and Middle America. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Williams, S. C. (editor) 1948 Lieut. Henry Timberlake's Memoirs, 1756-1765. Continental Book, Marietta, Georgia. Originally published 1927, Watauga Press, Johnson City, Tennessee.Google Scholar
Williams, S. 1980 Armorel : A Very Late Phase in the Lower Mississippi Valley. Southeastern Archaeological Conference Bulletin 22 : 105110.Google Scholar
Wissler, C. 1927 North American Indians of the Plains. Handbook Series No. 1. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Wood, W. R. 1980 Plains Trade in Prehistoric and Protohistoric Intertribal Relations. In Anthropology on the Great Plains, edited by Wood, W. R. and Liberty, M., pp. 98-109. University of Nebraska, Lincoln.Google Scholar