Just as the Iroquois Confederacy had six nations, each nation was made up of different clans. A person's clan is the same as their mother's clan. The members of each clan are all related to each other through their mothers. This is called a matrilineal system. Each clan is represented by a different animal.
There are nine clans, divided into animals from three earth elements: Land, Air & Water.
The land creatures are Deer, Wolf and Bear.
The water creatures are Turtle, Beaver & Eel.
The creatures of the sky are Hawk, Heron & Snipe.
Before the Iroquois Confederacy was created, there were many more clans but after the Peacemaker, only these nine remained.
All of the Six Nations have members from the Bear, Wolf, and Turtle clan while some nations also have members from some or all of the remaining 6 clans. Clans are headed by clan mothers. Their duties include: choosing the chiefs, reminding the chiefs of their duties, giving clan names to children, distributing the goods of those who have died, and meeting obligations to medicine societies. They can remove a chief from office when necessary. The clan system flourishes today among those who follow the traditional system, but most Iroquois of all faiths identify themselves as members of a particular clan. In the traditional government, chiefs are responsible to help those in their clans. The clan mothers appoint the chiefs and evaluate their dedication to those who are yet to come, up to the seventh generation.
Assignment:
Imagine that you have just been hired to create a museum about the Iroquois Confederacy. As museum curators, you and/or your group will be responsible to complete all 4 tasks tasks. The tasks will then be displayed in your museum for your classmates to see on the Padlet link below.
Instructions:
Work together and communicate
Make sure you are doing your part!
Work to resolve disagreements without arguing
Use Google Docs whenever possible to make collaboration easier.
Stay on task
Read all directions carefully
Choose two of the four tasks to showcase in the museum (AKA our classroom Padlet)