The Native Americans and Euro-Americans settlers were more different than similar from one another. THESIS: Both the Native Americans and Euro-Americans have very different lifestyles, cultures, and dissimilar perspectives. Euro-Americans saw themselves as conquers of the civilized world and saw the Native Americans as “savages”. Both Euro-Americans and Native Americans had a different theory about the land; it created problems between the two.
Before the 1860’s the native americans were living in peace until the Colonists attacked. The Western Expansion of 1860-90 greatly affected the lives of Native Americans, due to the powerful role
7. Europeans were Christian. The land was seen as a commodity, women who worked were considered to be abused. Native Americans believed in spirits, supernatural healing powers, and had religious leaders. Native Americans saw land as a common resource rather than a commodity as Europeans did.
The college board’s decision to shift to a consensus perspective more accurately reflects the era of 1491- 1607, because both Europe and North America were homes to complex and diverse societies with their own distinctive cultures. Therefore, each group adopted and improved aspects of each other’s culture, skills and interacted from the beginning. Even though they both had unique and individual ideas and beliefs about gods, they still shared some similarities. Misunderstandings and differences between the Europeans and Native Americans resulted in years of interaction. Each continent was diverse, different and unique on it’s own.
Sharing: Christian Versus Native American Perspective The phrase “Don’t be an Indian giver!” may sound innocent to someone who is not Native American. However, setting aside the racist undertone, that phrase underlines a difference between Native American culture and Christianity about what is considered giving and sharing. The Account of Mary Rowlandson and Other Indian Captivity Narratives was a book that primarily addressed captivity.
European exploration of the West began in 1500 and continued to flourish for over three centuries. While colonizing this new land, Europeans first came into contact with the native peoples. European religious views, gender roles, and land ownership shaped their interactions with Native Americans. The English, for example, practiced Christianity, while the Native Americans possessed a more spiritual and animalistic religion. Native American societies were heavily reliant on women for not only household duties, but also agricultural responsibilities.
Throughout the late 1400’s and the 1500’s, the world experienced many changes due to the discoveries of new lands and peoples that had been never been visited before. The new-found lands of the Americas and exploration of Africa by the Europeans led to new colonies and discoveries in both areas. It also brought different societies and cultures together that had never before communicated, causing conflict in many of these places. While the Europeans treated both the Native Americans and West Africans as inferior people, the early effects they had on the Native Americans were much worse. Beginning in the late 1400’s, many different European explorers started to look for new trade routes in the Eastern Hemisphere in order to gain economic and religious power.
- Religion has long played an important role in society. Native Americans had they’re own religion, more of a part of their lives in a non social way. It was applied in gathering, hunting and ceremony's. They often used tools or natural objects to perform rituals. Sacrifices were often too, in some tribes.
Native Americans had influenced many areas of American living. They wanted to bring cultures together with peace. They made music to heal pain and reduce tension between cultures. Many religious violence have a cultural and political component. Factors the perpetrate cycles of religious violence is punishment for those who were to be evil, those who showed acts of violence that are religious, and problems between religious
Compare and Contrast the Native American Culture Introduction The Native Americans were the original owners of the United States of America. However, due to the population increase in Europe, the European migrated to America in seek of land for farming, settlement, and spread their religion (Desai, n.p). The two communities lived together and interacted with each other.
Assignment #02: Section A: Of the questions that have been raised, Native Americans should be recognized more for founding our society today, should be taught about more thoroughly and accurately, and shouldn’t be assumed to be savages or uneducated as we normally presume them to have been. I learned many new things from the “The New World” chapter from the American Yawp textbook. Among these things, I learned about the different ways the Native Americans thought about their creation, that the males married into the female’s families instead of vice versa, and how the Spaniards incorporated the Native Americans into their colonial lives. The Native Americans had many stories about how they were created, ranging from a bald eagle forming them to emerging from caves. Secondly, I found it interesting that, unlike in our culture today, men married into a woman’s family to gain influence in society.
America became a world of blended culture, intertwined with the constant battle of cultural domination from the colonists. Over time, Native Americans formed a dependency on Europeans from trading, lost most of their population from disease or war that forced many tribes to seek refuge with the colonists in exchange for adopting their new cultural ideals and beliefs. As a result, the gain of new ideas among native tribes led to the loss of old traditions and ideas founded by Native American ancestors. To pursue new ideas, old ones have to be left behind. As Colonists promoted their new ideas, they had to suppress Native Americans' old ideas that are even seen today where most Native Americans' roles and experiences are only briefly mentioned in historical records.
Native Americans flourished in North America, but over time white settlers came and started invading their territory. Native Americans were constantly being thrown and pushed off their land. Sorrowfully this continued as the Americans looked for new opportunities and land in the West. When the whites came to the west, it changed the Native American’s lives forever. The Native Americans had to adapt to the whites, which was difficult for them.
Religion and Colonization In the New World was oportunity for all Europe, Spaniards, English, Portuguese, and even French. This new continent was able do give them gold, silver, wood, even a commercial trade route to China, or just an equality on their societies. But there was too many ways to atach the success way, those ways were in fact leaded by the religion.
The religious experience of the Native Americans can best be described as oppressive and very similar to the experience the slaves had. As the colonists began to invade their lands and try to convert the Natives from their own rituals, the Natives were able to adapt their religious beliefs in order to try and form a connection with the colonists. The current day lack of Native American religion could partially be due to the fact that they were so lenient with being taught and forced to practice a religion that did not mirror their actual beliefs. The overall journey of the Native Americans took them through defining religion and finding an actual word to mean religion, through being taught the traditions and religion of the Europeans, and,