Handbook Indians of California

Handbook Indians of California

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETH-NOLOGY BULLETIN 78 HANDBOOK OF THE INDIANS OF CALIFORNIA BY A. L. KROEBER WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1925 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - E E E - | - - - - , I: _ ArA ws-A-,,' HNOLOGY [BuLL. 78 in such a way as to indi- If this was pronounced Lg sound of English "i," ,"chief " and a closer one CHAPTER 19. So the theory that Drake's THE SHIASTAN GROUP. de farther north than has is raised is for historians SHASTAN c.ROUPS: Recognition, 279; the " Sastean" division, 280; possible con ws be favorable to the new nections with non-Shastan groups, 280; the Palaihnihan " division, 282. would have to be made to THE NEW RiVER SHASTA, 282. THE KONOMIHu, 283. THE: (KWANUCHU, 284. as prevalent farther north. SHASTAN GROUPS. equal success seems very sent an almost insuperable RECOGN MTTON. a northerly portion of the terpretation of his voyage The six Shastan languages are, in the light of present knowledge, low is that he touched at the northernmost members of the scattered family designated as noted by his men in the Hokan. As a group they are also one of the most divergent subdi- t have been preserved, at- visions of the family. A tendency to change and specialization has ortherly harbor. A theory penetrated even within the group, nearly all of whose members are ~ristic central Californian so different from one another that some analysis is required before two centuries before white their kinship is perceptible. can not possibly be enter- On older ethnological maps only two languages appear in place of the half dozen now recognized: the Sastean and the Palailhnihan. that Drake summered on The one is the Shasta, the other the Achomawi, but to the former )rth of San Francisco, and were attributed territories subsequently discovered to have held e now attaches. He is as- three other idioms, while under Palaihnihan Atsugewi had been stretch existed in substan- merged into Achomawi. The reason for the long ignoring of the ago, and he has tolerable three languages adjacent to the Shasta is simple: no vocabularies whom the great explorer were recorded, the tribes being numerically insignificant, and in 'oast Miwok. one case on the verge of extinction when the white man came to northern California. Now they have dwindled so far-in fact, to all practical purposes perished-that when we are hungry for any bits of information that would help to untangle the obscure history of these remnants of what may once have been greater peoples, we must content ourselves with brief, broken vocabularies and some (reneral statements about their speakers obtained from the neigh. boring nations. For the long hiding of the identity of the Atsugewi under that of the Achomawi no such valid reason exists, since the Atsugewi people survive to-day to the number of several hundred. Nor was a simi- larity of the two tongues the cause of the fault. Kindred, indeed, they are, in the sense and measure that French and Spanish are related; but they are also at least as different. Idioms in which I 279 a V_ 280 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BUL>L. 78 K 110E 13 : RI HANDBOOE corresponds to n, w to p, p to kA,and rn to r, are not so similar that without historical signi they are confounded by those interested in them. In fact, a bare thougrh an ever-lost know third of the more usual stem words seem to the unaided ear or eye to in fact, another Hoka be common to Achomawi and Atsugewi; and on the pioneer student's so that five groups of th( basis of overlooking trifles, there would have been almost as much this rugged region: the 1 justification for separating Atsugewi from Achomawi and erecting it Chimariko, wedged in into a separate family as for keeping Achomawi and Shasta apart, spread Karok and Shasta as ethnologists did for half a century. What lay at the bottom of of all the Hokan langual this inconsistence was that the Atsugewi live in a region topo- idioms may appear to fo ,graphically tributary to the larger Achomawi habitat; that the two that even the few bits of tribes were in close association and friendly; and that they followed them will suffice to ind very similar customs. No one troubled to make a speech record, Konomihu might prove i native statements minimized the difference, and the situation was New River in Chimariko, conveniently simplified, as compared with what a little inquiry would possible to judge to-day. have revealed as being true. three little peoples the rei Substantially, the Shastan habitat falls into two nearly equal later almost submerged I halves-a western, the old " Sastean," in Klamath drainage, and an into the vicinity; or the eastern, the former " Palaihnihan," in the drainage of the Pit. As stream, the four others of the two systems of waters reach the ocean nearly at the Oregon line and consequent conclusi, and at San Francisco, respectively, the outlook and connections of imagined. It is useless t the two areas were obviously far from identical. a small part even of th, THE " SASTEAN "? D)IVISION. languages has found its v The situation is one of The overwhelming body of people in the eastern or " Sastean " half philologist, and only he, were the Shasta proper or Shastika, on the Klamath River and its rescue. A dozen randoml tributaries above the Karok and below the Klamath-Modoc. They zation of a nation are ahv ran over, also, into the Rogue River headwaters in Oregon. only of the most general Fairly close to them in speech, in fact clearly a later offshoot of words, if only they and t the Shasta themselves and not one of the original divergent branches may, if there are more fu of the general Shastan trunk, were the Okwanuchu, outside the mine with reasonable ass drainage area of the Klamath and in that of the great central valley lines of the national exi of California. They held the heads of the Sacramento and McCloud. history who permits the 4 At the source of Salmon River, an affluent of the Klamath, and sister science philology tc of New River, tributary of the Trinity, which is also an affluent of regarding it as somethir the Klamath, was the little nation which in default of a known native from one of the most pro name has come to be called the New River Shasta. his onlv serviceable instr The third of these decayed Shastan groups, the most divergent, Bearing on the jostling and the earliest to perish completely, were the Konomihu, on the divergent Hokan peoples middle course of Salmon River. and the probability that 'POSSIBLE CONNECTIONS WITH NONSHASTAN GROUPS. slow changes in the ethni It is not without significance that in the same region was another is in this vicinity that fo and distantly allied Hokan, though non-Shastan, tribe that survived bascans, as represented I only in minute proportions at the time of discovery: the Chimariko. Pacific coast branch; the Crowded against each other and into the deep canyons of a jagged erly branch, the Yurok country, the coexistence of these three fragments is certainly not WVintun are the most nor v. il 4, A N0 I l. L-r t - aV/AI / l NOLOGY [BULrL. 78 KRO E BERI HANDBOOK OF INDIANS 01' CALIIFORNIA 281 are not so similar that without historical significance, which the imagination can sense them. In fact, a bare though an ever-lost knowledge forbids it to penetrate. ;he unaided ear or eye to In fact, another Hokan division, the Karok, also lived adjacent, on the pioneer student's so that five groups of the same ultimate origin jostled each other in ve been almost as much this rugged region: the perished New River Shasta, Konomihu, and ,chomawi and erecting it Chimariko, wedged in between the surviving and more broadly mawi and Shasta apart, spread Karok and Shasta. It is quite possible that when comparison iat lay at the bottom of of all the Hokan languages shall have progressed farther, these five live in a region topo- idioms may appear to form a single larger group or subfamily, and ,xi habitat; that the two that even the few bits of knowledge available concerning several of and that they followed them will suffice to indicate a new arrangement for the group: make a speech record, Konomihu might prove to have its nearest congener in Karok, and and the situation was New River in Chimariko, rather than both in Shasta, for all that it is iat a little inquiry would possible to judge to-day. Or such a classification might prove the three little peoples the remnant of one Hokan wave or layer that was into two nearly equal later almost submerged by another that brought Karok and Shasta amath drainage, and an into the vicinity; or the Karok may be the representatives of one Irainage of the Pit. As stream, the four others of a separate one; or still different affiliations early at the Oregon line and consequent conclusions as to origin and movements may be look and connections of imagined. It is useless to speculate at the present time when only ical. a small part even of the scanty recorded material on the several )N. languages has found its way into print. The situation is one of those not infrequently arising in which the istern or " Sastean " half philologist, and only he, can come to the ethnologist's or historian's Klamath River and its rescue. A dozen randomly preserved facts from the history or civili- Klamath-Modoc.

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