Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Pipe bag

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Native American ceremonial item

Apipe bag ortobacco bag is a common item used by someNative American ceremonial people. A pipe bag may be used to carry asacred pipe, such as aChanunpa.

Styles

[edit]

Although styles and sizes vary between Nations, geographical locations, and medicine societies, many have certain elements in common: a long neck of cloth or leather, a rim which is oftenbeaded orquilled, a lower panel, or pouch, also beaded or quilled, and a fringe at the bottom. Some bags are left unadorned.

Many of the more recent bags have a quilled "slat panel" between the pouch and the fringe, while many of the older ones do not.[citation needed]

Examples and symbolism

[edit]
Sioux Quilled Pipe Bagc. 1870, decorated with rare cocoon imagery.[1]
Northern Plains Beaded Pipe Bagc. 1870s

The Sioux Quilled Pipe Bag at left is decorated with quillwork forming flora and fauna, buffalo and caterpillars. The "cocoon" design symbolizes spiritual and physical transformation,[1] and the Sioux spirit Yumni, the whirlwind, responsible for the four directions of the world.[2]

Both the moth, which breaks free of its confining cocoon, and the untamable wind, are viewed as spirits impossible to contain.

Clark Wissler described in his 1907field notes the "whirlwind bug", a creature with spiral grooves that creates smalldust clouds along the ground. By this action, the cloud was thought to confuse the enemy and make him lose his senses.[3] The cocoon above what appears to be the head of the bear may represent the whirlwind phenomena.[4]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abTaylor, Colin (1987) "Wakanyan: Symbols of Power and Ritual of the Teton Sioux".The Canadian Journal of Native Studies, VII, 2 (237-257).
  2. ^Walker, James R. (1917) "The Sun Dance and Other Ceremonies of the Oglala Division of the Teton Dakota" Anthropological Paper, Vol. 16, 2.American Museum of Natural History
  3. ^Wissler, Clark (1902) "Field Notes on the Dakota Indians Collected on Museum Expedition." Ms. 1911 of the American Museum of Natural History, New York
  4. ^Mallery, Garrick1893 "Picture Writing of the American Indians." Tenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington, D.C.

References

[edit]
  • Painter, John W. (2003) "A Window on the Past". Cincinnati: Cincinnati Art Museum. p. 38


Bags and flexiblecontainers
Carried
Worn
Luggage
Postal
Containers
Purses/handbags
Other
Country
and region
Africa
Asia
Oceania
Europe
South America
North America
Religion
Health
Women and smoking
Smoking ban
Country and region
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pipe_bag&oldid=1321187073"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp