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Southeastern Ceremonial Complex

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Regional similarity of Mississippian cultures
A map of the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex and some of its associated sites

Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (formerlySouthern Cult,Southern Death Cult orBuzzard Cult[1][2]), abbreviatedS.E.C.C., is the name given by modern scholars to the regional stylistic similarity ofartifacts,iconography,ceremonies, andmythology of theMississippian culture. It coincided with their adoption ofmaize agriculture andchiefdom-level complex social organization from 1200 to 1650 CE.[3][4]

Due to some similarities between S.E.C.C. and contemporaryMesoamerican cultures (i.e., artwork with similar aesthetics or motifs; maize-based agriculture; and the development of sophisticated cities with large pyramidal structures), scholars from the late 1800s to mid-1900s suspected there was a connection between the two locations.[5][6] One hypothesis was that Meso-Americans enslaved by conquistadorTristán de Luna y Arellano (1510–1573) may have spread artistic and religious elements to North America.[7] However, later research indicates the two cultures have no direct links and that their civilizations developed independently.[8]

History of research

[edit]

TheS.E.C.C. was first defined in 1945 by the archaeologistsAntonio Waring andPreston Holder as a series of four lists of traits, which they categorized as theSoutheastern (centered) Ceremonial Complex. Their concept was of a complex of a specific cult manifestation that originated withMuskogean-speaking peoples in the southern United States.[9][10]

Since then scholars have expanded the original definition, while using its trait lists as a foundation for critical analysis of the entire concept.

In 1989 scholars proposed a more archaeologically-based definition for the Mississippian artistic tradition.Jon Muller ofSouthern Illinois University proposes the classification of the complex into fivehorizons, with each as a discrete tradition defined by the origin of specific motifs and ritual objects, and the specific developments in long-distance exchange and political structures.[11]

Description of S.E.C.C.

[edit]

Due to the seemingly rapid spread of S.E.C.C. traits, early scholarship described the S.E.C.C. as "a kind of religious revival in the lower Mississippi Valley" and nearby regions.[12] As of 2004, theories suggest that the complex developed from pre-existing beliefs spread over the midwest and southeast by theHopewell Interaction Sphere from 100 BCE to 500 CE.[4][13]

Other research shows the complex operated as an exchange network. This kind of network may be illustrated by a pair ofshell gorgets whose representation is so similar as to suggest that they were made by the same artist. One was found in southeastMissouri and the other found hundreds of miles away inSpiro Mounds inOklahoma, suggesting the items were used as gifts or exchange across a wide region. Numerous other pairs of extremely similar gorgets serve to link sites across the entire Southeast.[14]

The social organization of the Mississippian culture was based onwarfare, which was represented by an array of motifs and symbols in articles made from costly raw materials, such asconches fromFlorida,copper from theGreat Lakes area and Appalachian Mountains,lead from northernIllinois andIowa, pottery fromTennessee, and stone tools sourced fromKansas,Texas, andsouthern Illinois.[15] Such objects occur inelite burials, together with waraxes,maces, and other weapons. These warrior symbols occur alongside other artifacts, which bear cosmic imagery depictinganimals,humans, andlegendary creatures. This symbolic imagery bound together warfare,cosmology, and nobility into a coherent whole. Some of these categories of artifacts were used as markers of chiefly office, which varied from one location to another. The term Southeast Ceremonial Complex refers to a complex, highly variable set of religious mechanisms that supported the authority of localchiefs.[16]

Mississippian Ideological Interaction Sphere horizons

[edit]
HorizonsDatesMarkers
Developmental Cult Period900 - 1150Long-nosed god shell and copper masks, and "square cross" symbol appears
Southern Cult Period1250 - 1350Apogee of the horizon, bi-lobed arrows, striped pole, baton or mace, fringed apron,chunkey player, andogee appear
Attenuated Cult Period1350 - 1450Trade networks break down; motifs previously on exotic materials begin to appear on pottery and other local products
Post Southern Cult Period1450 – 1550Rise of a large number of regional artistic traditions that manifest distinct stylistic differences
Historic Period1550 onwardTermination of the ideological traditions, as well as the complex; rise of tribal societies of the European contact period


With the redefinition of the complex, some scholars have suggested choosing a new name to exemplify the new understanding of the large body of art symbols classified as the S.E.C.C. Participants of a decade-long series of conferences held atTexas State University have proposed the terms"Mississippian Ideological Interaction Sphere" or"M.I.I.S." and"Mississippian Art and Ceremonial Complex" or"M.A.C.C." The major expression of the complex developed at theCahokia site and is known as the Braden Style; it corresponds with the Southern Cult Period horizon defined by Muller. Other regional styles developed as a result of the fusion of ideas borrowed from the Braden Style and pre-existing local expressions of post-Hopewellian traditions.[4][13]

Projected development

[edit]

Projected development of Mississippian Art and Ceremonial Complex (M.A.C.C.) styles

Braden styleBirger figurine from Cahokia
Craig styleshell gorget from Spiro
Hightower style gorget from Etowah
Hemphill style stone palette from Moundville
Classic Braden
Cahokia
Late Braden
Cahokia
Late Braden
Hemphill
Moundville
Craig A
Spiro
Craig B
Spiro
Craig C
Spiro
Hightower
Etowah

As the major centers, such as Cahokia, collapsed and the trade networks broke down, the regional styles diverged more from theBraden Style and from each other. During the ensuing centuries, the local traditions diverged into the religious beliefs and cosmologies of the different historic tribes known to exist at the time of European contact.

Cosmology

[edit]
The Cedar Tree Axis Mundi
The Striped Pole Axis Mundi

Most S.E.C.C. imagery focuses oncosmology and the supernatural beings who inhabit the cosmos. The cosmological map encompassed real, knowable locations, whether in this world or the supernatural reality of the Otherworld. S.E.C.C. iconography portrayed the cosmos in three levels. The Above World or Overworld, was the home of theThunderers, the Sun, Moon, and Morning Star orRed Horn /"He Who Wears Human Heads For Earrings" and represented Order and Stability. The Middle World was the Earth that humans live in. The Beneath World or Under World was a cold, dark place of Chaos that was home to theUnderwater Panther and Corn Mother or "Old Woman Who Never Dies".

These three worlds were connected by anaxis mundi, usually portrayed as acedar tree or a striped pole reaching from the Under World to the Over World. Each of the three levels also was believed to have its own sub-levels. Deeply ingrained in the world view was the concept ofduality and opposition. The beings of the Upper and Under realms were in constant opposition to each other. Ritual and ceremony were the means by which these powerful forces could be accessed and harnessed.[4]

Motifs

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Many common motifs in S.E.C.C. artwork are locative symbols that help determine where the action takes place and where the beings originated:[4][13]

MotifImageDescription
Petaloid MotifPetalloid MotifThis motif derives its name from its resemblance to flower petals, but it most likely represents feathers. A Petalloid Motif placed around individuals, objects, or supernatural beings denotes its location as "celestial".
Quincunx orCross in Circle MotifCross in Circle MotifThe Cross in Circle Motif is prevalent in most Native American religions. It hassolar connotations and usually symbolizes the sacred fire that exists in the Middle World. A Cross in Circle Motif combined with a Petaloid Motif symbolized the Above World.
Swastika in Circle MotifSwastika in Circle MotifA Swastika is a variation of the Cross in Circle Motif, symbolizing the creative, generative power of the Underworld.
Forked Eye Surround MotifForked Eye Surround MotifBeings wearing the Forked Eye Surround Motif are understood to reside in the Above World. It is derived from the eye markings of theperegrine falcon.
Eye Surround MotifEye Surround MotifBeings wearing the Eye Surround Motif resided in the Under World.
Ogee MotifOgee MotifThe Ogee Motif symbolized portals into the Underworld. It appears frequently on Under World Deities. It may symbolize caves, may be derived from representations of female genitalia, or may represent the dorsal markings of the copperhead (Agkistrodon contortrix).[17]
Striped-Center-Pole MotifStriped center Pole MotifThe Cedar Tree and Striped Pole Motif represent theAxis Mundi or "world tree", a central axis on which all the worlds rotated and were connected. It would have had alternating bands of red and white. It is often augmented with raccoon skin bundles, Ogee Motifs, and anthropomorphic heads.
Trilobed MotifTrilobed MotifThe Tri-lobed Motif functioned as a serpent marking and may have symbolized a supernatural's ability to travel from the Lower World to the Upper World.
Bi-Lobed Arrow MotifBi-Lobed Arrow MotifThe Bi-Lobed Arrow Motif is often seen in the headdresses of the warriors/birdmen/chunkey players. A complex symbol, it is a graphic representation of a bow and arrow, anatlatl, or possibly aceremonial pipe. In theRed Horn Cycle, Red Horn is also called "He who gets hit with deer lungs", which may be a euphemism or an allusion to the fact that deer lungs with the trachea attached, resemble the graphic depiction of the Bi-Lobed Arrow. It may symbolize kinship and adoption rituals related to social hierarchies. Examples in the form ofMississippian copper plates have been found in many Mississippian culture sites.
TheHand and Eye MotifHand in Eye MotifThe Hand and Eye Motif is a human hand with an eye gazing out from the palm, yet another symbol of deity. It was one of the most common motifs in Mississippian symbolism and may be related to the Ogee Motif, suggesting it represents a portal to the Otherworld.
Mace MotifMace MotifThe Mace Motif usually is associated with the warrior image and may be combined with other motifs, especially the Cross in Circle Motif. It is a graphic representation of a war club orceremonial mace, such as the chipped flint and ground stone versions found throughout the southeast. The mace is also closely linked to the Spirit Birds and may even represent the pars pro toto feather of one of these powerful figures.[18]
Columnella Pendant MotifColumnella Pendant MotifThe Columnella Pendant is a graphic representation of the longitudinal center columnella of awhelk shell. Because of the association of whelk shells with theblack drink ceremony, it is theorized that this symbol is associated with it as well.[19]

Birdman

[edit]
Illustration of a warrior holding a ceremonial flint mace or war club and a severed head

Thefalcon is one of the most conspicuous symbols of the S.E.C.C. It was simultaneously anavatar of warriors and an object of supplication for a lengthy life, healthy family, and a long line of descendants. Its supernatural origin is placed in the Upper World with a pantheon including the Sun, Moon, and Four Stars. He is most often represented on precious materials, sometimes shell, most often on beaten copper. He dances, costumed with great ground-sweeping wings and a raptor-beaked mask. In his raised right hand he holds a club, prepared to strike. In his left he holds rattles fashioned from human skulls.

AtCahokia, the falcon imagery was elaborated in figural expression. It is associated with warfare, high-stakes gaming, and possibly family dynastic ambitions, symbolized by arrow flights and the rising of the pre-dawnmorning star as metaphors for the succession of descendants into the future. Raptor imagery gained prominence during theHopewell period, but attained its peak in the Braden Style of the early Mississippian period. It survived afterward in theRed Horn mythological cycle and native religion of theHo-Chunk (Winnebagos),Osage,Ioway, and other plainsSiouan peoples. In the Braden Style, the Birdman is divided into four categories.

  • Late Braden style Falcon dancer with wings-Mound C, Etowah
    Late Braden style Falcon dancer with wings-Mound C, Etowah
  • Classic Braden style warrior with wings-Mound C, Etowah
    Classic Braden style warrior with wings-Mound C, Etowah
  • Club-wielding wingless warrior-Castalian Springs shell engraving
    Club-wielding wingless warrior-Castalian Springs shell engraving
  • Chunkey player
    Chunkey player
  • Falcon Dancers with wings.
  • Chunkey players / warriors with wings.
  • Club-wielding wingless warriors.
  • Dancing wingless warriors / chunkey players

Various motifs are associated with the Birdman, including the forked eye motif, columnella pendants, mace or club weapons, severed heads,[20]chunkey play (including chunkey stones, striped and broken chunkey sticks), bellows-shaped aprons, and bi-lobed arrow motifs.[4][13][21]

Red Horn and his sons

[edit]

TheRed Horn Mythic Cycle is from theHo Chunk, or Winnebago people. The mythic cycle of Red Horn and his sons has certain analogies with theHero Twins mythic cycle ofMesoamerica.[22] Redhorn was known by many names, including "Morning Star", a reference to his celestial origin, and"He who is Struck with Deer Lungs," a possible reference to the Bi-Lobed Arrow Motif. In the episode associated with this name, Red Horn turns into an arrow to win a race. After winning the race, Redhorn creates heads on his earlobes and makes his hair into a long red braid. Thus he becomes known as"Redhorn" and as"He who has Human Heads as Earlobes".

In another episode, Redhorn and his friends are challenged by the Giants to playball (or possibly chunkey)[23] with their lives staked on the outcome. The best Giant player was a woman with long red hair identical to Redhorn's. The little heads on Redhorn's ears caused her to laugh so much that it interfered with her game and the Giants lost.[13] The Giants lost all the other contests as well. Then they challenged Redhorn and his friends to a wrestling match in which they threw all but Red Horn's friend Turtle. Since Redhorn and his fellow spirits lost two out of the three matches, they were all slain. The two wives of Redhorn were pregnant at the time of his death. The sons born to each have red hair, with the older one having heads where his earlobes should be, and the younger one having heads in place of his nipples. The older brother discovers where the Giants keep the heads of Redhorn and his friends. The two boys use their powers to steal the heads from the Giants, whom they wipe out almost completely. The boys bring back to life Redhorn, Storms as He Walks, and Turtle. In honor of this feat, Turtle and "Storms as He Walks" promise the boys special weapons.

In another episode, the sons of Redhorn decide to go on the warpath. The older brother asks "Storms as He Walks" for the Thunderbirdwar bundle. After some effort, it is produced, but the Thunderbirds demand that it have a case. A friend of the sons of Redhorn offers his own body as its case. The boys take the Thunderbird war bundle and with their followers go on a raid to the other side of the sky.[24]

Many S.E.C.C. images seem to be of Red Horn, his companions, and his sons. The characters in the myth seem to be tied integrally to thepipe ceremony, and its association with kinship and adoption.[25] In fact, the Bi-Lobed Arrow Motif may be a graphic depiction of the calumet.[24] Other images found in S.E.C.C. art show figures withlong-nosed god maskettes on their ears and in place of their nipples.[4][23][26]

Great Serpent

[edit]

TheGreat Serpent (or Horned Serpent) is the most well-known mythological figure from the S.E.C.C. Its roots go back to Hopewell times, if not earlier. It usually is described as horned and winged, although the wings are more an indicator of its celestial origin than an essential form of the creature. In some versions ofShawnee myths, the serpent is described as a multi-headed monster with one green and one red horn, horns being a manifestation or marker of its power. In other myths, it is described as a one-eyed buffalo with one green and one red horn. ThePiasa figure of theMiami was painted on a bluff near present-dayAlton, Illinois. It was described as having the body of a panther, four legs, a human head, an impossibly long tail and horns.

Mishibizhiw, theOjibwaunderwater panther, was a combination ofrattlesnake,cougar,deer, andhawk. Other native peoples also gave descriptions of the being, sometimes now referred to as theSpirit Otter, with the majority seeming to belong to one of two extremes, and a multitude in between.[13]

Distribution of belief

[edit]
Spiro shell design
Winged serpent
Underwater panther
Serpent Mound
Underwater PantherBoth or in between versionsHorned Serpent
WinnebagoDakotaMicmac
OjibwaMandanPassamaquoddy
ArikaraHidatsaPenobscot
IroquoisCheyenneMalecite
OmahaDelawareHuron
MiamiSaukKickapoo
PoncaMenominiCherokee
ShawneeMuskogeeKoasati
NatchezTunicaAlabama
IllinoisMeskwakiCaddo


The Great Serpents, the great denizens of the Underworld, were described as powerful beings who were in constant antagonism with the forces of the Upper World, usually represented by theThunderers (Birdmen or Falcon beings).[4] Although men were to be careful of these beings, they could also be the source of great power. A Shawnee myth tells of the capture and dismemberment ofMsi Kinepikwa. The pieces were distributed to the fivesepts of the tribe, who kept them in their sacred "medicine bundles".[13][27]

Modern rendition of aPiasa painted on a cliff inAlton, Illinois, based partly on 19th century sketches

Artifacts

[edit]

S.E.C.C. motifs have been found on a variety of non-perishable materials, includingmarine shell,ceramics,chert (Duck River cache),carved stone, and copper (Wulfing cache andEtowah plates). Undoubtedly many other materials also were used, but haven't survived the intervening centuries. It may be judged by looking at the remaining artifacts that S.E.C.C. practitioners worked with feathers and designs woven into cloth, practiced body painting, and possiblytattooing, as well as having pierced ears. One surviving painting found on a baked clay floor at theWickliffe Mounds site suggests they also painted designs in and on their dwellings.[28] Paintings displaying S.E.C.C. imagery also have been found in caves, most notablyMud Glyph Cave in Tennessee. Animal images, serpents, and warrior figures occur, as well as winged warriors, horned snakes, stylized birds, maces, and arrows. Their location underneath the Earth probably reflect aspects of Mississippian myth and cosmology concerning the (perhaps sacred) precincts beneath the earth.[29]

MotifImage 1Image 2Image 3Image 4Image 5
Engraved ShellAn engraved shell gorget from the Spiro siteHightower style Birdman gorget, EtowahA shell gorget from the Nodena siteAn engraved shell from the Spiro Site, with a tattooed figureA long-nosed god maskette from the Yokem Mound Group in Pike County, Illinois
CeramicsEffigy head pot from the Nodena siteHuman effigy pot from the Nodena sitePottery from the Fatherland siteA pot from the Nodena site with Horned Serpents in the shape of an ogee motifA piece of mortuary pottery from the Parkin site
StoneCarved stone statues from EtowahAn stone effigy pipe from the Spiro siteA stone palette from the Moundville site, the back is concave and was used as a bowl for mixing paintA ceremonial mace from the Spiro siteA stone bowl from the Moundville site, depicting a crested wood duck
CopperCopper ear spools from the Spiro SiteBilobed arrows-Repousse copper designs from Etowah Mounds GeorgiaReplicas of copper pieces found at the Spiro siteOgee motif-repousse copper plate from the Etowah Sitetwo replica repousse copper plates from Spiro

Sites

[edit]
Two Caddo-style pots with engraved Winged (left) and Horned (right) Serpents,Moundville

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hornerkamp, Nicholas. "Native American Religions Pre-Contact Period". In Hill, Samuel S.; Lippy, Charles H.; Wilson, Charles Reagan (eds.).Encyclopedia of Religion in the South. pp. 542–545.
  2. ^Griffin, John Wallace. “Historic Artifacts and the ‘Buzzard Cult’ in Florida.” The Florida Historical Quarterly, vol. 24, no. 4, 1946, pp. 295–301. JSTOR,http://www.jstor.org/stable/30138608. Accessed 3 Mar. 2023.
  3. ^muller."Connections". Archived fromthe original on 2006-09-14.
  4. ^abcdefghTownsend, Richard F., and Robert V. Sharp, eds. (2004).Hero, Hawk, and Open Hand.The Art Institute of Chicago andYale University Press.ISBN 978-0-300-10601-5.{{cite book}}:|first= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^Krieger, A.D. (1945)"An Inquiry into Supposed Mexican Influences on a Prehistoric 'Cult' In the Southern United States".American Anthropologist, 47: 483-515. doi:10.1525/aa.1945.47.4.02a00020
  6. ^Scott Weidensaul (2012).The First Frontier: The Forgotten History of Struggle, Savagery, and Endurance in Early America. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, p. 55
  7. ^Waring, A. (1945). The De Luna Expedition and Southeastern Ceremonial. American Antiquity, 11(1), 57-58. doi:10.2307/275531
  8. ^F. Kent Reilly; James Garber, eds. (2007).Ancient Objects and Sacred Realms.University of Texas Press.ISBN 978-0-292-71347-5.
  9. ^Waring, A.J. Jr. (1968). "The Southeastern Cult and Muskogean Ceremonial". In Williams, S. (ed.).The Waring Papers: The Collected Work of Antonio J. Waring. Harvard University. pp. 30–69.
  10. ^Waring, A.J. Jr. (1945)."A prehistoric ceremonial complex in the Southeastern United States".American Anthropologist.47 (1):1–34.doi:10.1525/aa.1945.47.1.02a00020.
  11. ^Muller, Jon (1989). "The Southern Cult". In Galloway, Patricia (ed.).The Southeastern Ceremonial Complex, Artifacts and Analysis:The Cottonlandia Conference. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 11–26.
  12. ^Nero, Robert W. "Prehistoric Indian Petroglyph." Blue Jay 16.1 (1958).
  13. ^abcdefgF. Kent Reilly; James Garber, eds. (2007).Ancient Objects and Sacred Realms.University of Texas Press. pp. 29–34.ISBN 978-0-292-71347-5.
  14. ^Muller."Connections". Archived fromthe original on 2006-09-14.
  15. ^"Spiro Mounds-A Ceremonial Center of the Southern Cult". Archived fromthe original on June 11, 2011. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2013.
  16. ^"The Late Woodland Period". Archived fromthe original on February 18, 2007. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2013.
  17. ^Sharp, Robert V. (2013),Middle Cumberland Female Effigies and the Portal to the Beneath World, retrieved2018-01-21
  18. ^Butterfield, Valerie (2018)."The Mace and the Spirit Bird: Examining Images and Referents within Mississippian Iconography".Illinois Archaeology.30:1–23. Retrieved26 July 2021.
  19. ^Hudson, Charles M. (1979).Black Drink. University of Georgia Press. pp. 83–112.
  20. ^James A. Brown and David H. Dye (2007).The Taking and Displaying of Human Body Parts as Trophies by Amerindians. Springer US.ISBN 978-0-387-48300-9.
  21. ^Lake Jackson Mounds reveal remnants of thriving culture
  22. ^Power, Susan (2004).Early Art of the Southeastern Indians-Feathered Serpents and Winged Beings.University of Georgia Press. p. 158.ISBN 978-0-8203-2501-9.
  23. ^abPauketat, Timothy R. (2004).Ancient Cahokia and the Mississippians.Cambridge University Press.ISBN 978-0-521-52066-9.
  24. ^ab"The Red Horn Cycle". RetrievedJanuary 16, 2015.
  25. ^Duncan, James R; Diaz-Granados, Carol (2000)."Of Masks and Myths".Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology. Retrieved2008-09-13.
  26. ^Staeck, John P. (1994)."Archaeology, Ethnicity, and Oral Tradition-Chapter 6". Archived fromthe original on 2009-07-26. Retrieved2008-09-13.
  27. ^"Shawnee Mythology". Archived fromthe original on 2009-10-27. Retrieved2013-09-09.
  28. ^"The Wickliffe Mounds Site". Retrieved2008-09-13.
  29. ^"Issues in the study of southeastern prehistoric cave art".Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology. 2001.

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