Ishi (1860-1916), last surviving member of the Yahi Indian tribe of California.
Author: Saxton T. Pope

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Ishi (1860-1916), last surviving member of the Yahi Indian tribe of California.
Author: Saxton T. Pope
Ishi was the last known member of the Yahi, a subgroup of the Yana people in California. Yahi customs forbade individuals from speaking their own name without another Yahi’s introduction, so Ishi stated he had no name. Anthropologists named him "Ishi," meaning "man," as his real name was never revealed.
Happy pride month btw
Mini little comic I made!
We did an exchange for Halloween~ here are the arts!!
Oli did Jinkee in the cutest little chicken costume and Marsh did Adelaide as a bunny!
Ishi did Peregrine as a pirate and Briar did Zigg as a detective and Freyr as a Scarecrow,
Tam did Runa as Pearl from the movie and Angel as a cowboy, and Erin did the Marionette as the puppet from fnaf,
Ken did Adriel as Jigsaw and Nova did Azreal as Frankenstein, complete with dolls and quotes,
and Chris did Tylene and Blake did Maxwell as vampires :D
It was a LOT of fun. We at dead people central hope you had a great Halloween!!
THIS ONE IS FOR DEU 🫵 HI DEU I MISS YOU
My favourite artistic representation of lady Aine
Celtic native
This is a painterly piece with beautiful greens perfectly contrast with her ginger hair. She has green eyes that tie back to nature. It has a realistic painterly style which I personally adore. Over all you can tell she's Irish and she's Celtic god so you should be able to tell that. Celtic native was discussing her own had this piece of art on their website I'm not sure who made it but if you want to see this piece and possibly support the original creator I legitimately don't know if they are but they're the closest thing I could find or if you just want more information about her check them out.
I found this piece on eBay
she has a green dress that makes you think about nature as well as celtic mythology. She is holding wheat which she created. She is with a red stallion but she sometimes turns into. She has red long hair. She had fairy wings kind of which makes sense because she is the mother of Fay and and a queen of a fae court. She has golden accessories in her reminding you with her power and her sovereignty and she is the goddess of sovereignty.
Renee L.Lavoice
she has a beautiful crown and add a bunch of pretty jewelry as well which makes you think of royalty which makes you think of sovereignty and she is the goddess of sovereignty. The butterflies and butterfly wings that makes you think about faires. She is the mother of fairies in the queen of the Fay Court. The green dress reminds you of nature ever so subtly pulling you in the direction of thinking about mother Earth. She has green eyes with beautiful green shadow. She's overall she's covered in gems but she does have moon symbolism in there and she is a moon goddess as well as the sun goddess which is in showcased here but that's completely fine can't showcase everything in one piece. And things that make you think of the thay like butterflies actually mostly butterflies.
In the 1960s, Ursula K. le Guin represented a changing of the guard in science fiction literature. She was part of a generation of novelists
In the 1960s, Ursula K. le Guin represented a changing of the guard in science fiction literature. She was part of a generation of novelists who questioned the colonist mindset which had influenced American sci-fi for most of the 20th century. Le Guin came to this understanding not just as a moral stance or an intellectual exercise. Issues of racism and colonialism were personal to her. This episode, originally titled "The Word For Man Is Ishi,” comes from the podcast The Last Archive from Pushkin Industries hosted by Jill Lepore and Ben Naddaff-Hafrey.