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Heh, it's been a while, but im back! I'll just drop these here and reblog more-
scientist supreme
Photograph of Matilda, an elderly Modoc. Photo by Joseph Andrew Shuck, Seneca, MO, c. 1901-1902.
The Gateway to Oklahoma History; Oklahoma Historical Society.
How Death Came into the World (Modoc Legend)
How Death Came into the World is a legend of the Modoc nation whose ancestral lands once covered the region of modern-day northeastern California and southern Oregon, USA. Their story of the origin of death shares many similarities with those of other Native peoples of North America as well as with the ancient Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice.
Pit River Valley, Modoc County, California
Robert F. Ettner (Public Domain)
The Modoc were 'discovered' by Euro-Americans c. 1820 in their ancestral lands of what is now southern Oregon and northern California. They are described by the American ethnographer James Mooney (l. 1861-1921) as a small band who were culturally isolated, which makes the similarities between How Death Came into the World and the Orpheus/Eurydice myth all the more interesting.
The Modoc had been living in the region for approximately 14,000 years before the arrival of the Euro-Americans but, by 1864, had been forcibly relocated to reservations, eventually two separate ones in the territories of modern Oklahoma and Oregon. They retained their stories, however, including How Death Came into the World, which is still told today.
The main character of the tale, Kumokums, is the Creator God of the Modoc (also known as Kemush, Kumokum, Kumush, Koomookumpts, Gmukamps) and his name is translated as "Old Man of the Ancients" or "Primeval Old Man", suggesting his existence from the beginning of time. In one version of the Modoc Creation Story, Kumokums travels to the Land of the Dead to select the spirits that would animate the people of four tribes of the region: the Shasta, the Warm Springs, the Klamath, and the Modoc. In How Death Came into the World, he again travels to the Land of the Dead but, this time, to bring back the spirit of his recently deceased daughter.
Native American Death Origin Myths
Native American origin myths concerning death are remarkably similar, even when the nations have had no known contact with each other prior to Euro-American contact and efforts to synthesize cultural beliefs as expressed in Native American literature. Scholar Larry J. Zimmerman writes:
Most accounts of the origin of death accept the logic that space is limited on Earth and room needs to be made for new life. On the whole, the afterlife is regarded as a place much like this one but with more game, corn, or whatever was prized…Almost all Indian peoples believed in some plane of existence beyond the realm of the living, but descriptions of the afterlife differed greatly, and the issue of what happens to the soul after death was a highly complex one for many tribes.
(246)
As Zimmerman notes, there was no doubt – for many, if not all Native American nations – that the soul survived physical death and went on to another realm, but that did very little to help a survivor deal with the grief of their loss. Native American origin myths concerning death tried to assist with that by explaining how death came to be and how even those responsible for the decision suffered the same grief at their loss.
The basic paradigm involves a figure of some degree of authority who makes a decision concerning mortality, then loses someone close to them, and wishes to reverse their earlier judgment – but, once the choice has been spoken into existence, it cannot be taken back.
Modoc Harvest Diorama
Michael Barera (CC BY-SA)
The Kiowa of the Plains Indians culture have a similar tale, sometimes given as How Death Came into the World and sometimes as Why the Ant is Almost Cut in Two, which follows this same model. In that story, the trickster figure Saynday (well-known from the Saynday tales) interacts with Red Ant as they discuss mortality and Saynday's concept of resurrecting the dead after four days. Red Ant rejects his proposal, claiming there are already too many living things on the earth and death is necessary to make room for those yet to be born or already living. Saynday agrees with her and decrees death as the final chapter of life on earth but, when Red Ant's son is killed, her grief is so intense she tries to kill herself, wishing she could have back what she had lost.
The Shoshone (Shoshoni) nation has a similar tale in which the central characters are Wolf and Coyote. Wolf suggests that death should be only a temporary state, which one could return from if the living enact a certain ritual that includes shooting an arrow beneath the deceased. Coyote rejects this plan, noting that there would then be too many of the living and resources would be spread too thinly. Wolf accepts Coyote's suggestion and decrees death as a permanent state, but when Coyote's son is killed, he comes to Wolf and asks that the decision be reversed. Wolf then reminds him that it was Coyote himself who insisted on death as a permanent state and that decision cannot now be altered.
Other Native American nations have similar origin stories for death, but the Modoc tale is unique in that it also provides an explanation of why the people had winter and summer camps, how their calendar was devised, and a detailed description of the Land of the Dead.
The story is also of interest to anthropologists, historians, and literary scholars for its similarity to the story of Orpheus and Eurydice from Greek mythology, which makes it stand out; as scholar Alice Marriott phrases it, "the Orpheus-Eurydice theme is unusual in North American Indian mythology" (190). There is no known record of interaction between the Modoc and anyone who would have known the Orpheus/Eurydice tale prior to contact between the Modoc nation and Euro-Americans, and How Death Came into the World is understood to pre-date that time as it seems to have already long been a part of the Modoc oral literary tradition.
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150 Years Ago, the US Military Executed Modoc War Leaders in Fort Klamath, Oregon ... A small band of Modoc warriors held off hundreds of U.S. soldiers in California. Ultimately, the conflict left the Modoc leaders dead and the tribe divided ... by Kami Horton vial ... October 3, 1873 ... Kintpuash was the only Native American leader to be tried and convicted as a war criminal by the U.S. government ... He led a group of Modocs in resistance against the U.S. Army, holding off a numerically superior force for several months from a natural fortress in the California lava beds, known as "Captain Jack's Stronghold". The conflict escalated after the assassination of General Edward Canby, the head of a peace commission, by Modoc warriors during negotiations in April 1873 ... Kintpuash was captured in June 1873, tried by a military tribunal, and executed by hanging at Fort Klamath in Oregon on October 3, 1873 ... The Modoc War highlighted significant conflicts over federal reservation policies and the forced removal of Native American tribes in the post-Civil War era.
Spotted Fritillary, Fritillaria atropurpurea, flowering along a stand of Western Juniper, within the Devil's Garden meadows of the Modoc Plateau
Modoc National Forest, California
Something silly but I like to imagine that despite living in Gravity falls with all kinds of anomalies and creatures (including Bill) Modoc is still superstitious
decided to add in the first batch of villain and anti-hero sketches for @batstickblog marvel's spiderman 2017 season 4.
I had fun redesigning modoks, with most of the elements being from avengers assemble in season 1 and face expressions from phil barousa's design created the perfect blend of arrogance and evil genius.
also curt connor's human design had expressions that showed his painful expression fighting off the lizard transformation and the regret on his face after his role from last season of msm 2017.
msm 2017 characters belongs to Marvel and disney.