Facts For Kids
Facts For Kids
Facts For Kids
In the past, the Hopi Indians had a theocratic government. That means
that the head priest or kikmongwi of each village was also the town
chief. Today, each Hopi village still has its own kikmongwi, but he is
primarily a religious leader. The Hopi nation is now led by an elected
tribal council.
What was Hopi culture like in the past? What is it like now?
Here is the homepage of the Hopi Nation. On their site you can find
information about the Hopi people in the past and today.
How do Hopi Indian children live, and what did they do in the
past?
They do the same things all children do--play with each other, go to
school and help around the house. Many Hopi children like to go
hunting and fishing with their fathers. In the past, Indian kids had more
chores and less time to play in their daily lives, just like colonial children.
But they did have dolls, toys, and games to play. A Hopi mother
traditionally carried a young child in a cradleboard on her back--a
custom which many American parents have adopted now.
What were Hopi clothes like? Did the Hopis wear feather
headdresses and face paint?
Originally, Hopi men didn't wear much clothing-- only breechcloths or
short kilts (men's skirts). Hopi women wore knee-length cotton dresses
called mantas. A manta fastened at a woman's right shoulder, leaving
her left shoulder bare. Missionaries didn't think this dress style was
modest enough, so in the 1900's many Hopi women started wearing
blouses underneath their mantas. This style is still in use today. Men
and women both wore deerskin moccasins on their feet. For dances and
special occasions, women painted their moccasins white and wrapped
white strips of deerskin around their shins as leggings. Here is a site
with sketches of Navajo and Hopi clothing styles, and some photos and
links about Indian clothing in general.
The Hopis did not traditionally wear feather warbonnets. Hopi men
usually wore cloth headbands tied around their foreheads instead. Most
men wore their hair gathered into a figure-eight shaped bun called a
hömsoma, though some Hopi men began cutting their hair to shoulder-
length during the early 1900's. Unmarried Hopi women wore their hair in
elaborate butterfly whorls, while married women wore theirs in two long
pigtails. The Hopis also painted their faces for special occasions. They
used different patterns for war paint, religious ceremonies, and dances.
Today, many Hopi people still wear moccasins or mantas, but they wear
modern clothes like jeans instead of a breechcloth... and they only wear
legging wraps or kilts on special occasions like a dance.
What was Hopi transportation like in the days before cars? Did
they paddle canoes?
No--the Hopi Indians weren't coastal people, and rarely traveled by
river. Originally they just walked. There were no horses in North
America until colonists brought them over from Europe, so the Hopis
used dogs pulling travois (a kind of drag sled) to help them carry heavy
loads. Once Europeans brought horses to America, the Hopis could
travel more quickly than before.
What other Native Americans did the Hopi tribe interact with?
The Hopis traded regularly with other tribes of the Southwest,
particularly the other Pueblo tribes. Pueblo trade routes reached into
Mexico and to the California coast, supplying Hopi craftsmen with
shells, coral, and turquoise for their jewelry. The Navajos were frequent
trading partners, but also frequent enemies, who sometimes raided Hopi
villages.