Sweat lodge: Did you mean...?

Search

Search Results

Origin of the Sweat Lodge
Article by Joshua J. Mark

Origin of the Sweat Lodge

The sweat lodge is a temporary or permanent structure integral to Native American culture and frequently used in spiritual ceremonies. The lodge is often a low, dome-shaped, structure heated by hot rocks which produce steam as water is poured...
Sweat Lodge
Image by Mary Irvin Wright

Sweat Lodge

Sweat lodge, Kiowa camp on the Washita, illustration from the Annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1880.
Sweat Lodge Frame
Image by Edward S. Curtis

Sweat Lodge Frame

Sweat lodge frame - Cheyenne, photo by Edward S. Curtis, 1910. Library of Congress, Washington D.C.
Found In the Grass
Article by Joshua J. Mark

Found In the Grass

Found In the Grass is a legend of the Algonquian-speaking nations of the Plains Indians and one of the most famous. The story is told in many different versions, but the best-known comes from the Cheyenne and features the child hero Mok-so-is...
Native American Sweat Lodge
Image by Chorazy Jane

Native American Sweat Lodge

Frame of a traditional Native American sweat lodge, photo by Chorazy Jane, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Bringing the Sweat-lodge Willows - Piegan
Image by Edward Sheriff Curtis

Bringing the Sweat-lodge Willows - Piegan

Bringing the Sweat-lodge Willows - Piegan, photo by Edward Sheriff Curtis, 1910. Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego.
Seven Sacred Rites of the Lakota Sioux
Article by Joshua J. Mark

Seven Sacred Rites of the Lakota Sioux

The Seven Sacred Rites of the Lakota Sioux (Seven Sacred Rites of the Lakota Oyate) are the spiritual observances of the Native American Sioux nation that maintain their relationship with the Great Mystery/Great Spirit Wakan Tanka, the creative...
The Wonderful Sack
Article by Joshua J. Mark

The Wonderful Sack

The Wonderful Sack is a legend of the Cheyenne nation and one of the Wihio tales, featuring the trickster figure Wihio, similar to the Lakota Sioux character Iktomi (also known as Unktomi) of the famous Iktomi tales. Although the date of...
Ehyophsta Legend
Article by Joshua J. Mark

Ehyophsta Legend

Ehyophsta is a Cheyenne legend of the heroine, Ehyophsta, the Yellow Haired Woman, who first brought the buffalo to the people. When she accidentally breaks a taboo, the buffalo vanish until they are brought back later by the two other great...
The Girl Who Was the Ring
Article by Joshua J. Mark

The Girl Who Was the Ring

The Girl Who Was the Ring is a Pawnee legend committed to writing by the anthropologist George Bird Grinnell (l. 1849-1938) in his work The Punishment of the Stingy and Other Indian Stories (1901). The story highlights the Native American...
Support Us Remove Ads