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Camera - Vintage Photos IconIMAGES OF THE AMERICAN WEST

Vintage Sioux Photographs

 

Vintage Native American Photographs

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Sioux Maiden, 1908

 

Sioux maiden, 1908

Sioux Maiden, 1908 by Edward S. Curtis

This image available for photographic prints and downloads HERE!

 

Though the Sioux were primarily known for being great warriors, the family was considered primary in Sioux life, especially children. However, women, too, were highly regarded. Though monogamy was the norm, Sioux men had the ability to take on more than one wife. The roles of men and women were clearly defined, with men expected to provide for and defend the family and the women were to rule the family. These matriarchs controlled  domestic life, performing all tasks to make life more comfortable. They worked hard at such tasks as making the teepees, collecting wild berries and plants, making clothing, cooking, and creating magnificent beadwork and quills. When a man married a Sioux woman, it was expected that he would move into her home.
 

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"Sioux women are better treated and handsomer than those of all other tribes. Also they are more virtuous, and the gayest white Adonises confess that the girls of that race seldom yield to the seducer." -- John F. Finerty, Warpath and Bivouac (1890)

 

 

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