No Slide Title

Download Report

Transcript No Slide Title

Life
of the
Click Once to Begin
Haudenosaunee
Jeopardy
Presented by:
Christine Williams and Tom Baker
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Haudenosaunee Life
Where they
live
Potpourri
Category
1
Food
Government
Culture
Festivals
Category
2
Category
3
Category
4
Category
5
Category
6
100
100
100
100
100
100
200
200
200
200
200
200
300
300
300
300
300
300
400
400
400
400
400
400
500
500
500
500
500
500
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Where They Lived: 1-100
These were the uses of the
Iroquois Trail.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer :
What is the path used by
messengers, travelers, or for visiting
relatives?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Where They Lived : 1-200
Describe three aspects in a long
house.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 1-200:
What are sleeping compartments,
fire pits, smoke holes, food storage
barrels, weapons, utensils, saplings,
logs, Elm bark, or any other
acceptable answer?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Where They Lived: 1-300
The Iroquois would do this when the
area where they lived no longer
supported their needs.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 1-300:
What is move about every ten to
twenty years?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Where They Lived: 1-400
When you married, male Iroquois
would move in here.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 1-400:
Where is your wife’s mother’s
house?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Where They Lived: 1-500
These were the boundaries of the
Iroquois League.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 1-500:
What is southern Ontario to northern
Pennsylvania or eastern New York to
northeastern Ohio?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Potpourri: 2 - 100
Your Iroquois “Fireside” family
included these family members.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 2-100:
What is your father, mother,
brothers, and sisters?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Potpourri: 2 - 200
Everyone in a longhouse family was
related to this person.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 2-200:
Who was the oldest living female?
(matriarch)
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Potpourri: 2 - 300
List three of the jobs that women
did.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 2-300:
What is choose chiefs, planting,
harvesting, cooking, and making
clothes.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Potpourri: 2 - 400
The Iroquois used these to “tell
time.”
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 2-400:
What are the rising and setting of
the sun, and the changes in the
moon?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Potpourri: 2 - 500
All natural things like the
wind, the clouds,
rain, trees, plants, etc. where
under the care of this.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 2-500:
What is the Great Spirit?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Food: 3-100
Another name the Haudenosaunee
called corn, beans, and squash.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 3-100:
What are the Three Sisters?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Food: 3-200
Iroquois men did this to feed their
family.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 3-200:
What is hunting or fishing?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Food: 3-300
Women and children gathered these
in the spring or fall.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 3-300:
What are berries and nuts?.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Food: 3-400
Another important food source was a
sugary substance that came from
trees.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 3-400:
What is maple sugar?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Food: 3-500
Daily Double!!!
A dish made from corn and beans.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 3-500:
What is succotash?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Government: 4-100
Only women elected these, as long
as they did their job well.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 4-100:
What are chiefs?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Government: 4-200
Daily Double!!!
In order to take an action the tribes
would act only if they had this.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 4-200:
What is they all have to agree, or
have unanimous agreement?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Government: 4-300
These are the five nations of the
Haudenosaunee.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 4-300:
What are the
Seneca: Keepers of the Western Door
Cayuga: People of the Muckland
Onondaga: Keepers of the Central Fire
Oneida: People of the Standing Stone
Mohawk: Keepers of the Eastern Door
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Government: 4-400
The U.S. government borrowed this
from the Iroquois.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 4-400:
What is a democracy or a
representative government?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Government: 4-500
Both the Iroquois and U. S. Constituions
guaranteed these rights.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 4-500:
What is freedom of speech
and freedom of religion?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Culture: 5 - 100
This is what your clothes most likely
would be made from.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 5 - 100:
What is deerskin?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Daily Double!!!
Culture: 5 - 200
This games was played in teams
using a ball and a “bat” with a net.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 5 - 200:
What is lacrosse?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Culture: 5 - 300
The five nations spoke the same
language, but used different
_________
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 5 - 300:
What is a dialect?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Culture: 5 - 400
These beads from seashells were
used to record important
information and great events.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 5 - 400:
What is Wampum?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Culture: 5 - 500
Of the nine clan names the Iroquois
used, these are the most common.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 5-500:
What is Wolf, Turtle, and Bear?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Festivals: 6 - 100
During this festival, children born
since the Midwinter Festival would
be named.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 6-100:
What is the Green Corn Festival?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Festival: 6 - 200
This festival celebrated the first
fruits of the Earth, and is still
celebrated in Phelps.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 6-200:
What is the Strawberry Festival?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Festivals: 6 - 300
This festival was the longest. In each
house people were told to clean
their house and build a new fire.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 6-300:
What is the Midwinter Festival?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Festivals: 6 - 400
During this festival crops were
picked, cooked, and stored for
winter.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 6-400:
What is Harvest Festival?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Festivals: 6 - 500
Name three activities that were part
of every Iroquois festival.
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD
Answer 6-500:
What is giving thanks to the creator,
feasting, dancing, singing, games,
and smoking sacred tobacco?
Template by
Bill Arcuri, WCSD