Kuksu was a religion in Northern California practiced by members within several Indigenous peoples of California before and during contact with the arriving European settlers. The religious belief system was held by several tribes in Central California and Northern California, from the Sacramento Valley west to the Pacific Ocean.

Kuksu
Map of California showing hypotheses on the distribution of the Kuksu religion
DivisionsNorthern Kuksu, Southern Kuksu
RegionNorthern California
Konkow Kuksu ceremony

The practice of Kuksu religion included elaborate narrative ceremonial dances and specific regalia. The men of the tribe practiced rituals to ensure good health, bountiful harvests, hunts, fertility, and good weather. Ceremonies included an annual mourning ceremony, rites of passage, and intervention with the spirit world. A male secret society met in underground dance rooms and danced in disguises at the public dances.[1][2]

Among the Patwin and Maidu, Hesi developed as a subdivision of Kuksu distinguished by its female participation.[3][4]

Kuksu has been identified archaeologically by the discovery of underground dance rooms and wooden dance drums.

Northern Kuksu religion

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Patwin

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The Patwin culture of Northern California had comparatively strong and noticeable Kuksu systems and rituals.[1]

 
Maidu Kuksu dancer

Maidu

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The Maidu culture of Northern California had comparatively strong and noticeable Kuksu systems and rituals.[1]

 
Pomo headdress used in Kuksu ceremonies

Pomo

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Kuksu was personified as a spirit being by the Pomo people. Their mythology and dance ceremonies were witnessed, including the spirit of Kuksu or Guksu, between 1892 and 1904. The Pomo used the name Kuksu or Guksu, depending on the dialect, as the name for a red-beaked supernatural being, that lived in a sweathouse at the southern end of the world. Healing was his province and specialty. The person who played the Kuksu/Guksu in Pomo dance ceremonies was often considered the medicine man, and dressed as him when attending the sick.[5] A ceremony dance was named after him. He also appeared in costume at most ceremonies briefly in order to take away the villager's illnesses.

All males were expected to join a ceremonial society; some of their dances were private or secret from women and children. Scholars differ in their opinions of the societies' power in the tribe: "There was no secret society of importance as there was among the Maidu and presumedly among the neighboring Wintun, and no organized priesthood vested with control over ceremonies."[6] In contrast, in 1925 a witness of the Clear Lake Pomo said: "The heart of religious activities lay in a secret society called kuhma, akin to that of the Patwin and Maidu and composed chiefly of men, which managed the ritual of the ancient kuksu religion.[7]

Southern Kuksu religion

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The ethnohistorian Alfred L. Kroeber observed that Kuksu existed, but had less "specialized cosmogony," in the "southern Kuksu-dancing groups" of the Ohlone/Costanoan, Salinan, Miwok and Esselen and northernmost Yokuts, in comparison to the groups in the Northern California and northern Sacramento Valley.[8]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Kroeber, Alfred L. The Religion of the Indians of California, 1907.
  2. ^ The Kuksu Cult paraphrased from Kroeber. Archived 2006-10-11 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Kroeber, Alfred Louis (1923). Anthropology. Harcourt, Brace. p. 309. kuksu hesi.
  4. ^ Okladnikova, E. A. (1983). "The California Collection of I. G. Voznesensky and the Problems of Ancient Cultural Connections Between Asia and America" (PDF). Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology.
  5. ^ Barret (1917): 423, 430-431
  6. ^ Barret 398
  7. ^ Gifford 353
  8. ^ Kroeber (1925) 445: "It is true the Costanoan and Salinan stocks, who participate in the Kuksu cult and live in the same transverse belt of California as the Miwok, seem also to lean in their mythology toward the Yokuts more than to the Sacramento Valley tribes. A less specialized type of cosmogony is therefore indicated for the southern Kuksu-dancing groups. [1. If, as seems probable, the southerly Kuksu tribes (the Miwok, Costanoans, Esselen, and northernmost Yokuts) had no real society in connection with their Kuksu ceremonies, the distinctness of their mythology appears less surprising.]"

References

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  • Barret, Samuel A. "Ceremonies of the Pomo Indians", Published by University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnicity, July 6, 1917, Vol. 12, No 10., pages 397-441. Thi Stephen Powers.
  • Kroeber, Alfred L. The Kuksu Cult. Paraphrased. Maidu Culture [1]
  • Kroeber, Alfred L. 1907. The Religion of the Indians of California, University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 4:#6. Berkeley, sections titled "Shamanism", "Public Ceremonies", "Ceremonial Structures and Paraphernalia", and "Mythology and Beliefs"; available at Sacred Texts Online
  • Kroeber, Alfred L. 1925. Handbook of the Indians of California. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 78; (Miwok chapter is available at Yosemite Online Library - discusses Kuksu)
  • Gifford, Edward W. 1926. Clear Lake Pomo Society,University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 18:2 p. 353-363 "Secret Society Members" (Describes E.M. Loeb's 1925 investigation of the Clear Lake Pomo's practice of the Guksu [sic] religion.)

See also

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