Biloxi ball game

David Kaufman dvklinguist2003 at yahoo.com
Tue Jan 16 03:18:02 UTC 2007


Thanks for this, Mark!  Sounds like the Hohokam game could have been similar to the Maya.
   
  Dave
  
Mark J Awakuni-Swetland <mawakuni-swetland2 at unlnotes.unl.edu> wrote:
  

 
One of Two Hohokam Ball Courts, Snaketown, Arizona 
Circa AD600-900 
Readers’ Digest America’s Fascinating Indian Heritage copyright 1978 



        Karenne Wood <karennewood at yahoo.com> 
Sent by: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu   01/14/2007 06:30 PM           Please respond to
siouan at lists.colorado.edu


            To
  siouan at lists.colorado.edu       cc
        Subject
  RE: Biloxi ball game
          



Hi all,
Just a guess.  The Tutelo-Monacan-Mannahoac Siouan speakers played a two-stick form of lacrosse, a violent version played by other Mississipian tribes that evolved into the one-stick lacrosse played by Haudenosuanee peoples.  It's worth a thought that the Biloxi played something similar, given the linguistic and spiritual similarities.  Only a theory.
Karenne Wood (Monacan), Ford Fellow
University of Virginia
PhD candidate, linguistic anthropology

"Rankin, Robert L" <rankin at ku.edu> wrote: 
Mrs. Rowe talked about the Kaws playing "shinny". I think Justin mentioned that the Kaws and Osages had recently competed. Maybe he can fill you in.

Bob

________________________________

From: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu on behalf of David Kaufman
Sent: Sun 1/14/2007 3:05 PM
To: Siouan List
Subject: Biloxi ball game


Hi all, and Happy New Year.

Since there are terms in the Biloxi dictionary for a ball and ball club, I'm wondering if they played the Choctaw/Cherokee game Stickball, apparently the precursor of La Crosse. I'm basing this on cultural contact, such as the Biloxi borrowing the idea of the blowgun from the Choctaw. Or, was there some type of ball game played among other Siouan tribes? 

The Maya, of course, had their own type of ball game, which apparently usually ended in the sacrificing (beheading) of one or the other team. I haven't acquainted myself with all its rules although they apparently couldn't use their arms or legs in touching the ball and they apparently had some type of hoop they could put the ball through for extra points (a la basketball). I don't think the Mayan ball game had a North American counterpart though, or did it?

Any thoughts?

Dave

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