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Apolyton ExtraCivs Pack: Iroquois

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  • #16
    Originally posted by Trifna
    Native Americans were divided in two: Iroquois and Algonquiens. They both include loooots of tribes (Sious is one of them).
    Err - no.
    The Sioux are rather far cousins of the Iroquois and certainly not of the same civilization. You are also forgetting the Pueblo tribes (Hopi, Zuni), the Anasazi (/Navaho), the Aztecian tribes (Soschone, Comanche), to name just a few groups.
    The Iroquois were not constantly at war, this is pure myth. They formed the League exactly to make sure that they weren't; other confederations in the region followed for the same reason. Only after the Europeans came was there
    more warfare - but still not constant.

    By the way, I'M the guy who voted Algonquiens
    I am curious to hear why.
    A horse! A horse! Mingapulco for a horse! Someone must give chase to Brave Sir Robin and get those missing flags ...
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    • #17
      I'm sorry, but if you don't have either writing or permanent cities I just can't see how you can be called a 'civilisation' except in the totalitarian Empire of the Politically Correct. It seems to me that having at least one of these two things is the bare minimum for a claim to civilisation to even be considered. If we say that civilisation exists simply wherever there are people living together, then we have emptied the word of all useful meaning. IMHO.

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      • #18
        The Iroquois had both writing and permanent towns (up to 4,000 people), even before the Europeans arrived.
        Did you think Firaxis just invented their city list?
        A horse! A horse! Mingapulco for a horse! Someone must give chase to Brave Sir Robin and get those missing flags ...
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        • #19
          Once again, I'm sorry, but I must beg to differ. The Iroquois had no written language in any meaningful sense. Art is not the same thing as writing. Furthermore, if you want to see what an Iroquois 'city' looked like, you might visit the Royal Ontario Museum at



          These were temporary structures which would last a couple of seasons until the land was exhausted, whereupon the 'city' would relocate.

          I'm sure the Iroquois were and are an admirable people with 'much to teach us', etc. But whatever else they were, they were not a civilisation. They were a borderline late stone-age and early agricultural people.

          The Aztecs and the Incas were civilizations. They had real permanent cities made from stone. 'Civis', hence 'civilisation', is the latin word for town or city. The Aztecs also appear to have had a written language, although this is somewhat more doubtful in the case of the Incas.
          Last edited by oriel94; November 7, 2001, 20:36.

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          • #20
            Originally posted by oriel94
            Once again, I'm sorry, but I must beg to differ. The Iroquois had no written language in any meaningful sense. Art is not the same thing as writing.
            The Iroquois (and many other native tribes in North America) used a script of glyphs. Laws, treaties and important events were recorded on wampum belts. Messengers used glyphs on less permanent surfaces in case they had business with tribes that did not speak their language.

            Furthermore, if you want to see what an Iroquois 'city' looked like, you might visit the Royal Ontario Museum at ...
            These were temporary structures which would last a couple of seasons until the land was exhausted, whereupon the 'city' would relocate.
            Before European contact, the Iroquois usually stayed in the same place for about 20 years, not much different from many other civs elsewhere in the world. They would move a couple of kilometers along the river and return when the soil had recovered. Quite different from setting up a tipi or wigwam and moving twice a year. They used construction techniques such as the arch to make their longhouses last. They had other things besides houses that are typical for a permanent town, such as palisades, granaries, gardens and guesthouses. Fishing lodges were nearby, and their villages were connected by permanent roads. They had long trade routes and used wampums (without writing) as currency.

            I'm sure the Iroquois were and are an admirable people with 'much to teach us', etc. But whatever else they were, they were not a civilisation. They were a borderline late stone-age and early agricultural people.
            I have no idea what you mean by those qualifications. What I do know is that
            Iroquois agriculture was in some ways more advanced than what Europeans had.
            Furthermore, I think it is weird to deny a people who had formed a confederacy of nations, with a constitution, a participatory democracy, women's rights, etc., again long before the Europeans had any of the sort, the right to be called a civilization - for just a single reason: they didn't make their houses from stone.

            Well, it may come as a surprise to you, but many civilizations didn't build stone
            houses. in 1665 the great city of London, made of wood and straw, burned to the ground. So we can't really call the British a civilization either, can we?
            In general, people simply used what was readily available. The Aztecs had good stone and bad wood. The Iroquois and the British had good wood for building. Other civs used loam. So what?
            A horse! A horse! Mingapulco for a horse! Someone must give chase to Brave Sir Robin and get those missing flags ...
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            • #21
              Originally posted by Trifna
              Locutus, I think that other tribes stil are included because of culture... I mean culturally covered by Iroquois. No?.......
              I'm not sure what you're trying to say here. Do you mean that by including the Iroquois we thereby also include the culture of other Native American tribes? If so, I couldn't agree more, that's exactly why I voted for keeping the Iroquois myself. Don't get me wrong, I have 'issues' with the Iroquois but I'd like to see them in Civ3 none-the-less.
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              • #22
                Originally posted by Ribannah


                Err - no.
                The Sioux are rather far cousins of the Iroquois and certainly not of the same civilization. You are also forgetting the Pueblo tribes (Hopi, Zuni), the Anasazi (/Navaho), the Aztecian tribes (Soschone, Comanche), to name just a few groups.
                The Iroquois were not constantly at war, this is pure myth. They formed the League exactly to make sure that they weren't; other confederations in the region followed for the same reason. Only after the Europeans came was there
                more warfare - but still not constant.



                I am curious to hear why.
                I didn't meant constantly at war, but that war was an important thing in their culture. The warrior was valorised alot, etc.



                And about Sioux and such, I may not be in the same group of tribes, but they were culturally similar. Like the case of Portugal/Spain, all the ones grouped in "Babylonian" in Civ III, or even Visigoth and Ostrogoth (that did have some differences but could be generalized as Goths)
                Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by Locutus


                  I'm not sure what you're trying to say here. Do you mean that by including the Iroquois we thereby also include the culture of other Native American tribes? If so, I couldn't agree more, that's exactly why I voted for keeping the Iroquois myself. Don't get me wrong, I have 'issues' with the Iroquois but I'd like to see them in Civ3 none-the-less.
                  Yes, it's exacty what I meant. But I think there was a second type of Amerindians ("Native Americans) that had a different culture. The naturally more pacifists Algonquiens (I guess u saw my posts somewhere)
                  Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by Trifna
                    And about Sioux and such, I may not be in the same group of tribes, but they were culturally similar. Like the case of Portugal/Spain, all the ones grouped in "Babylonian" in Civ III, or even Visigoth and Ostrogoth (that did have some differences but could be generalized as Goths)
                    Let's see ...

                    The Sioux chiefs took their title by force, the Iroquois held elections.
                    The Sioux rode horses, the Iroquois had muskets.
                    The Sioux hunted the bison, the Iroquois planted corn.
                    The Sioux women had few rights, the Iroquois women had many.
                    The Sioux lived in tents, the Iroquois in longhouses.
                    .....

                    They aren't in the same linguistic group either.
                    And this is a neighbouring nation, the differences with the Zuni, Comanche and Seminole, to name a few, are even larger.
                    A horse! A horse! Mingapulco for a horse! Someone must give chase to Brave Sir Robin and get those missing flags ...
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                    • #25
                      Originally posted by Ribannah
                      The Sioux chiefs took their title by force, the Iroquois held elections.
                      The Sioux rode horses, the Iroquois had muskets.
                      The Sioux hunted the bison, the Iroquois planted corn.
                      The Sioux women had few rights, the Iroquois women had many.
                      The Sioux lived in tents, the Iroquois in longhouses.
                      There are theories saying that they learned this stuff (except for the muskets, of course) from Norse explorers that were assimilated into the tribes.
                      CSPA

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                      • #26
                        Hhmmm... Not easy. I confess that I didn't know these parts. Then, it's not as easy. But for their language, are you sure? i mean, they all came from the same people. Like west Russians compared to east Russians may have some distinctions in their languages that were important due to distance.

                        But after your arguments, I'd stil keep my position on something: they seem to have quite the same way of doin.

                        By the way, are you sure Iroquois cultivated corn that much compared to Sioux?... Cuz as I know that Americans emphasized the corn culture within American tribes because of some advantage it had. And it gave dentition problems to the concerned Amerindians. As I know, Iroquois were hunting what they had in their regions.

                        For Sioux taking over Iroquois, well it's not a factor that much if we consider that interior wars between factions are always there in any culture.

                        So on conclusion, I put a stanby my ideas.
                        I'd need to know little more.
                        Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by Ribannah
                          The Iroquois had both writing and permanent towns (up to 4,000 people), even before the Europeans arrived.
                          Did you think Firaxis just invented their city list?
                          4,000 people?? Ribannah that's not a town, that's a village! My home town has 7,000 people in it, and my God it's not densely populated at all

                          You also have to look at population. The Persian Empire at its height (including Tyre, Antioch, Babylon, Alexandria, etc. etc. etc.) was home to probably 10X or more the population of any time in Iroquois history, possibly even Native Americans altogether!
                          "Chegitz, still angry about the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991?
                          You provide no source. You PROVIDE NOTHING! And yet you want to destroy capitalism.. you criminal..." - Fez

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                          • #28
                            Um, not Alexandria, that was founded by Alexander when he was defeating the Persians. After he died it was ruled by the Ptolemaic Greeks then the Romans but the Persians never ruled it. Alexander actually founded loads of Alexandrias so I wouldn't be surprised if some of them went back to Persian rule, but I assume you are referring to the one in Egypt.

                            Accoding to http://www.io.com/~sjohn/demog.htm The population of a town in the Middle Ages was 1000 to 8000, so 5000 is quite an average size. Cities could be a lot bigger, Moscow in the 15th century had a population in excess of 200,000

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                            • #29
                              Originally posted by Trifna
                              But for their language, are you sure? i mean, they all came from the same people.
                              Yes, I'm sure. Remember, they had thousands of years to develop their languages since they crossed over from Siberia! Sioux and Iroquois could not understand each other's tongue one bit (unless they learned to, of course).

                              But after your arguments, I'd stil keep my position on something: they seem to have quite the same way of doin.
                              Give one single example!

                              By the way, are you sure Iroquois cultivated corn that much compared to Sioux?... Cuz as I know that Americans emphasized the corn culture within American tribes because of some advantage it had. And it gave dentition problems to the concerned Amerindians. As I know, Iroquois were hunting what they had in their regions.
                              Yes, I'm sure. The Iroquois did some hunting and fishing to complete their meal, but agriculture was the basis since around 900 AD. Later, when the Dutch and French arrived, they hunted the beaver for trade.

                              For Sioux taking over Iroquois, well it's not a factor that much if we consider that interior wars between factions are always there in any culture.
                              On occasion, Iroquois fought Iroquois. But war between different cultures is just as common! The Iroquois drove the Sioux from their original hunting grounds so they could trade more fur. The Sioux (better: Lakota) did not stand a chance against the superior Iroquois warfare skills. They retreated to the plains, then grew into the horseriding tribe as we now remember them.

                              Orange, it's like Wulfram says, 4,000 people was quite a town in those days.
                              The total number of natives north of Mexico is estimated to have been 15 million, which dropped to a mere 500,000 because of the diseases (and slaughter) brought by the Europeans.
                              A horse! A horse! Mingapulco for a horse! Someone must give chase to Brave Sir Robin and get those missing flags ...
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                              • #30
                                I'm afraid this thread has become little more than a vehicle for the promotion of a civilization-mythology for the Iroquois.

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