Yuki people

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "For". Template:Main other Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other The Yuki (also known as Yukiah) are an Indigenous people of California who were traditionally divided into three groups: Ukomno'om ("Valley People", or Yuki proper),[1] Huchnom ("Outside the Valley"),[2] and Ukohtontilka or Ukosontilka ("Ocean People", or Coast Yuki).[3] The territory of these three groups included Round Valley and much of northern Mendocino County and Lake County. Today they are enrolled members of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of the Round Valley Reservation. The exonym "Yuki" may derive from the Wintu word meaning "foreigner" or "enemy."[4]

Yuki tribes are thought to have settled as far south as Hood Mountain in present-day Sonoma County.

History

Archaeologists, including Alfred Kroeber, have speculated that the Yuki have been resident in California for many thousands of years and once occupying a greater area than their historic homeland in Mendocino County. The Yuki language is an isolate, unrelated to other Native American languages, although distant relationships to other languages have been proposed by Joseph Greenberg and others. Scholars have also said that Yuki physical appearance is different than most other Native American peoples. They are described as short in stature and long-headed (Dolichocephalic), unusual in American Indians, but perhaps similar to the extinct Guaycura and Pericú of Baja California, also believed by archaeologists to be ancient residents of the Americas.[5][6][7]

In 1856, the US government established the Indian reservation of Nome Cult Farm (later to become Round Valley Indian Reservation) at Round Valley.[8] It forced thousands of Yuki and other local tribes onto these lands, often without sufficient support for the transition. These events and tensions led to the Mendocino War (1859), where militias of white settlers killed hundreds of Yuki and took others by force to Nome Cult Farm.[9]

Language

File:Yuki-Wappo langs.png
Distribution of Yuki-Wappo languages

The Yuki language has been extinct since its last speaker, Arthur Anderson, died in 1983.[10] It is distantly related to the Wappo language,[11] the two languages making up the entirety of the Yukian language family. The Yuki people had a quaternary (4-based) counting system, based on counting the spaces between the fingers, rather than the fingers themselves.[12]

Population

Template:See Scholarly estimates have varied substantially for the pre-contact populations of most native groups in California, as historians and anthropologists have tried to evaluate early documentation. Alfred L. Kroeber estimated the 1770 population of the Yuki proper, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki as 2,000, 500, and 500, respectively, or 3,000 in all.[13] Sherburne F. Cook initially raised this total slightly to 3,500.[14] Subsequently, he proposed a higher estimate of 9,730 Yuki.[15]

File:"Protecting The Settlers" Illustration by JR Browne for his work "The Indians Of California" 1864.jpg
Yuki massacre in Round Valley, California.

According to the research of Benjamin Madley, "the Yuki suffered a cataclysmic population decline under United States rule. Between 1854 and 1864, settlement policies, murders, abductions, massacres, rape-induced venereal diseases, and willful neglect at Round Valley Reservation reduced them from perhaps 20,000 to several hundred."[9] In his work, Madley argues that Yuki history constitutes a clear-cut example of genocide. He cites the fact that there is no evidence of any epidemic that would have caused such drastic population decline among the Yuki between 1854 and 1864, other than venereal diseases originating from European settlers.[9] His research thus challenges the idea that the indirect effects of European colonization were the leading cause of population decline and mass death for Native Americans.

E.N. Anderson a professor of Anthropology at the University of California at Riverside writes that the extermination of the Yuki, a helpless colonized people, was a genocidal massacre.[16]

Intermarriage among neighboring tribes after their forced relocation to the Round Valley Reservation resulted in large numbers of Native Americans with mixed ancestry.[17] Many of these people are descendants of many local tribes and have come to be called Round Valley Indian Tribes.

In the 2010 census, 569 people claimed Yuki ancestry. 255 of them were full-blooded.

Ethnobotany

Yuki people use the large roots of Carex plants to make baskets.[18]

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Sources

  • Cook, Sherburne F. 1956. "The Aboriginal Population of the North Coast of California", Anthropological Records, 16:81-130. University of California, Berkeley.
  • Cook, Sherburne F. 1976. The Conflict between the California Indian and White Civilization. University of California Press, Berkeley.
  • Harrison, K. David 2007. When Languages Die. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Kroeber, A. L. 1925. Handbook of the Indians of California. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 78. Washington, D.C.

External links

Template:Sister project

Template:Indigenous peoples of California Template:Authority control

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  11. "Yuki." Ethnologue. Retrieved 23 October 2012.
  12. Harrison, p.173
  13. Kroeber, p.883
  14. Cook, 1976 p.172
  15. Cook, 1956 pp. 106, 108
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  18. Curtin, L. S. M., 1957, Some Plants Used by the Yuki Indians ... II. Food Plants, The Masterkey 31:85-94, page 93