Friday, April 3, 2015

Jivaro: South America Jivaro (jungle man) Indian is primitive tribes living in the upper Amazon bas


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Jivaro: South America Jivaro (jungle man) Indian is primitive tribes living in the upper Amazon basin forest. borea adventures They became one of the most studied tribes of South America because of their religious practices taking and shrinking heads of their enemies and offenders moral code. Skull bone is removed, and then the skin is stitched on the back. And with heating, head shrunk to about the size of a large orange, but still retains borea adventures its human expression. The tsantsa (head shrink) hung from the neck of the killer at the feast celebrating their victory. Jivaro tribes also practice polygamy. The Jivaro is very stubborn borea adventures to outside influence, and their resistance Inca conquest, European influence borea adventures and sustainable independence Christianization account to modernity. Dayak or Dayaks: Southeast Asia is the Dayaks of Borneo. One unusual habit of these people is that - they usually stay at home a very large length is about 270 meters long and large enough for 30 or more families. Sometimes one building houses the entire community. Dayak animist in faith, but many became Christians, and some converted to Islam recently. Ilongots: Southeast Asia last year, the headhunting tribes borea adventures of Ilongots of the Philippines, a man who intends to marry a woman must pass the test is almost similar to that experienced by the legendary borea adventures William Tell. But here, the target is one foot long bamboo tube is held under the armpit of the bride. The man had to shoot an arrow through a narrow hole of a bamboo tube. Should he fail or injure her, he would be beheaded, but if he had passed the test, he will undergo another test, this time, he had to go headhunting and present a human head, complete with drying blood in it. And finally, to cover the wedding ceremony, the index finger borea adventures couples' should be sliced with a knife. Yahgan India: South America Yaghan people of India, who lived at the tip of South America, which was previously wearing almost nothing, despite the cold climate. They traveled by canoe from one coast to the other in search of food. Yaghan people known for their complete indifference borea adventures to the bitter weather around borea adventures Cape Horn. Although they had a fire and a small domed shelters, they routinely go about completely naked in the cold wind and biting cold of Tierra del Fuego, and swim in the 48-degree waters. They often sleep in a completely open and unsheltered naked while Europe shivers under their blankets. They can not survive contact with the white man's disease, they are suspected to be ill immediately if the missionaries persuaded them to put on some clothes. In the 1920s some resettled in Keppel Island in the Falklands in an effort borea adventures to preserve the tribe but continue to die. The last full-blooded Yahgan died in 1999. Chiquito: South America Chiquito (little one) is a group of Indian tribes borea adventures of South America is a different language stocks, which inhabits the area between the upper reaches of the Mamone and Paraguay. Their house is unique. High and low door of the hut they need to get in on all fours like the Inuit igloo. Khoikhoi: South Africa The Khoikhoi (also Khoekhoe) South Africa believe in the existence of the soul after death and maker of everything that comes from the east. Their graves therefore oriented towards the east. Mound Builders: Mound Builders of North America are Indians who built the mounds of earth are common in what is now the eastern and central United States, especially in Ohio and Mississippi river valleys. The size, shape and purpose of the mound vary from place to place. The biggest is the Cahokia Mound found in Illinois. Caribbean: South America Caribbean or Kalinago renowned for their ferocity. They practiced cannibalism, even, the cannibal world comes from the Spanish term for this India, canibales. Examples of cannibalism said to have been recorded as a feature of war rituals: borea adventures the limbs of victims may have taken home as Kalinago trophies.While will chew and spit out a mouthful of meat a very brave warrior, so that his courage would go to him, there is no evidence that they eat humans to satisfy hunger. The Kalinago have a tradition to keep the bones of their ancestors in their homes, initially this was taken as evidence that they ate human flesh. To this day the people of K

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