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  2. Gender roles among the Indigenous peoples of North America

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_roles_among_the...

    Traditional Apache gender roles have many of the same skills learned by both females and males. All children traditionally learn how to cook, follow tracks, skin leather, sew stitches, ride horses, and use weapons. [2] Typically, women gather vegetation such as fruits, roots, and seeds. Women would often prepare the food.

  3. Native Americans and women's suffrage in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_Americans_and_women...

    Mott also saw women in these communities work towards greater independence in their own lives. [4] Matilda Joslyn Gage was also influenced by the structure of society in the Iroquois. [2] Gage believed that Native societies lived in a way that was a model for creating a lasting peace in the world. [3] She wrote articles in the New York Evening ...

  4. Iroquois - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iroquois

    A source of confusion for European sources, coming from a patriarchal society, was the matrilineal kinship system of Iroquois society and the related power of women. [44] The Canadian historian D. Peter MacLeod wrote about the Canadian Iroquois and the French in the time of the Seven Years' War:

  5. Native American women in politics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_women_in...

    Native American women have played significant roles in politics, both within their tribal nations and in broader American political life. Their involvement spans from traditional governance systems to participation in local, state, and national levels of government in the United States.

  6. Laura Cornelius Kellogg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laura_Cornelius_Kellogg

    Iroquois Clan Mothers decided any and all issues involving territory, including where a community was to be built and how land was to be used. The Washington Herald published an interview with Kellogg [25] where she supported women's suffrage, emphasizing Iroquois women's equality of civic powers with the men. Female leaders among the Oneida ...

  7. Native American feminism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_Feminism

    These women noted many ways in which indigenous culture influenced their ideas of feminism, specifically giving note to the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) women who were observed living free lives in which they could do things such as own their own property or even play sports. [16]

  8. Iroquois kinship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iroquois_kinship

    The term Iroquois comes from the six Iroquois tribes of northeastern North America. Another aspect of their kinship was that the six tribes all had matrilineal systems, in which children were born into the mother's clan and gained status through it. Women controlled some property, and hereditary leadership passed through the maternal line.

  9. Native American women in Colonial America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_women_in...

    Native American women. Before, and during the colonial period (While the colonial period is generally defined by historians as 1492–1763, in the context of settler colonialism, as scholar Patrick Wolfe says, colonialism is ongoing) [1] of North America, Native American women had a role in society that contrasted with that of the settlers.