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  2. Culture of the Tlingit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_the_Tlingit

    The totem poles carved normally tell a story, and Tlingit artists carve subjects like animals into the totem poles. These pictures are aligned in a column down the pole, in order from top to bottom. The poles are put on outside corners of "traditional dwellings", used to structurally support their interiors, or placed on shores.

  3. Totem pole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Totem_pole

    Totem pole in Vancouver, British Columbia Totem poles at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia. The meanings of the designs on totem poles are as varied as the cultures that make them. Some poles celebrate cultural beliefs that may recount familiar legends, clan lineages, or notable events, while others are mostly ...

  4. Tlingit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tlingit

    Tlingit thought and belief, although never formally codified, was historically a fairly well organized philosophical and religious system whose basic axioms shaped the way Tlingit people viewed and interacted with the world around them. Tlingits were traditionally animists, and hunters ritually purified themselves before hunting animals.

  5. Northwest Coast art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwest_Coast_art

    Totem poles, a type of Northwest Coast art. Northwest Coast art is the term commonly applied to a style of art created primarily by artists from Tlingit, Haida, Heiltsuk, Nuxalk, Tsimshian, Kwakwaka'wakw, Nuu-chah-nulth and other First Nations and Native American tribes of the Northwest Coast of North America, from pre-European-contact times up to the present.

  6. Visual arts of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_arts_of_the...

    The art of the Haida, Tlingit, Heiltsuk, Tsimshian and other smaller tribes living in the coastal areas of Washington state, Oregon, and British Columbia, is characterized by an extremely complex stylistic vocabulary expressed mainly in the medium of woodcarving. Famous examples include totem poles, transformation masks, and canoes. In addition ...

  7. Philosophy and religion of the Tlingit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_and_religion_of...

    Another series of dichotomies in Tlingit thought are wet versus dry, heat versus cold, and hard versus soft. A wet, cold climate causes people to seek warm, dry shelter. The traditional Tlingit house, with its solid red cedar construction and blazing central fireplace, represented an ideal Tlingit conception of warmth, hardness, and dryness ...

  8. Tlingit clans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tlingit_clans

    The Tlingit people of Southeast Alaska have multiple moieties (otherwise known as descent groups) in their society, each of which is divided into a number of clans. Each clan has its own history, songs, and totems , and each forms a social network of extended families which functions as a political unit in Tlingit society.

  9. Natsilane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natsilane

    Natsilane (/ n oʊ t s aɪ ˈ k l ɑː n eɪ / noht-sy-KLAH-nay) [1] is the human hero of the "Blackfish" creation myth, one of the Tlingit and Haida stories about how the various supernatural animal species from the Tlingit culture of the American Northwest coast were created.