Tiki Central / General Tiki
Polynesian history
Pages: 1 14 replies
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aikiman44
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Tue, Feb 22, 2005 4:30 PM
In Jared Diamond's book Collapse, there's a significant amount on the history of Easter Island, Pitcairn Island and general Polyesian history, most of it relating to collapsing cultures due in part to environmental problems. Fascinating stuff. Are people familiar with this stuff? Should I post some of it in summary? |
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bigbrotiki
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Tue, Feb 22, 2005 5:47 PM
Everybody SHOULD be familiar with his writings, the man is brilliant. Please post ahead. |
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Tiki Chris
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Tue, Feb 22, 2005 6:03 PM
follow this link to an interview w/ jared diamond. great stuff. |
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christiki295
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Wed, Feb 23, 2005 6:38 PM
Please do. Regarding Easter Island, Tikibars provided the following interesting facts: In the late 18th century, the island was lambasted with the moai-toppling tribal wars, slave raids, and smallpox all back-to-back. It was said by a missionary at the time that the total population of the island at the time was 110. He included himself in the census for a total of 111. According to Heyerdahl in his 1985 tome Easter Island The Mystery Solved (his final word on the subject and an amazing book that states his case very very convincingly), in the 1980s there was only one living original "long ear" descendant left alive. According to moast theories, the long ears, who built the moai and arrived on the island first, were defeated by the short-ears, who arrived later and toppled the moai, and from whom just about all of the native Rapa Nui living today are escended. To digress further... 'long ears' and 'short ears' may have been a mistranslation of the word 'eepe' vs 'epe', which would make 'long ears' translate as 'slender people' in reality, and 'short ears' into 'stocky people'. That one is in debate too. The so-called Batlle of Poike Ditch has been completely debunked - no battle occurred and no one was roasted alive. In spite of what I posted above or elsewhere, the most up-to-the-minute theories actually say there weren't two tribes at all: there were two CLASSES, same genetics and lineage (all from Hotu Matua) and that the thin people overthrew the corpulent people, but they were all of the same race and, if one were to go back 30-40 generations, all related. http://www.tikicentral.com/viewtopic.php?mode=viewtopic&topic=7445&forum=1&start=15 |
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Holler Waller
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Fri, Mar 28, 2014 12:26 PM
How could Polynesians have made it to Brazil? Indeed ~ More American History actually |
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christiki295
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 10:00 AM
Here is the Jared Diamond thread: http://www.tikicentral.com/viewtopic.php?topic=17462&forum=1&hilite=Diamond Dr. Diamond provides the following explanation of the factors which caused the collapse of the pre-contact Rapa Nui culture on Easter Island*:
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TikiTacky
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 10:26 AM
Here's a very interesting article on sexual practices in pre-contact Hawaii: http://www.hawaii.edu/PCSS/biblio/articles/2000to2004/2004-sexual-behavior-in-pre-contact-hawaii.html Some highlights:
Is it any wonder that the early explorers who landed here thought it paradise, or that the missionaries worked so hard to convert the "heathens"? |
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christiki295
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 11:22 AM
Good post. I thought this discussion of nudity being non sexual was interesting: In traditional Hawai‘i, nudity was not seen primarily as being sexual. Warm climate often dictates less clothing. The basic dress was a malo (loin cloth) for adult males and a leaf or tapa (bark) skirt for adult females. The female breasts were not covered. Very young children went uncovered. A young male was permitted to wear a malo only after he began to live in the hale mua (“men’s house”), usually between the ages of 4 and 6 (Handy and Pukui, 1958, P. 9). Once the pubic hair began to grow, the genitals were covered, reportedly out of respect for the piko ma‘i (genitals) and to protect the organs that gave progeny. A tapa robe might be added for protection against the cold or sun (Handy, 1930, P. 10), not for modesty. |
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Atomic Tiki Punk
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 11:27 AM
"Future ritual genital cutting!" Hell no, I won't go! |
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christiki295
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 2:04 PM
GENITAL PREPARATION - PENIS The penis-blowing procedure was said to guarantee health and efficient coitus (Pukui, Haertig, and Lee, 1972, p. 75). This procedure, and the vulva treatment to be mentioned, was said to make the genitals more beautiful and to be a form of “blessings with which loving relatives desired to endow the firstborn throughout life .... What was true for the firstborn was true for subsequent children, to a lesser degree” (Handy and Pukui, 1958, p. 94). Seems more like the traditional Jewish bris ceremony, although one does hope that wine from pineapple or passion fruit would be used to attempt to dull the pain. |
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TikiTacky
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 2:12 PM
Subincision of the foreskin is a little more dramatic than a simple circumcision. Here's a Wikipedia article. Be warned, there's a photo, and it's cringeworthy. Edit: After reading the entire article (Ow. Ow. Ow.), it's apparent that the subincision performed in Hawaii was only on the tip of the foreskin, and not as hardcore as what was pictured. It apparently is closer to a bris, although it's only slit underneath, not removed. Edit 2: I now know more than I care to about Hawaiian sexy times. Immortalize your name for eternity by contributing to The Tikipedia!T-shirts based on vintage tiki matchbooks: TikiTees [ Edited by: TikiTacky 2014-03-29 14:19 ] |
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christiki295
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 5:49 PM
Another section of that interesting article from that University of Hawaii article is on the subject of the Kapu and how it restricted women from eating certain foods or from eating with males. This seemingly is an odd, and seemingly discriminatory, distinction. Under the kapu system, there were forms of bondage and slavery, human sacrifice (Valeri, 1985), and infanticide (Malo, 1951, p. 70; Kamakau, 1961, p. 234). While adult females were afforded many rights and some had great status, it was kapu for them to eat certain foods; they could be put to death for eating pork, certain kinds of bananas or coconuts, and certain fish (Malo, 1951, p. 29). Poi and taro4 (basic staples of the Hawai‘ian diet) were not to be eaten from the same dish by males and females. Furthermore, in certain circumstances upon threat of death, adult males and adult females were not allowed to eat together, although they could have sex together. Religious laws controlled eating more than they controlled sex. Some suggest that the restrictiveness of the Kapu led to the demise of traditional Hawaiian society and the abandonment of worship of the Tiki Gods. Shortly after his father's death and his succession to power, Kamehameha's son Liholiho disregarded the sanctity of the kapu system that was the backbone of Hawaiian society. Encouraged by his mother, Keopuolani, and regent Ka'ahumanu, two of Kamehameha's widows, Liholiho defied tradition by allowing men and women to eat together without restriction at a feast attended by high chiefs and several foreigners. Called the 'Ai Noa, his act shook the foundation and eventually brought the demise of an entire belief system. Ultimately, the ancient gods were abandoned as temples were dismantled and idols burned. |
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Cammo
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 6:22 PM
For a really interesting take on the subject, check out the incredibly controversial Bruno Bettelheim's: "Symbolic Wounds; Puberty Rites and the Envious Male, 1954 " Where he basically puts forth the idea that with circumcision, boys are imitating women's first menstrual cycle. The bleeding of the girls' sexual organs freaked out the whole community - so menstruating women were traditionally shut up in dark back huts and the boys were publicly celebrated with cuts on their schwangs... [ Edited by: Cammo 2014-03-29 18:22 ] |
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TikiTacky
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Sat, Mar 29, 2014 7:01 PM
"Neat." |
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Cammo
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Sun, Mar 30, 2014 7:34 AM
I just read Margaret Mead's "Coming Of Age in Samoa" - a lot of it has been discounted, and I don't think Mead had any idea at all how much Samoan society had already changed by the 1920's when she visited. Nonetheless, you can see exactly how seriously they took division of the sexes; Samoans were simply not allowed any contact whatsoever with the other sex. Mead thought that these prison-like guidelines were actually much more psychologically good for the teenagers as there was an age-old pre-approved outlet for almost all behavior types. There was a short period (when very young) when all the village kids play together, but even this was incredibly brief due to Samoans basically making their children slaves of every adult whim... |
Pages: 1 14 replies