How American Indians Have Adapted their Culture Since Colonization

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My essay will have an outlook of the history of the first Americans “Indians” and how they’ve adapted with their religion, subsistence strategy, social organization, and material culture. Over the years things have change in the history of Native Americans, prior to the reconstruction period, Native Americans knew who they were and what they lived for. Before the Europeans came and changed their living they one with nature and the land they’ve came to know. They believe that America was there’s and they lived free. In today’s history of Native Americans culture was founded in many ways, started in the mid 8200s B.C and before Christopher Columbus discovered America. Living in the Americas they were in touch with nature as well as their ancestors. The first Americas have ruled this country for many years. In my research I’ve learned that so many things around us are influence by Native Americans culture, independence and were they have come from Native Americans are disputed in this country, diverse among tribes, culturally mixed and socially in their own political standards. The social aspect of Native Americans today is that in the state of Virginia used to be Native American lands? The Indians claimed god gave them that land they have every right to own and settle on it. In history we have seen many problems, Europeans and Spanish came and took over Native American land in the name of the queen. Europeans invaded the Indians territory destroyed their culture, lives and what they have worked hard for. Conquered by the Spanish, but it wasn’t just the Spanish who conquered Native Americas. The civilizations of the Indians fell from a combination of a poor government, lack of technology, new disease introduced by the settlers who ... ... middle of paper ... ...rs of nations, tribes, or bands of Native Americans who have sovereignty or independence from the government of the United States. Their societies and cultures still flourish amidst a large Native American social organization, and fundamental change in social attitudes toward Native people by museum curators, the scientific community, and Congress. Congress attempted to strike a balance between the interest in scientific examination of skeletal remains and the recognition that Native Americans have a religious and spiritual reverence for the remains of their ancestors The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act established Indian nations as the owners of Native American cultural objects, including human remains, which were found on Federal land. It requires that the American Indians provide substantial amounts of information to validate their claims.

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