People of the Longhouse
The People of Longhouses
Within the Iroquoian village,
longhouses were important activity centres. People lived and
worked in and around them. These homes sheltered several families related through the women. If need be,
the longhouse could be physically extended to make more room for new
residents.
Longhouses brought together, under a single roof, people related
through the female line. To the Iroquoian people, the longhouse
symbolized all of society. This society was based on
relationships between and through women, and on cooperation for
everyone's support and benefit.
Some 15th-century Iroquoian villages such as the Draper site
near Pickering, Ontario, housed several thousand individuals.
The clustering of houses within the communities is thought to
indicate social and family groupings.
Artistic recreation of the Draper site village. From The
1975 and 1978 Rescue Excavations at the Draper Site, by
William D. Finlayson, National Museum of Man Mercury Series,
Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper no. 130, Ottawa, 1985.
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