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  2. ʻAhu ʻula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ʻAhu_ʻula

    The circular type may have developed in Hawaii due to foreign (non-Polynesian) influence. [d] [45] Also, early types of Hawaiian feather cloaks were rectangular, though none of the surviving examples remained in Hawaii and have been kept elsewhere, so that only the later circular forms became generally family to the Hawaiian populace.

  3. Visual arts of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

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

    Iroquois people carve False Face masks for healing rituals, but the traditional representatives of the tribes, the Grand Council of the Haudenosaunee, are clear that these masks are not for sale or public display. [13] The same can be said for Iroquois Corn Husk Society masks. [14] Art from the Eastern woodlands of North America

  4. Mahiole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahiole

    Hawaiian feather helmets, known as mahiole in the Hawaiian language, [2] were worn with feather cloaks (ʻahu ʻula). These were symbols of the highest rank reserved for the men of the aliʻi, [3] the chiefly class of Hawaii. There are examples of this traditional headgear in museums around the world.

  5. Culture of the Native Hawaiians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Culture_of_the_Native_Hawaiians

    In 1898 the United States enacted the Newlands Resolution, annexing the Hawaiian islands. [17] In 1959, following a referendum in which over 93% of Hawaiian residents voted in favor of statehood, Hawaii became the 50th state. At its height the Hawaiian population an estimated 683,000 Native Hawaiians lived in the islands. [18]

  6. False Face Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_Face_Society

    Iroquois oral history tells the beginning of the False Face tradition. According to the accounts, the Creator Shöñgwaia'dihsum ('our creator' in Onondaga), blessed with healing powers in response to his love of living things, encountered a stranger, referred to in Onondaga as Ethiso:da' ('our grandfather') or Hado'ih (IPA:), and challenged him in a competition to see who could move a mountain.

  7. Transformation mask - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transformation_mask

    A transformation mask, also known as an opening mask, is a type of mask used by indigenous people of the Northwest Coast of North America and Alaska in ritual dances. These masks usually depict an outer, animal visage, which the performer can open by pulling a string to reveal an inner human face carved in wood to symbolize the wearer moving ...

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