Introduction-The Prehistoric Puerto Rican
The Prehistoric Puerto Rican. His habits and customs. How the Greater and Lesser Antilles were peopled. Interesting ceremonies. I spend much of my time reading many historical books, magazines, articles, etc., about my ancestor’s ancestral home. My family is from Puerto Rico and has lived for hundreds and, most likely, a few thousand years.
Like many, researching our ancestors is not just collecting names and locating their supporting documentation. I like to place a face when I can, so I ask family members for photographs. When I do not have one, I allow the documents to paint an image of my ancestor. I want to know how they lived and try to imagine their way of life. I want to know what they ate, how they prepared their meals, how they dressed, how they spent their day working, and their
social life at night. By reading historical accounts about the island and its people, allows me to feel closer to them. To know your ancestors, you must know what was happening during that time. Thus, history & genealogy go hand in hand.
The Caribs and their Migrations
Below is an article I came across while reading some magazines from the early 1900s. It refers to the Indigenous natives on our island and their way of life, their habits, customs, ceremonies, and migrations from island to island.
I am collecting as much information as possible on the subject matter and will share it with you as I come across articles like these. It is my hope you enjoy the article as much as I did, and keep in mind that an American wrote it in the 20th century. Nevertheless, there is some well-documented information about the Indigenous Natives.
I must also remind you that the original author wrote this over one hundred years ago. The thought process, interpretation, meaning, and style of writing are quite different in modern times. Read this article with an open mind. This article merely aims to enlighten the reader on accounts written about the descendants of our Indigenous Native ancestors over one hundred years ago.
There are two parts to this article, written in two different issues. I have included both here for your reading enjoyment. Let me know what you think, leave me a comment.
The Prehistoric Puerto Rican Part I
His Habits and Customs. —How the Greater and Lesser Antilles Were Peopled.—Interesting Ceremonies.—The Caribs and Their Migrations
The address of J. Walter Fewkes on “Prehistoric Puerto Rico” before the Pittsburgh meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science is reported in full in Science. Mr. Fewkes drew his facts in regard to the Antillean race in the new possession of the United States from many works on the subject and from original research on the island and declares that all the available evidence supports the conclusion that the purest Indian blood among the present mountaineers of the island must be looked for in the inaccessible region called Loquillo. In the
isolated valleys of that region is still found the old Carib canoe, surviving in the hollowed-out log of wood by which produce is drawn down the slippery mountainsides. There also are the old forms of hammocks, different from those now generally used. Maize is a staple article of food and the primitive mills with which it is ground date back to a remote past.The prehistoric inhabitants of the Antilles from the Bahamas to the coast of South America belonged to one and the same composite stock differing in minor characteristics which are not racial. The people of the Bahamas, Cuba Hayti, and Puerto Rico were a mild-mannered agricultural race that had lost in vigor what they had gained by their sedentary life. The Caribs, confined to the Lesser Antilles, were more warlike, and their ferocity was known everywhere in the West Indies. The later, although confined to the Lesser Antilles, made frequent predatory expeditions upon the more peaceful inhabitants of Cuba, Hayti, and Puerto Rico—especially the latter— carrying away the women as slaves, thus bringing into the Carib communities a new speech and bringing about an amalgamation of the two stocks. There are, unfortunately, no authentic craniums of typical prehistoric Puerto Ricans to compare with those of the Caribs, but it is believed that a systematic search of the caves of the island would produce such skulls.
The prehistoric Puerto Ricans did not differ materially from those of the country people today. Stone or adobe buildings were not constructed, but a fragile cabin, the frame of which was tied together with maguey fibre (sic) and covered with bark of the royal palm or yucca, and thatched with straw, furnished a home for the prehistoric Puerto Rican. Like their modern representatives, these houses were raised on posts to avoid dampness and insects, suggesting pile-dwellings, a feature of house construction with which the Caribs were familiar. In many of the streets of Puerto Rico, still found houses built in the same primitive way, inhabited by poorer people, negroes, or peons. Some of these modern buildings are of the rudest construction and practically the same as those of four centuries ago.
The furniture of the ancient Puerto Rican house was limited but ample. The bed was a hammock made of the leaves of the palm, maguey, or fibre (sic)of native cotton. In the mountainous regions, primitive hammocks, like those of the ancients, are still made, and palm fibre (sic) is wholly employed in their construction. Calabashes or cocoanuts served as household implements as drinking cups and are still used for the same purpose in the poorer parts of the island. Clay vessels of rude construction were used by the Puerto Rican Caribs, who lived along the shore. These clay vessels were unglazed, their rims commonly adorned with raised heads representing animals of grotesque forms. Many of these heads are likened to monkeys, and, as there are no monkeys in Puerto Rico, they are generally ascribed to the Caribs rather than the Puerto Ricans.
The most characteristic of all objects made by the Caribs were the canoes, with which they navigated from island to island or traveled along the numerous rivers and lagoons. This craft often reached a great size and was, in some instances, made of logs of wood hollowed out with stone tools aided by fire. The number of stone implements in collections from Puerto Rico is very large, including objects of all sizes and many shapes. The arms of warfare were mostly adzes and hatchets with wooden handles, war clubs made of the ironwood of the island, spears, and possibly throwing- sticks. No arrow points have been found. Most of the implements are of polished stone, although two have been found that show marks of clipping. The culture of the island’s prehistoric inhabitants, as shown by their pictography, was of the same general character as the North American Indians. In the caves on the island, there are still many excellent specimens of picture writing. The figures studied appeared to be clan totems and other symbols.
The social organization appears to have been the same as that of the Indians in other parts of North America. The unit of organization was the clan, of which the chief was called a cacique. It also appears that some of these caciques had control over others and that unions of several smaller caciques for mutual defense occurred at rare intervals. The names of many of these caciques are still preserved on the island, and it would appear as if localities, mountains, rivers, and modern towns were called after powerful rulers who had raised themselves to the positions of governors of some regions. Aguenaba is commonly reputed to have been the ruler of the island, but it is doubtful if he was able to maintain his position at all times.
The worship of ancestors was a feature of the Carib religion. From the existence of many skulls in their houses, it had been supposed that these people were anthropophagous, but it is probable that many of these skulls, carefully wrapped in basket-ware or woven cotton coverings, were the crania of their own ancestors—preserved with pious care and used in the rites and ceremonies of ancestor worship. Their ceremonial dances had religious motives in which the praise of the ancestors was only one, although an important part. In these dances, songs commemorating the valor
or worth of the dead were sung on ceremonial occasions. In these dances, the priests personated their ancestors, as do the Pueblos, but with far different paraphernalia. One of the most important ceremonies of the prehistoric Antillean was the dance to the Goddess of Growth, in which the image of the Earth Mother played an important part.In conclusion, Mr. Fewkes says: “From this imperfect sketch, and much more of a like import, certain general conclusions have been drawn which have a relation to the early migrations of man on the American continent.
The Puerto Rican Herald, Año II, Núm 56, NY, August 2, 1902 pg. 37The Puerto Rican Herald, Año II, Núm 57, NY, August 9, 1902 pg.54
Part II [continuation from the past Issue]
His Habits and Customs. —How the Greater and Lesser Antilles Were Peopled.—interesting Ceremonies.—The Caribs and Their Migrations.
“The peopling of the Antilles is believed to have occurred at a comparatively modern date and to have been brought about by offshoots of the Arawak stock, migrating in old times from South America to Heriquen, via the chain of islands forming the Lesser Antilles. The peculiar culture of this race attained its highest development in Hayti and Puerto Rico, where conditions were most favorable to its growth. Cuba and the Bahamas had likewise been peopled by the same race, but in neither of these islands was the culture the same as in the islands mentioned. The Lesser Antilles, exposed to inroads from savage South American tribes of the same stock as those of Puerto Rico, were unable from physical and agricultural conditions to preserve the sedentary culture of the more central islands. They were the starting place of the foraging parties that constantly attacked Borinquen.
“The cradle of the prehistoric Antilleau was on the banks of the Orinoco and its tributaries in the great republic of Venezuela. His ancestors belonged to the Arawak stock of South America. His culture, having naturally developed certain distinctive features in fluviatile waters among great forests, became maritime and spread from island to island until it came to Borinquen.
A part of the race became sedentary, but with the adoption of this kind of life, it lost much of its early prowess and daring, retaining only certain linguistic and other kinship with South American relatives. In the same way, the Caribs, another race-related in some respects but distinct in others, swarmed out of the same Orinoco valley, coasted from island to island in the wake of its predecessor, and extended its excursions to Florida and our South eru States.This race also yielded to the insular environment and, commingling its blood with that of the former, developed into a composite culture that we have called Antillean. These two peoples, and others of like kin, at first tribally distinct, though members of the same stock by admixture and changed by environment, were fast coming to be homogeneous and thoroughly amalgamated when the advent of the European practically exterminated the Boriquenos and reduced the insular Carib to a wretched remnant of one of the finest races of America.”
The Puerto Rican Herald, Año II, Núm 57, NY, August 9, 1902 pg.54
Sources:
- The Puerto Rican Herald, Año II, Núm 56, NY, August 2, 1902 pg. 37
- The Puerto Rican Herald, Año II, Núm 57, NY, August 9, 1902 pg.54
- Don’t forget to check out other articles I have. Go back to the home page, and check out the articles.