Micronesian republic
Micronesian republic
Map of Micronesian republic
Matrilineages were traditionally exogamous—members did not marry within the same lineage. While matrilineage membership was considered basically unalterable in some communities, actual practices probably allowed some flexibility. If a lineage grew too large, it tended to split into two parts, one of which would adopt a new name; the two parts would from that time forward be considered different lineages for the purposes of exogamy. If outsiders moved into a community, they would often be taken into an existing lineage as honorary or fictive members and would be expected to observe the lineage’s rules of exogamy.
Sun Set in Micronesia
Marriage in Micronesia varied in formality. In Palau and Yap, marriages were marked by formal payments from the groom’s family to the bride’s. In the area from the central Carolinian atolls to the Marshalls, marital relationships were usually rather loose and informal, although people of high rank may have had public ceremonies with some exchange of wealth. In this area considerable premarital and extramarital sex was traditionally expected. Marriage for ordinary people consisted simply of openly living together and being spoken of by the community as spouses. Apparently, there was more formality to marriage and more control of premarital sex in the Gilberts. Polygyny, a form of marriage in which wives share a husband, was generally permitted to some extent in Micronesian societies, although it was not very common. It was most likely to involve high-ranking men and was sometimes restricted to chiefs.
Before European contact, the majority of Micronesians lived in some form of extended family group. In most areas the organization of these groups probably had considerable flexibility. Some newlywed couples lived with the husband’s family and others with the wife’s relatives, as the major determinants in the choice of residence were the relative availability of agricultural land and the need for additional labourers on one or the other side of the family. Descent was traced through matrilineage in most of Micronesia.
While residence with the wife’s family was thus widely held as the ideal, exceptions were frequently allowed in practice, and children often had rights to use land on their paternal grandmother’s side. In Yap, on the other hand, patrilocal residence and patrilineal inheritance of land were considered ideal.
Micronesia limits
Matrilineages were traditionally exogamous—members did not marry within the same lineage. While matrilineage membership was considered basically unalterable in some communities, actual practices probably allowed some flexibility. If a lineage grew too large, it tended to split into two parts, one of which would adopt a new name; the two parts would from that time forward be considered different lineages for the purposes of exogamy. If outsiders moved into a community, they would often be taken into an existing lineage as honorary or fictive members and would be expected to observe the lineage’s rules of exogamy.
Sun Set in Micronesia
Marriage in Micronesia varied in formality. In Palau and Yap, marriages were marked by formal payments from the groom’s family to the bride’s. In the area from the central Carolinian atolls to the Marshalls, marital relationships were usually rather loose and informal, although people of high rank may have had public ceremonies with some exchange of wealth. In this area considerable premarital and extramarital sex was traditionally expected. Marriage for ordinary people consisted simply of openly living together and being spoken of by the community as spouses. Apparently, there was more formality to marriage and more control of premarital sex in the Gilberts. Polygyny, a form of marriage in which wives share a husband, was generally permitted to some extent in Micronesian societies, although it was not very common. It was most likely to involve high-ranking men and was sometimes restricted to chiefs.
Micronesian culture | cultural region, Pacific Ocean
Bairiki islet, Tarawa Atoll, Kiri
Birth order has traditionally been widely important in Micronesian societies. The eldest child typically represents the family or lineage in public, is expected to inherit any lineal political offices, and directs the use of lineage or family lands. Younger siblings generally exhibit formal respect to older siblings. Brother-sister avoidance relationships are well developed in parts of Micronesia, perhaps most strongly in the central Carolines from Chuuk through the atolls to the west. In this area sisters and brothers were traditionally expected to avoid speaking to one another, and a sister was expected to crouch in her brother’s presence and to show respect in other ways. In Pohnpei a similar relationship existed between a sister whose next older sibling was a brother, but it did not extend with the same force to relationships between other siblings.
As in other parts of Oceania, people often adopted the children of their relatives. The practice was useful in many ways: it provided a home for children who were orphaned or born out of wedlock; and it was a way of relieving young adults of the chores of child care while providing older people with children to do minor work for them, a way of ensuring more-equitable distribution of land rights, and a way of providing heirs who could be taught specialized knowledge when a natural heir was unavailable or unsatisfactory.
Social hierarchy and political organization
A certain amount of hereditary social stratification was found in Micronesia, but its degree varied considerably from some of the smaller Carolinian atolls, which had nominal hereditary chiefs with little special power or wealth, to the high island of Yap, which had several ranked endogamous castes. Other cultures that showed relatively marked social stratification were Palau, Pohnpei, Kosrae, the Marshalls, and the Gilberts. The Marianas may have also had distinct social classes before the Spanish conquest. In all of these areas there appear to have been some chiefs who were supported principally by tribute from their subjects, who were the object of considerable deference, who could punish offenses (especially against themselves and their own relatives) by fines, destruction of property, or death, and whose principal wives were generally members of other high-ranking families. Often they had subordinate chiefs and officials.
Throughout most of Micronesia the maximum independent autonomous political unit was the high island or the atoll, often subdivided into more than one polity. At the time of European contact, Satawan Atoll in the Mortlocks had four separate communities, each with its own leader, which sometimes fought one another. Palau had two confederations of villages or districts, each independent of the other, and the villages themselves had considerable autonomy. Pohnpei had five petty states, although traditions of a unified rule for the whole island are apparent from an earlier period. Chuuk was extremely fragmented politically, with several independent communities on each of the six larger high islands. The Marshalls and the Gilberts had larger polities and integrated groups of separate atolls under a high chief; these expansionist states achieved their fullest development after the introduction of firearms by Europeans.
The low islands between Chuuk and Yap have been described as belonging to the so-called Yapese empire. The purported empire consisted mainly of a chain of trading and ceremonial relationships with one of the states of Yap. Notably, the Yapese exerted no military force over the low islanders—but did claim the ability to punish them by sending cyclones, disease, and famine if they should fail to fulfill their obligations.
In most of the area from the Palaus in the west to the Marshalls in the east, the community was considered to be owned in some sense by a clan, the head of which was also the leader of the community. Other clans had land rights by their relation to former chiefs or to the men of the ranking clan, usually because their women had married men of the chiefly clan or because their men had rendered service to the chiefly clan in the past. The chiefly clans in some cases claimed their position by virtue of ancient military conquest and in others by virtue of being the first to occupy the land. The aboriginal pattern of political and community organization in the Marianas has been obscured by the early Spanish conquest, which exterminated most of the population and concentrated the remainder under close Spanish military and religious control.
Socialization and education
Micronesians were indulgent with infants. Children were inducted into adult life gradually, through observation and participation. There was little in the way of formal schooling or initiation ceremonies in most Micronesian societies.
Several forms of bodily ornamentation were practiced, mostly performed around puberty or in early adulthood. The most widespread of these was tattooing, practiced by both sexes. This and other forms of bodily adornment were generally done on individual initiative to demonstrate bravery and increase attractiveness.
Training in cultural specialties—including medicine, magic, mythology, house building, canoe building, and navigation—was often delayed until young adulthood or middle age. Usually an older relative taught an individual these skills, although sometimes outsiders would be instructed for a payment of food and goods. The most-formal training in esoteric knowledge appears to have been given by the specialists known in Chuuk as itang. These were men and women who had trained under an older expert adept in traditional history, oratory, war strategy and tactics, and magic. Those who had earned the title or degree of itang could thenceforth serve as an orator, ambassador, counselor, or executive officer for a chief.
Production and technology
The small groups of people who first settled the islands of Micronesia probably had few technical specialists among them. They most likely had a subsistence technology in which a few part-time specialists produced luxury items such as personal ornaments and the shell and stone valuables that were used, mostly in the western Carolines, for ceremonial payments.
Cutting tools were made from stone and shell. Europeans introduced iron, although some iron tools may have been obtained before that time from Asian sources in western Micronesia. Simple pottery has been found only in the western high islands of Micronesia: Palau, the Marianas, and Yap. Suitable clay apparently exists in Chuuk, Pohnpei, and Kosrae, but if pottery was ever introduced to those islands, it was not widely used.
Subsistence throughout the region was based primarily on fishing and horticulture, with fishing somewhat more important in the low islands and horticulture more important in the high islands. Domestic animals were found only in some areas and were generally limited to dogs and chickens, although archaeology indicates that small numbers of pigs were also kept on a few islands.
Coconuts and coconut palms were used everywhere, both as food and for other purposes, such as thatch, lumber, and cordage. Some form of taro, either true taro (Colocasia esculenta) or giant swamp taro (Cyrtosperma species), was probably cultivated everywhere except on some of the drier low islands in the east, where the groundwater tended to be too brackish. The breadfruit tree, which produces a large starchy fruit in abundance in the early summer, was also widely distributed. Bananas were an important food crop on the high islands.
Tropical yams (Dioscorea species), which produce large starchy tubers, are found today on a number of the high islands; they are of greatest importance as a cultivated crop on Pohnpei, where they have high prestige value and provide an important source of food in the winter. On some of the drier atolls in the Marshalls and the Gilberts, the pandanus tree is a major subsistence crop. The edible fruit of some cultivated varieties contains starch and sugar that can be made into flour and stored. Other varieties have large edible nuts. Some varieties of pandanus are cultivated for their leaves, used principally in making plaited mats and thatch for roofs.
Pandanus trees, Arorae, Kiri.
Pandanus trees, Arorae, Kiri.
Rice was introduced in the Marianas but later was largely replaced by corn (maize), introduced from Mexico by the Spanish conquerors. The sweet potato and cassava (manioc), also introduced by Europeans, now serve as alternate subsistence foods on some of the high islands.
Many kinds of fishing were practiced. Often there was a gendered division of labour in which men would fish in deep water and women would do so in the shallower waters of the fringing reefs. Low islanders also engaged in deep-sea trolling with sailing canoes and made expeditions to small uninhabited reefs and low islands to fish and collect turtle and seabird eggs.
All Micronesians relied heavily on water travel, although the high islanders used canoes principally in the sheltered coastal waters of their home islands. Micronesian canoes had a single hull with one outrigger. Canoes used in protected waters were often simple dugouts, but the oceangoing vessels, found especially in the central Carolinian atolls, the Marshalls, and the Gilberts, had sides built up of irregular planks that were caulked and sewn together with cord made from coconut-husk fibre.
Some of the atoll dwellers regularly went on trips requiring several nights on the open sea. Extra provisions were usually taken along as gifts and for emergency needs if the canoe was blown off course. It seems clear that, prehistorically, there was communication in chain fashion from the Ellice Islands and western Polynesia through the Gilberts, the Marshalls, and the Carolines to Palau and the southeast atolls and beyond them into the northern Moluccas in Indonesia. Probably there was also deliberate communication across the larger gap between the central Carolinian atolls and the Marianas, which have a long-established population of cultural Carolinian immigrants who have retained their original language.
Property and exchange
Traditionally, the most important property among the Micronesians was land. Specific land-tenure customs varied considerably from island to island, even among those with related cultures, but in general land was owned by extended families or lineages. Individuals acquired use rights to particular plots through their kin connections, acknowledging the rights of the group by periodic offerings of first fruits to the kin group’s leader. Often a community chief, and sometimes a superior chief, received offerings from each household or larger kin group holding land under his jurisdiction. In some areas, especially in eastern Micronesia, strong chiefs confiscated land from those who fell out of their favour, awarding it to loyal followers.
Because land was scarce, various mechanisms were developed to govern its distribution. In most areas matrilineal inheritance of land rights was the norm; in practice, children could also inherit use rights to the land worked by their fathers or receive a share outright if the father’s lineage had more than it needed. Land was generally not sold, but it might be given in payment for medicine and health services or as compensation for an injury.
In the larger high islands, interior areas not under regular cultivation were considered community property and were used for collecting wild food and for temporary gardens. In the atolls all land was owned by one or another family group, even the smallest islets with only a few coconut trees.
Large feasts were common throughout Micronesia. People assembled sizable quantities of food and offered it to the chief, who in turn redistributed much of it to the people. Sometimes a set of kin groups or communities held alternating semicompetitive feasts in which each tried to outdo the other. Feasts were held to commemorate important transitions in the life cycle, especially marriage and death. A kind of delayed exchange took place at these events, as certain relatives were obliged to make presentations of food and goods in return for past or anticipated services.
Substantial payments were sometimes made to practitioners of traditional medicine, especially when the practitioner was not a close relative. Such payments consisted of food and other goods. The precise amount was generally left to the family of the patient, with the understanding that a stingy family might not get the most energetic and effective treatment.
In Palau and Yap, shell and stone valuables were used in the transactions that occurred in conjunction with rites of passageand for certain other compensations, such as payment for injuries. These are often referred to as money, but their use was much more limited and specific than that of most currency. The best known of these valuables were the large, flat stone disks that the men of Yap manufactured on Palau and carried home in sailing canoes. These stones were up to 13 feet (4 metres) in diameter; a hole was drilled through the middle of each disk so that two men could transport it on a pole.
A certain amount of trade developed between the low islanders and the high islanders. The low islanders provided handicraft products that the high islanders could have made if they had needed to, and the high islanders provided goods obtained more easily where they lived. Trade was especially well developed between the low islanders of the central Carolines and the high islanders of Yap and Chuuk. The most important high-island export was turmeric, which was used for medicinal and cosmetic purposes or mixed with coconut oil to make a bright orange body paint. The low islanders provided shell beads, plaited pandanus mats, and coarse cloth woven from banana or wild hibiscus fibre that was used for women’s skirts and for men’s loincloths. Trade was often with particular partners who regarded themselves as distant relatives. An important function of interisland trade was to provide the low islanders with aid and a temporary dwelling place when their islands were devastated by periodic cyclones.
Religion
After 1900 Christianity became well established in most major centres in Micronesia. For the most part, traditional religions ceased being practiced in their full original form, although in Yap and some atolls of the central Carolines, traditional religion continued to be practiced until the middle of the 20th century. Missionaries and travelers recorded descriptions of certain aspects of the island religions, but there is no complete and systematic account.
The basic patterns of religion were probably similar throughout most of Micronesia. Micronesians were polytheists, believing in several high gods, a large number of spiritsattached to specific localities or performing specific functions, and a number of ancestors and deceased neighbours who could sometimes make contact with their living descendants and friends. Practices associated with each of these three major categories of supernatural beings tended to be distinct and to be handled by different specialists, although a specific being might gradually shift from one category to the other.
Micronesians generally believed in at least three vertically arranged levels of the universe: the heaven or sky world, the earth, and the underworld. Some Micronesians may have believed in multiple heavens, as did people in Polynesia and Indonesia. Micronesian myths and legends tell of the origin of particular islands or descent groups and of the initial discovery or conquest of an island by the ruling descent group. The notion of a supernatural creation of the whole human species or of the whole world is either not found or little emphasized in Micronesian mythology.
The principal ceremonies for the high gods appear to have been offerings of first fruits, performed in private by a specialist priest with a few helpers. Priests were very likely relatives of the ruling chiefs and probably made special appeals to the high gods at times of community crisis, as when wars or cyclones approached. Human sacrifice seems not to have been practiced.
Lesser spirits were called on by magicians for specific purposes, most notably for the diagnosis and curing of disease but also for such purposes as success in fishing, control of weather, success in love, and prowess in athletic contests, battle, canoe building, and other pursuits. Ancestral spirits were often contacted in dreams and in the trances of spirit mediums, as were the high gods and other nonhuman spirits. They would give people information about the causes of diseases, deaths, and other misfortunes and would sometimes prescribe new medicines or new varieties of magic. At times, the spirit mediums would also order their human protégés to perform songs and dances for the entertainment of the spirits, to win their goodwill and ensure the prosperity of the community.
Art
Prominent art forms include body painting and ornamentation, singing, dancing, and the recitation of myths, tales, and poetry. Oratory was, and still is, an important traditional art; good orators were expected to make mythological and historical allusions and to use special figures of speech.
Festival dance, Yap, Micron.
Festival dance, Yap, Micron.
Micronesia has relatively little sculpture or painting that is permanent. The best-known examples consist of the painted bas-relief scenes on the timbers and gables of the men’s meetinghouses in Palau. Stylized wooden masks and human figures have been found in the Mortlock Islands, southeast of Chuuk. Wooden bowls were also carved and painted. Painting and decoration of canoes was common, following traditional patterns for each island. In addition, decorative lashings of light and dark sennit twine are found in important buildings, and patterns were woven into clothing. For more-detailed treatment of Oceanic arts, see Oceanic art and architecture; Oceanic music and dance; Oceanic literature.
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