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description archivistique
British Columbia Avec objets numériques
Aperçu avant impression Hierarchy Affichage :

Jack, George, Taha

Portrait of Chief John L. George, of the Burrard tribe, holding a small carved wooden pole. He is seated outside.

Sans titre

Taha George

Portrait of an older woman wearing traditional dress and headpiece. She is seated in a grassy area.

Sans titre

Jack, George, Taha

Portrait of Chief John L. George, of the Burrard tribe, holding a small carved wooden pole. He is standing outside.

Sans titre

Dancers in field

Image of a group of dancers in a field, with a crowd gathered behind them watching. There appears to be about six dancers.

Sans titre

Taha George

Portrait of an older woman wearing traditional dress and headpiece. She is standing in a grassy area. Woman is Taha, wife of Chief George Slahholt of the Burrard Reserve [Coast Salish] in North Vancouver and mother of Dan George

Sans titre

Taha & Pat George

Portrait of an older woman and man wearing traditional dress and headpieces. They are standing outside in a brushy, open area, with a building visible in the background. The man is holding what appears to be a tobacco pipe. Woman is Taha, wife of Chief George Slahholt of the Burrard Reserve [Coast Salish] in North Vancouver and mother of Dan George

Sans titre

Taha George

Portrait of an older woman wearing traditional dress and headpiece. She is standing in a grassy area. Woman is Taha, wife of Chief George Slahholt of the Burrard Reserve [Coast Salish] in North Vancouver and mother of Dan George

Sans titre

House frontal totem pole, Anthony Island

Image of an old house post on Anthony Island, Haida Gwaii. This appears to the same as a post now housed at the Museum of Anthropology. This museum item is decribed as follows: "The lower section of a totem, crescent shaped in cross section, carved in shallow and deep relief. From top to bottom: bear with protruding tongue and raven on body, kneeling on head of unknown creature... Figures probably from historical narratives owned by lineages of house owner and wife. Grizzly bear was a crest of the lineages of the 'Striped Town People' and 'Sand Town People' of the Raven Moiety, to one of which the husband may have belonged. The supernatural Snag was also a crest of the 'Striped Town People'. Human arms of the raven or cormorant may indicate ability to transform from animal to human."

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