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HOUSES AND HOUSE-LIFE OF THE AMERICAN ABORIGINES.


BY LEWIS H. MORGAN.


CHAPTER I.

SOCIAL AND GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATION.

In a previous work[1] I have considered the organization of the American aborigines in gentes, phratries, and tribes, with the functions of each in their social system. From the importance of this organization to a right understanding of their social and governmental life, a recapitulation of the principal features of each member of the organic series is necessary in this connection.

The gentile organization opens to us one of the oldest and most widely prevalent institutions of mankind. It furnished the nearly universal plan of government of ancient society, Asiatic, European, African, American, and Australian. It was the instrumentality by means of which society was organized and held together. Commencing in savagery, and continuing through the three subperiods of barbarism, it remained until the establishment of political society, which did not occur until after civilization had commenced. The Grecian gens, phratry, and tribe, the Roman gens, curia, and tribe find their analogues in the gens, phratry, and tribe of the American aborigines. In like manner the Irish sept, the Scottish clan, the phrara of the Albanians, and the Sanskrit ganas, without extending the comparison further, are the same as the American Indian gens, which has usually been


  1. "Ancient Society; or, Researches in, the Lines of Human Progress from Savagery through Barbarism to Civilization." Henry Holt &, Co. 1877.