"BONNETS TRADITIONALLY HELD 28 FEATHERS. THE BONNET HAD TO BE EARNED THROUGH BRAVE DEEDS IN BATTLE FOR THE VERY FEATHERS IT CONTAINED WERE SIGNIFICANT OF THE DEEDS THEMSELVES."
"THE EAGLE WAS CONSIDERED BY THE INDIAN AS A GREATEST AND MOST POWERFUL OF ALL BIRDS AND THE FINEST BONNETS WERE MADE OUT OF ITS FEATHERS.
Feathered war bonnets (also called warbonnets or headdresses) were worn by honored Plains Indian men, sometimes into battle, but most often for ceremonial occasions, and were seen as items of great spiritual and magical importance.The eagle was considered by Plains tribes as the greatest and most powerful of all birds, and thus the finest bonnets were made out of its feathers.
Someone holding a completed bonnet could tell countless stories. The bonnet was only worn on special occasions and was highly symbolic. Its beauty was considered of secondary importance; the bonnet's real value was in its supposed power to protect the wearer.
The bonnet had to be earned through brave deeds in battle because the feathers signified the deeds themselves. Some warriors might have obtained only two or three honor feathers in their whole lifetime, so difficult were they to earn. The bonnet was also a mark of highest respect because it could never be worn without the consent of the leaders of the tribe. A high honor, for example, was received by the warrior who was the first to touch an enemy fallen in battle, for this meant the warrior was at the very front of fighting. Feathers were notched and decorated to designate an event and told individual stories such as killing, capturing an enemy's weapon and shield, and whether the deed had been done on horseback or foot.
After about ten honors had been won, the warrior went out to secure the eagle feathers with which to make his bonnet. In some tribes these had to be purchased from an individual given special permission to hunt the bird; a tail of twelve perfect feathers could bring the seller as much as a good horse. Some tribes permitted a warrior to hunt his own eagles. This was a dangerous and time-consuming mission and meant that he had to leave the tribe and travel to the high country where the bird could be found. When the destination had been reached, ceremonies were conducted to appeal to the spirits of the birds to be killed.
A chief's war bonnet is made of feathers received for good deeds to his community and is worn in high honor. Each feather would represent a good deed. A warrior's war bonnet, such as the famous war bonnet of Roman Nose, the Cheyenne warrior, served to protect him during battle. In several instances Roman Nose, wearing his war bonnet, rode back and forth before soldiers of the United States Army during battles of theIndian Wars and despite being firing upon by many soldiers was unscathed.
Chiefs and honored warriors still sometimes wear war bonnets for ceremonial occasions.
Source // Wikipedia
The bonnet had to be earned through brave deeds in battle for the very feathers it contained were significant of the deeds themselves. Some warriors might be able to obtain only two or three honor feathers in their whole lifetime, so difficult were they to earn. The bonnet was also the mark of highest respect because it could never be worn without the consent of the leaders of the tribe. A high honor, for example, was received by the warrior who was the first to touch an enemy fallen in battle, for this meant the warrior was at the very front of fighting. Feathers were notched and decorated to designate an event. Feathers told individual stories such as killing, scalping, capturing an enemy's weapon and shield and whether the deed had been done on horseback or foot.
The eagle was considered by the Indian as the greatest and most powerful of all birds and the finest bonnets were made out of its feathers.
When about ten honors had been won the warrior then went out to secure the eagle feathers with which to make his bonnet. In some tribes these had to be purchased from an individual given special permission to hunt the bird and a tail of twelve perfect feathers could bring the seller as much as a good horse. Some tribes permitted a warrior to hunt his own eagles. This was a dangerous and time-consuming mission and meant that he had to leave the tribe and travel to the high country where the bird could be found. When the destination had been reached, ceremonies were conducted to appeal to the spirits of the birds to be killed
The history and construction of a war bonnet held a lot of oral history for the warriors and their tribe. Someone holding a completed boonnet could tell countless stories. This exercise borrows from this old tradition and guides the writer in their quest to document either their own, or the stories of others.
from The Book of American Indians by Ralph H. Raphael.
Source // www.dailywriting.net
Imagery on War Bonnets:
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