Commanche, Kiowa and Cheyenne: The Plains
Indians
Moderns are inclined to view primitive societies
as following the same pattern of life for century after
century. If, after all, they were capable of change, surely
they would have progressed, become more like us, ceased to be
primitive. The plains indians provide a striking
counterexample. Their immemorial life style was in fact a
brand new invention when white men first came into substantial
contact with them.
The reason it was a new invention is that hunting
buffalo from horseback requires horses. There were no horses
in America until the Spanish brought them and none available
to North American indians until enough time had passed for
horses that had escaped the Spanish to multiply in the wild
and spread north.
Faced with a sudden opportunity for progress, the
chance to stop scratching in the earth as primitive
agriculturalists and turn into noble savages hunting buffalo,
living in tipis, and proving their manhood by making war on
each other, the indian tribes living on or near the great
plains seized the opportunity. The result was the development,
in the 18th century, of a common material culture
shared by a variety of tribes with quite different origins. It
depended on the horse, but also made good use of the rifle,
rifles having been initially provided by the English to tribes
willing to fight tribes allied with the French, and by the
French to tribes willing to fight those allied with the
English.
In this chapter I will discuss what is known
about the legal systems of three tribes. My discussion is
based mainly on a chapter by Hoebel,[1]
covering all three tribes, and a book by Llewellyn and Hoebel,[2]
covering the Cheyenne in much greater detail.
Commanche
“Once there were a bunch of Commanche out
looking for trouble”
(The usual start of an account by a Commanche
informant, according to Hoebel)
I start with the Commanche; their government is
the simplest of the three to describe, since they didn't have
one. A Commanche war chief was simply an entrepreneur, a
warrior who announced his intent to go steal horses from the
Mexicans, Americans, or some other tribe, and invited anyone
interested to come along. Within the war party he had absolute
rule, but anyone unhappy with the situation was free to leave.
Along similar lines, the Commanche peace chief was simply an
individual who others were willing to follow. If he chose to
go one direction and the rest of the band another, he was no
longer a peace chief.
The Commanche, in other words, were anarchists,
their social system allowing for nothing recognizable as a
government. One of the problems that concerns modern
anarchists is how to defend their society against adjacent
states, given the difficulty of raising and funding an army
without a draft, taxation, feudal obligations, or something
along similar lines.[3]
The Commanche reversed the situation, raising the
problem of defending adjacent states, and anyone else in the
neighborhood, from them. They drove the Apache from the
southern plains, raided the Mexicans for horses and slaves,
and, despite the disadvantage of lower technology and smaller
population, blocked American expansion across Texas for
decades, fairly earning the title of Spartans of the plains.
Facing an overwhelmingly superior enemy they were eventually
defeated, but only after making a very impressive fight of it.
Part of the reason, seen from an economist's
perspective, is that they made warfare into a private rather
than a public good. For most of their history, the incentive
to fight was not the welfare of the tribe but of the
individual warrior. Successful raids produced valuable loot.
Heroic and successful fighting produced status.
One way of getting status was to steal horses
from outsiders. Another was to face down another Commanche
warrior. The excuse for doing so was provided by the common
practice of wife stealing.
The strongest bond within the tribe was between
brothers who, among other things, shared their wives and had
the power to marry off their sisters. From the standpoint of
the brother, the ideal brother-in-law was a wealthy and
successful warrior. The sister, however, might prefer someone
earlier in his career, younger and more handsome—and, given
the opportunity, leave the husband chosen for her by her
brothers to run away with one such. The incentive of the
wife-stealer was both possession of the wife and the
opportunity to outface the husband.
Wife stealing was illegal and done openly, so
guilt was not an issue. Compensation was. The husband was
expected to confront the wife stealer and demand generous
compensation, with the amount an increasing function of the
wealth of the stealer and the prowess of the husband, a
decreasing function of the prowess of the stealer. There being
no government to enforce the law, the threat that backed the
demand was the private use of force. Pay or I'll kill you.
Carrying out that threat was neither desired nor
likely, since if the husband killed the stealer (or vice
versa) the victim's kin would take revenge by killing the
killer. The intended result of the threat was to set off the
game that economists call bilateral monopoly, a bargaining
game in which the parties have a common interest in a peaceful
resolution of their dispute but a conflict over the terms, in
this case over how much will be given in compensation to the
wronged husband.
What if the stealer was clearly the more
dangerous man of the two—not unlikely, since a prudent man in
search of status would prefer not to steal from too able a
husband? The husband had the option of calling in his brothers
or other kin to support his threats. The stealer, having set
off the conflict in order to prove his status, had no such
option—asking for help would be to admit that he had bitten
off more than he could chew, and besides, he was on what
everyone saw as the wrong side of the (unwritten) law. So at
that point the stealer backs down and agrees to pay
substantial damages, which damages are collected not by the
husband but by his helpers.
Suppose the husband had no brothers? His option
then was to find a champion, a brave, generous, well thought
of warrior willing to take over the case and face down the
stealer. This time the damage payment went to the husband. The
champion's payment was the status gained by his willingness to
risk himself in defense of the right and his success in
forcing another warrior to back down. Much the same pattern
appears in some of the Icelandic sagas, where a bully who
relies too heavily on his and his friends' strength to let him
violate the rights of weaker men is brought down by someone
still more formidable out to establish his own status.[4]
Wife stealing cases seem to have been the nearest
thing to legal disputes among the Commanche. So far as
conflicts between husband and wife, most likely to occur when
the husband suspected his wife of adultery, the husband had
pretty much a free hand, up to and including torturing his
wife to make her name her lover or killing her. One possible
resolution was for the wife to swear by earth and sky that she
was innocent, at which point the husband accepted the oath in
the belief that if she was lying, then earth and sky would
eventually kill her. As far as minor theft was concerned, the
Commanche, like the other two tribes I will discuss, regarded
such matters as beneath the notice of a warrior. As a Cheyenne
would have put it, "if you had asked, I would have given it to
you."
That attitude, as well as other features of
plains indian behavior that I will be discussing in the
context of the Cheyenne, suggests one important feature of
those societies—in their own terms, they were wealthy. Men
frequently had more horses than they themselves had use for,
and so were free to use the surplus to prove their generosity
by giving some away. In an uncertain environment, they were
from time to time at risk of starving to death during the
winter. But the most important form of portable, self-portable
on four legs, wealth was plentiful.
What about murder? Among the Commanche, as
already mentioned, a first killing required a second, of the
killer by the kin of his victim. At that point the matter
ended. The second killing was justified by the first and so
required no further vengeance. For these purposes, killing a
favorite horse, thought of as having a soul, counted as murder
and so justified the killing of the human responsible in
revenge.
An exception to the rule of a life for a life
occurred in the context of sorcery. Every Commanche male was
expected at some point to go on a vision quest and end up with
some sort of magical power, typically restricted by a tabu
whose violation could cost his life. For the most part such
power was used for the good of the tribe and the individual,
but there were "mean medicine men," individuals with a greater
than usual share of magical power and an inclination to misuse
it, sometimes lethally.
The first recourse, if someone was believed to be
dying from sorcery, was to get a good medicine man to cure
him. If that failed, the next step was to confront the
sorcerer believed responsible and try to get him to stop what
he was doing. If that failed, however, there was no obligation
to kill the sorcerer, possibly because doing so was seen as
too dangerous, possibly because in that case, unlike an
ordinary murder followed by revenge, there might be a serious
risk of blaming the wrong man.
What if it was believed that a particular bad
medicine man was responsible for multiple deaths? At that
point, the Commanche make use of the nearest thing their
society has to criminal law. The rest of the tribe meets
together, concludes that the guilty individual must die, and
either kills him or tricks him into violating his own tabu and
so dying.
The Kiowa
The Kiowa, while in some ways similar to the
Commanche, had something a little closer to a government and
much closer to a well defined class/rank system. The latter
consisted of four classes. The Onde were the high status warriors,
sufficiently high that they had no need to further demonstrate
their courage or prowess; they are estimated to have been at
most ten percent of the men. The Ondegupta were would-be Onde, the pushy up and
coming warriors trying to establish their claim to the top
category. Not surprisingly, they were the chief source
of conflict within the tribe as they, like their Commanche
equivalent, tried to gain status. Below them were the common
men and below those the Dapom,
the dregs of society, functioning as hangers-on of the more
important Kiowa and tolerated petty thieves.
Kiowa bands had recognized headmen, almost all of
Onde rank, who in
practice made important decisions for the band. Kiowa war
chiefs, like Commanche war chiefs, were the leaders of war
parties.
In addition to these, there were ten keepers of
medicine bundles, tribal fetishes with magical power, and one
keeper of the Sun Dance fetish and nominal grand chief of the
tribe, all of whom played an important role in settling
disputes. An Ondegupta
who claimed to have been wronged by another made a great show
of threatening a violent response, while letting himself be
restrained by the bystanders from actually doing anything
until one of the ten medicine bundle bearers showed up with
his pipe, asking him to accept a peaceful settlement with
suitable compensation. Usually the offer was accepted. If not,
a second medicine bundle bearer would apper and, if necessary,
a third and a fourth. It was believed that refusal of the
fourth meant death by supernatural agency.
Both men were trying to demonstrate their courage
and determination, with the risk that the bluff might became
reality. If someone was killed, he might be killed in
retaliation by his victim's kin or they might accept
compensation, the equivalent to the Icelandic wergeld or the
blood money that atoned for killing under Sharia or among the
Somali. The man who had killed was believed to become unlucky
as a result, like a murderer in ancient Athens, but his
presence did not pollute the tribe.
In addition to the keepers of the medicine
bundles, the Kiowa had military fraternities, roughly similar
to those of the Cheyenne.
The Cheyenne
Of the three tribes, perhaps of all the plains
indians, the Cheyenne came closest to having a government—part
of the year. The entire tribe, possibly as many as four
thousand of them, gathered together in a single camp in summer
when food was plentiful. During the winter the tribe separated
into much smaller bands and dispersed in search of game.
The summer encampment was the site of the council
of forty four, the government, or perhaps nascent government,
of the tribe. It was a self-perpetuating body; how the
original members were chosen does not seem to be known. Every
tenth year, the council was renewed. Each existing member
chose a successor, usually from his own band but not his own
son. A chief could not succeed himself but could be kept
in the council if another chief was willing to name him as his
successor.
There were four priest chiefs among the
forty-four, each associated with a supernatural power, plus
one keeper of the sweet-medicine, the most important of the
tribal fetishes. When the council was renewed, each priest
chief chose his successor from among the retiring chiefs of
the council. If a priest chief died, his successor was chosen
by the others.
In addition to the Council, there were also
soldier societies, military fraternities, existing initially
as social groups but over time taking on some governmental
responsibilities. One of the societies, the dog soldiers,
constituted its own band, and so existed as a single unit
through the entire year. Each of the others had members
dispersed among the bands and so was together only during the
summer encampment. Each of the soldier societies had two
chiefs, functioning as war chiefs, and two "servants," lower
level chiefs responsible for holding a particularly dangerous
position in defense against attackers.
The council was responsible for making decisions
about war or peace with other tribes, deciding cases of
homicide or whether to permit the readmission of an exiled
killer, and deciding the movements of the tribe in search of
game. The impression one gets from incidents described in some
detail by Hoebel and Llewellyn is that, in practice, it was a
consensus process. One chief might decide that the tribe
should move in some direction. He would take council with
several others, they would eventually call together all of the
council chiefs, confer, and have the conclusion announced to
the tribe. In other contexts, such as deciding on a peace
treaty with another tribe, the process could involve a good
deal of back and forth between the Council and one or more of
the soldier societies. The Council had the right to make the
decision, but in practice it had to be made in consultation
with others, most obviously the others who would actually
implement it.
At all times, the Council chiefs were expected to
be exemplars of moderation and good behavior, even when
wronged, and paragons of generosity. A Cheyenne who did not
think he could live up to the standard expected of a council
chief might decline the office on that account. As Sun Road
put it:
"When a dog is running after a bitch in heat—if my wife is chased by another man, I might weaken and open my mouth. Then it would be well if another had the medicine and not I."
One further responsibility of the Council was to
control the buffalo hunt, a mass effort by the entire tribe
conducted under the authority of one of the soldier societies
selected for the purpose. The basic rule was that nobody was
to attack a buffalo until the word was given, at which point
the line of hunters would charge the herd, with the ends of
the line wrapping around to entirely enclose it.
It is unclear to what degree this was a practical
policy designed to kill buffalo as effectively as
possible, to what degree a ceremonial hunt designed to
establish the authority of tribal rules, in this case the rule
against premature hunting. In practice, that rule was not
uncommonly violated, typically by young warriors out to prove
that they could get away with it.
The following account is from one of the
informants quoted by Hoebel and Llewellyn:
All the hunters went out in a line with the
Shield Soldiers in front to hold them back. Just as they were
coming up over a long ridge down wind from where the scouts
had reported the herd they saw two men down in the valley
riding in among the buffalo. A Shield Soldier chief gave the
signal to his men. They paid no attention to the buffalo, but
charged in a long line on the two violators of the rules.
Little Old Man shouted out for everyone to whip them:"Those
who fail or hesitate shall get a good beating themselves."
The first men to reach the spot shot and killed
the horses from under the hunters. As each soldier reached the
miscreants he slashed them with his riding whip. Then some
seized the guns of the two and smashed them.
When the punishment was done, the father of these
two boys rode up. It was Two Forks, a member of the Dakota
tribe, who had been living with the Cheyennes for some time.
He looked at his sons beforee talking. "Now you have done
wrong. You failed to obey the law of this tribe. You went out
alone and you did not give the other people a chance. This is
what has happened to you."
Then the Shield Soldier chiefs took up the talk.
"Now you know what we do when anyone disobeys our ourders,"
they declared. "Now you know we mean what we say." The boys
did not say anything.
After that the chiefs relented. This was not
alone because of the fact that the culprits were Dakotas. They
called their men to gather around. "Look how these two boys
are here in our midst. Now they have no horses and no weapons.
What do you men want to do about it?"
One of the soliders spoke up. "Well, I have some
extra horses. I will give one of them to them." Then another
soldier did the same thing.
Bear Standing On a Ridge was the third to speak
out. "Well," he announced, "we broke those guns they had. I
have two guns. I will give them one."
All the others said, "Ipewa, good."
The account has several interesting features,
consistent with other such accounts. To begin with, the
punishment of the offenders consisted of whipping them and
destroying their property. On the face of it, those seem
wasteful forms of punishment. Why not replace the destruction
by a fine, seizing the property and using it for the good of
the tribe, or perhaps the soldier society that was enforcing
the rules?
One possible answer is that making punishment
profitable invites excessive or unwarranted punishment[5]—the
problem that Athenian law attempted to solve by combining a
profitable punishment via private prosecution, a share of the
fine, with a penalty for unsuccessful prosecution. It might be
a particularly serious risk in a system as unstructured as the
Cheyenne. Hunting too early violated a well understood rule,
but exactly what the consequences were, in that case and most
others, was up to the particular people, often the members of
one of the soldier societies, who detected the offense and
punished the offender. Customs that permit the enforcers to
shoot horses but not to confiscate them are one way of
eliminating the risk.
The second interesting, and to us odd, feature of
the story is the replacement of the killed horses and
destroyed gun by the enforcers. By not trying to evade
capture, offer arguments in their defense, or resist the
destruction of their property, the two boys were implicitly
conceding the authority of the tribal rule they had violated
and of the enforcers of that rule. Once they had done that
they were, in effect, readmitted to respectability—and since
young men obviously couldn't be left on the prairie, just
before the hunt started, without horses or guns, horses and at
least one gun were generously donated by members of the same
group that had imposed the punishment.
In this case the Shield Soldiers were acting to
enforce the existing rule against premature hunting, having
been appointed to that task by the Council of forty-four,
although the details of the enforcement were of their own
invention. In addition to monitoring the actual hunt, the
members of the selected soldier society could also investigate
charges of premature hunting by insisting on searching the
tipi of the accused. If fresh buffalo meat was found, a likely
punishment was to destroy the tipi.
In other cases described by the informants,
members of the soldier societies acted to enforce other rules,
in some cases engaging in de facto legislation, solving a
particular problem and proclaiming a general rule to cover
such situations in the future. Thus, for example:
While Wolf Lies Down was away, a friend took one
of his horses to ride to war. This man had brought his bow and
arrow and left them in the lodge of the horse’s owner. When
Wolf Lies Down returned, he knew by this token security who
had his horse, so he said nothing.
A year passed without the horse's return, and
then Wolf Lies Down invited the Elk Soldier chiefs to his
lodge, because he was in their society. [He asks what he should
do. The chiefs agree to send someone to bring back the
borrower or word from him. Eventually the messenger returns
with the borrower, leading two horses. He confirms that he
borrowed the horse, but was gone longer than he planned to
be, and offers to both return the horse he borrowed and give
Wolf Lies Down two other horses and his bow and arrow. ]
Then up spoke Wolf Lies Down. “I am glad to hear
my friend say these things. Now I feel better. I shall take
one of those horses, but I am giving him that one he borrowed
to keep. From now on we shall be bosom friends.”
The chiefs declared...
“Now we shall make a new rule. There shall be no
more borrowing of horses without asking. If any man takes
another's goods without asking, we will go over and get them
back for him. More than that, if the taker tries to keep them,
we will give him a whipping.”
When the tribe was broken up into separate bands,
neither the council nor the full soldier societies (except for
the dog soldiers, who were their own band) was available to
deal with matters. Council chiefs functioned as peace chiefs
in their individual bands, leaders with imprecisely
defined powers, and to some degree members of the soldier
societies acted to enforce group decisions, for instance by
preventing a minority of the band who disagreed with a
decision on which way to go from openly splitting off.
In a warrior society where it is common for
semi-official enforcers to punish those they regard as rules
violators by whipping them or shooting their horses, there is
an obvious risk that someone will go too far, and either
enforcer or enforcee end up dead. The Cheyenne has a simple
and elegant solution to that problem. Beating up another
Cheyenne was between you and him. Killing another Cheyenne,
for any reason, meant exile from the tribe.
The reason, as they saw it, was not punishment
but hygiene. Killing a fellow Cheyenne polluted the medicine
arrows that were one of the tribal fetishes; blood would
mysteriously appear on their feathers. It also polluted the
killer; he smelled of death, and the pollution was contagious.
Until the arrows had been ceremonially renewed and the killer
exiled, no luck could be expected in hunting or warfare.
Exile was not lethal; there were other friendly
tribes on the plains. After a period of some years the exiled
man could petition to be readmitted to the tribe, possibly
bringing with him a horse loaded with tobacco to demonstrate
his repentance. If the kin of his victim were willing he might
be readmitted, subject to conditions that they imposed. But
for the rest of his life, nobody would share his pipe or eat
from his bowl. The smell of death might be weakened enough by
time to permit his presence in the tribe, but it was still
contagious.
As in Athens.
[1] E. Adamson Hoebel, The Law of
Primitive Man, Harvard University Press, 1967.
[2] K.N. Llewellyn and E. Adamson Hoebel, The
Cheyenne Way, U of Oklahoma Press 1941.
[3] For one discussion of the problem, see D.
Friedman, The
Machinery of Freedom, Chapter XXX.
[4] Find and cite the case I_m thinking of.
[5] For a discussion of the same issue in a
modern context, see D. Friedman, "Reflections on Optimal
Punishment or Should the Rich Pay Higher Fines?," Research
in Law and Economics, (1981).