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Bay Miwok

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Mount Diablo, is in the homeland of the Bay Miwok, and figures in their legends and myths.

The Bay Miwok (also called the Karkin), refers to a cultural and linguistic group of Miwok a Native American people in Northern California. The Bay Miwok ethnic group lived in Contra Costa County. Some of their members the Karkin were formerly identified with the Ohlone (initially the Costanoan), but turned out to be Miwok. The Carquinez Strait derives from the word Karkin.

Description

The Bay Miwok (Karkin) lived by hunting and gathering, and lived in small bands without centralized political authority. They spoke Bay Miwok also known as Saclan and/or Karkin. They were skilled at basketry. According to Miwok mythology, The Bay Miwok believed in animal and human spirits, and worshipped animals as ancestors. Coyote was seen as the their ancestor and creator god.[1]

Population: Historically, the Bay Miwok population was not mentioned or counted as Miwok apart from the Valley and Sierra Miwok in older references, while Karkin were counted as Ohlone or Costanoan. They were probably counted as part of the 9000 Plains and Sierra Miwok in the 1770s.[2]

Authentic Villages

There were five tribelets that the villages were named after, they were: Saclan, Chupcan, Volvon, Julpun, and Tatcan. [1]

History


Notable Miwokans

Notes

  1. ^ a b Forester, 2006.
  2. ^ Kroeber

References

See Also