Huron
The Huron Through out our history, there have been cultures throughout this world for centuries upon centuries who made this world there home long before we came into existence. Of those groups of the past was the Huron who are to have had an estimated 20000 people in their society. The Huron lived along the St. ... The prosperity of the Huron was unmatched by that of any of the other tribes the French encountered. ... The information used to find about the Huron is not that of the Huron itself or of an ethnographer. ... Other than that we have the artifacts left behind from the Huron cultures to help us understand a bit more about their society (pg3). The difference in the Huron social structure is the sex difference. ... The Huron did not approve of public affection and it was embarrassing for a man to be arguing with women in public. ... Like I mentioned before the Huron were a horticulture society. The staple food of the Huron and it most important crop was the maize. The women of the Huron did planting and harvesting of the crops and the only thing grown by men was tobacco, tobacco was only grown in small patches. The environment around the Huron is very dry and therefore there is always wonder of a drought. ... The Huron agriculture forces them to relocate every ten to twenty years. ... The economy of the Huron would strongly depend on fishing although it was not highly recognized. ... The animal the Huron liked hunting the most was the deer, they would go out in large groups and were mostly taken in drives. ... Every Huron is a member of one of four tribes and one of possible eight clans, each tribe has a political system and each was made up of one or more villages and had its own territory. The Huron were a matrilineal group; they traced their common ground through the mother. ... It is likely that the Huron was an exogamous.