Star
Legends
There are many stories and
legends about the stars, the sun and the moon throughout Native American
History.
The stories vary from Nation
to Nation.
Below you can read a
selection of some of those stories.
Title:
Canoe Race
Tribe: Chinook
Region: Southwest Washington
Object: Orion
A
big canoe (Orion's belt) and a small canoe (Orion's dagger) are in a race to
catch a salmon in the Big River (Milky Way). The little canoe is winning the
race.
Title:
Bear and Three Hunters
Tribe: Musquakie
Region: Wisconsin
Object: Big Dipper
The
bowl stars of the Dipper form a bear. The stars of the handle are hunters. The
tiny star Alcor is a small dog named "Hold Tight." In autumn when
the Dipper is low to the horizon the blood from the arrow wounds drips on the
trees and turns them red and brown.
Title:
Maui's Hook
Tribe: Polynesian
Region: South Pacific
Object: Scorpius
Maui
was a powerful god but a poor fisherman. He snagged his hook (Scorpius) and
line on the bottom of the sea and thought he had hooked a big fish. He pulled
hard and pulled up the Hawaiian Islands.
Title:
Spider God
Tribe: Blackfoot
Region: North Dakota, Montana
Object: Corona Borealis
The
Spider God (Corona Borealis) sits in his web (Hercules) and watches over the
land. Sometime he climbs down the summer Milky Way to visit the Earth.
Title:
Grizzly Bear
Tribe: Shoshoni
Region: Wyoming, Southern Idaho
Object: Cygnus
A
grizzly bear (Cygnus) climbed up a tall mountain to go hunting in the sky. As
he climbed, the snow and ice clung to the fur of his feet and legs. Crossing
the sky the ice crystals trailed behind him forming the Milky Way.
Title:
Elk Skin
Tribe:Yakima
Region: Central Washington
Object: Cassiopeia
A
Hunter killed a great elk and stretched the skin to dry by driving wooden stakes
through it. Afterwards he threw the skin into the sky (Cassiopeia) where the light
above shines through the stake holes forming stars.
Title:
Coyote's Eyeball
Tribe: Lummi
Region: Pacific Northwest
Object: Arcturus
The
Coyote liked to show off to the girls by juggling his eyeballs. One day he threw
one so high it stuck in the sky (Arcturus).
Title:
Two Dogs
Tribe: Cherokee
Region: Tennesee, North Carolina
Object: Canis Major
There
are two dogs (alpha and beta Canis Majori) who guard the path to the land of
souls. To get past the dogs one should bring food. Be warned, if you give food
to the first dog (alpha) he will let you pass, but if you fail to save some
food for the second dog (beta) you will be trapped between them forever.
Title:
Grizzly Sisters
Tribe: Sierra
Region: California
Object: Aries
Grizzly
sisters (Aries) use to play with Deer sisters in a cave. One day Grizzly mother
ate Deer mother. Deer sisters retaliated by trapping Grizzly sisters in the
cave.
Title:
Six Wives
Tribe: Western Mono
Object: Taurus
Six
wives (Pleiades cluster) ate wild onions that gave them skunk breath. The Husbands
(Hyades cluster) threw them out of their huts. When the wives went up into the
sky to live, the lonely husbands followed but never caught them.
Title:
Walks All Over the Sky
Tribe: Tsimshian
Region: Pacific Northwest
Object: Sun, Moon, Stars
Back
when the sky was completely dark there was a chief with two sons, a younger son,
One Who Walks All Over the Sky, and an older son, Walking About Early. The younger
son was sad to see the sky always so dark so he made a mask out of wood and pitch
(the Sun) and lit it on fire. Each day he travels across the sky. At night he
sleeps below the horizon and when he snores sparks fly from the mask and make
the stars. The older brother became jealous. To impress their father he smeared
fat and charcoal on his face (the Moon) and makes his own path across the sky.
Title:
Three Legged Rabbit
Tribe: Western Rocky
Region: Rocky Mts.
Object: Sun, Moon, Stars
A
three legged rabbit made himself a fourth leg from wood. The rabbit thought
the Sun was too hot for comfort so he went to see what could be done. He went
east at night to the place where the Sun would rise. When the Sun was half way
up the Rabbit shot it with an arrow. As the Sun lay wounded on the ground the
Rabbit took the white of the Suns eyes and made the clouds. He made the black
part of the eyes into the sky, the kidneys into stars, and the liver into the
Moon, and the heart into the night. "There!" said the Rabbit, "You
will never be too hot again."
Title:
Coyote and Eagle Steal the Sun and Moon
Tribe: Zuni
Region: New Mexico, Arizona
Object: Sun, Moon
Back
when it was always dark, it was also always summer. Coyote and Eagle went hunting.
Coyote was a poor hunter because of the dark. They came to the Kachinas, a powerful
people. The Kachinas had the Sun and the Moon in a box. After the people had gone
to sleep the two animals stole the box. At first Eagle carried the box but Coyote
convinced his friend to let him carry it. The curious Coyote opened the box and
the Sun and Moon escaped and flew up to the sky. This gave light to the land but
it also took away much of the heat, thus we now have winter.
Title:
Boy and the Sun
Tribe: Hopi
Region: Northern Arizona
Object: Sun, Moon, Milky Way
A boy once lived with his mother's mother for he
didn't know who his father was. His grandmother said to ask the Sun about his
father, surely the Sun would know. One morning the boy made a flour of crushed
tortoise shell, cornmeal, coral, and seashells. He threw the flour upwards and
it made a path into the sky (Milky Way). He climbed the path and when he found
the Sun he asked "Who is my father?" and the Sun replied, "You
have much to learn." The boy fell to Earth. He then made a wooden box from
a Cottonwood tree and sealed himself in it as it floated west down a river to
find the Sun again. The box washed ashore where two rivers join. He was freed
from the box by a young female rattlesnake. Together they traveled west to find
the Sun. They saw a meteor fall into the sea on its way to the Sun's house.
They asked it for a ride. In this way they made it to the Sun's house. There
they met the Sun's mother (the Moon) who was working on a piece of turquoise.
That evening when the Sun came home from his days work, the boy asked again,
"Who is my father?" And then the Sun replied "I think I am."
Title:
Sun and her Daughter
Tribe: Cherokee
Region: Tennesee, North Carolina
Object: Sun, Moon
As
the Sun traveled across the sky she would stop in the middle each day to have
dinner at her daughter's house. Now the Sun hated people because they would always
squint when they looked at her. "They screw up their faces at me!" she
told her brother the Moon. "I like them," said the Moon, "they
always smile at me." They Sun was jealous and decided she would kill the
people by sending a fever. Many people were dying and those remaining decided
they would have to kill the Sun. With some magic, one of the people was turned
into a rattlesnake and sent to wait by the daughter's door, to bite the Sun when
she stopped for dinner. But when the daughter opened the door to look for her
mother the snake bit her instead. The snake returned to Earth with the Sun still
alive and the daughter dead. When the Sun discovered what had happened she shut
herself up in the house and grieved. The people no longer had the fever but now
it was cold and dark. So, seven people were chosen to visit the land where ghosts
dance to see if they could retrieve the daughter. As she danced past them they
struck her with rods so she fell down, then they trapped her in a box. On the
trip home she complained of not being able to breath so they opened the lid just
a crack. She became a redbird and escaped, flying back to the land of ghosts.
Seeing the seven people return empty handed, the Sun began to cry. This caused
a great flood. To amuse the Sun and stop the flood, the people danced. This is
why the people do the Sun dance to this very day.
Title:
Spider and the Sun
Tribe: Cherokee
Region: Tennesee, North Carolina
Object: Sun, Milky Way
In
the beginning there was only darkness and people kept bumping into each other.
Fox said that people on the other side of the world had plenty of light but were
too greedy to share it. Possum went over there to steal a little piece of the
light. He found the Sun hanging in a tree, lighting everything up. He took a tiny
piece of the Sun and hid it in the fur of his tail. The heat burned the fur off
his tail. That is why possums have bald tails. Buzzard tried next. He tried to
hide a piece in the feathers of his head. That is why buzzards have bald heads.
Grandmother Spider tried next. She made a clay bowl. Then she spun a web (Milky
Way) across the sky reaching to the other side of the world. She snatched up the
whole sun in the clay bowl and took it back home to our side of the world.
Title:
Girls who made love to the stars
Tribe: Ojibway
Region: Northern Minnesota
Object: Stars
Once
there were two foolish girls who slept outside the lodge. No self-respecting girls
would do this, only man hungry ones. As they lay on the ground they looked at
the sky. "Look at those two stars, the red one and the white one." said
one of the girls. The other girl said "I'd like to make love to a star, they
must be good lovers." "Me too," said the first, "I'd like
to have a star under the blanket with me. You take the red star, I'll take the
white one." They fell asleep and when they awoke they were in the sky surrounded
by stars. The stars were men and they said "You wanted us, well here we are."
The girl who had chosen the red star found that he was a vigorous young lover
and he kept her busy all night. The girl with the white star found that he was
quite old and couldn't perform very well. After a while the girls realized that
star husbands were not as fun as they imagined. All the husbands did was eat star
food, make love, and shine. One day the old woman who sits on a hole in the sky
moved a little so the girls could peek down at the Earth through the hole. They
saw their tribe playing games in the snow. They asked their husbands to help them
go home by letting them down on long ropes made from plants. The ropes didn't
reach the ground and the girls wound up trapped in an old eagles nest in the top
of the tallest tree in the world. They called to a bear "Help us down and
we will make love to you." But the bear was wise and thought them too forward.
They called to a buffalo with the same promise and he tried desperately to climb
the tree but he couldn't climb with hooves so he wandered off. They called to
a wolverine who quickly climbed the tree and made love to them both. But then
he fed them and left them in the tree. Everyday he returned to rape them and feed
them. One day a female wolverine passed by and helped the girls down from the
tree. The male wolverine returned that night. In the dark and his haste he mistook
the female wolverine for one of the girls. He made love to her all night and they
were married the next day. The two girls swore never to sleep outside the lodge
again.
Title:
Moon
rapes the Sun
Tribe: Inuit
Region: Northern Canada
Object: Sun, Moon
A
brother and sister went to a dance house one night. A windstorm blew out the seal-oil
lamps and during the darkness a man grabbed the sister and raped her. He finished
before the lights could be restored and she didn't know who he was. The next time
they went to the dance house the sister first smeared her hands with soot. Again
the lamps blew out and the man raped her but this time she smeared the soot on
his back. When the lights returned she discovered that the attacker was her brother.
She was enraged. "Such things are not done!" she screamed. She took
a knife and cut off her breasts and threw them at him saying "Here you are,
you enjoy them so much!" She grabbed a torch and ran out. The brother grabbed
a torch and followed her but he tripped and fell in the snow. His torch was put
out but the embers still glowed. Just then the wind swept them into the sky where
she became the Sun and he became the Moon. She continues to stay away from him
as best she can. If his torch had not fallen in the snow the Moon would now be
as bright as the Sun.
Title:
Little Brother Snares the Sun
Tribe: Winnebago
Region: Michigan
Object: Sun
In
the old days people were not the chiefs and did not hunt animals. Animals were
the chiefs and hunted people. They killed all the people except one girl and
her little brother. They hid in a cave. The boy learned to kill snowbirds with
a bow and arrow and made a robe from the feathers. They made soup from the bodies
of the birds and that was the first time people ate meat. The bright sun ruined
the robe one day and the little brother swore revenge. His sister helped him
fashion a snare. He traveled to the hole in the ground where the Sun rises every
morning. As the Sun rose he snared it and tied it up so that there was no light
or warmth that day. The animals were afraid and amazed by the boy. They sent
the biggest and most fearsome animal to try and free the sun. This was the dormouse
which in those days was as big as a mountain. The mouse chewed through the snare
freeing the sun but meanwhile the intense heat shrunk him down to his present
size. Since that time the people have been the chiefs and the hunters.
Title:
The Fifth World
Tribe: Toltec
Region: Central America
Object: Sun, Earth
Five
worlds and five suns were created, one after the other. The first world was destroyed
because it's people acted wrongfully. They were eaten by ocelots and the sun destroyed.
The second sun saw it's people turned into monkeys due to lack of wisdom. The
third sun had it's world destroyed by fire, earthquakes, and volcanoes because
the people didn't make sacrifices to the gods. The fourth world perished in a
flood that also drowned it's sun. Before creating the fifth world, our world,
the gods met in the darkness to see who would have the honor of igniting the fifth
sun. Tecciztecatl volunteered. The gods built a big fire on top of a pyramid and
the volunteer prepared to throw himself into the flames. He was dressed in beautiful
hummingbird feathers, and gold and turquoise. Four times he tried to force himself
into the suicidal fire but each time his fear drove him back. Then the lowliest
of all the gods, Nanautzin, dressed in humble reeds, threw himself into the fire.
Teccitztecatl was so ashamed that he too jumped into the fire. The new sun rose
into the sky giving light to the fifth world.
Title:
Fox and the Moon
Tribe: Snoqualmie
Region: Washington
Object: Moon
Long
ago, Snoqualm, the Moon, had a spider make him a rope out of cedar bark and stretch
it from the sky to the Earth. One day Fox and Blue Jay found the rope and climbed
up to where the rope was fixed to the underside of the sky. Blue Jay pecked a
hole in the sky and they climbed through to the sky world. Blue Jay flew to a
tree while Fox changed himself into Beaver and swam in a lake. Moon had set a
trap in the lake which caught Beaver. Moon skinned him and threw the body in the
corner of the smokehouse. That night when Moon was asleep Beaver got up and put
his skin back on. He looked around. He took a few of the trees, and the Moon's
daylight making tools, some fire, and the Sun which was hidden in Moon's house.
He changed back into Fox then he found the hole that Blue Jay had made and took
the things to Earth. He planted the trees, made daylight, gave the fire to the
people, and put the Sun in it's place. When Moon awoke he was very angry. He found
the tracks that led to the hole. He started down but the rope broke and he fell
to the Earth in a heap where he became a mountain. One can see the face of Snoqualm
on one of the rocky cliffs. Today it is called Mount Si and it is near Northbend,
Washington.
Title:
Raven and the Sun
Tribe: Tsimshian
Region: Northwest
Object: Sun
Once
the sky had no day. When the sky was clear there was some light from the stars
but when it was cloudy it was very dark. Raven had put fish in the rivers and
fruit trees in the land but he was saddened by the darkness. The Sun at that time
was kept in a box by a chief in the sky. The Raven came to a hole in the sky and
went through. He came to a spring where the chief's daughter would fetch water.
He changed himself into a cedar seed and floated on the water. When the girl drank
from spring she swallowed the seed without noticing and became pregnant. A boy
child was born which was really Raven. As a toddler he begged to play with the
yellow ball that grandfather kept in a box. He was allowed to play with the Sun
and when the chief looked away he turned back into Raven and flew back through
the hole in the sky.
Title:
Coyote, Wolves, and Bears
Tribe: Wasco
Object: Big Dipper
Once there were five wolves who would share meat with
Coyote. One night the wolves were staring at the sky. "What are you looking
at?" asked Coyote. "There are two animals up there." they told
him. "But we can't get to them." "That is easy." said Coyote.
He took his bow and shot an arrow into the sky where it stuck. He shot another
arrow which stuck into the first. Then he shot another and another until the
chain of arrow reached the ground. The five wolves and Coyote climbed the arrows
and the oldest wolf took along his dog. When the reached the sky they could
see that the animals were grizzly bears. The wolves went near the bears and
sat there looking at them and the bears looked back. Coyote thought they looked
good sitting there so he left them and removed his arrow ladder. The three stars
of the handle of the Big Dipper and the two stars of the bowl near the handle
are the wolves. The two stars on the front of the bowl that point to the North
Star are the bears. Alcor, the little star by the wolf in the middle of the
handle is the dog.
Title:
Evening Star wins Morning Star
Tribe: Skidi Pawnee
Region: Kansas-Nebraska
Object: Venus
In
the beginning there was only Tirawahat, which is the Universe and everything in
it. Morning Star (Venus) and the Sun and the other males in sky were in favor
of creating the world but Evening Star (Venus) and the Moon and the females were
against it. To win the debate it was clear that Morning Star would have to win
the heart of Evening Star. Many had failed, she was guarded by the Wolf (Sirius),
Cougar (Auriga), Bear (Sagittarius), Bobcat (Procyon), and worst of all the Snake
(Scorpius). One by one Morning Star defeated them and won the hand of Evening
Star. And so the world was created.
Title:
The Lost Children
Tribe: Blackfoot
Region: North Dakota, Montana
Object: Pleiades
There
were once six young brothers who were orphans. They lived from handouts and wore
castaway clothing. No one cared much about them except the camp's pack of dogs.
They loved the dogs and played with them all day. People were unkind to the boys
because of their ragged clothes and uncombed hair. The brothers were teased by
the other children who wore fine buffalo robes. The boys no longer wanted to be
people. They considered becoming flowers but the buffalo might eat them. Stones?
No, stones could be broken. Water could be drank, trees could be cut and burned.
They decided they wanted to be stars. Stars are always beautiful and always safe.
Up went the boys to the sky to become stars (Pleiades). The Sun welcomed the boys
and the Moon called them her lost children. Then the Sun punished the people with
a drought. Meanwhile the people heard the dogs howling at the sky. The dogs missed
the boys. Finally the dog cheif asked the Sun for pity because drought hurts all
creatures. Then the rains came.
Title:
Coyote as the Moon
Tribe: Kalispel
Region: Idaho
Object: Moon
Once
there was no Moon for someone had stolen it. The people asked "Who will be
the Moon?" The Yellow Fox agreed to give it a try but he was so bright it
made the Earth hot at night. Then the people asked Coyote to try and he agreed.
The Coyote was a good moon, not to bright - not to dim. But from his vantage point
in the sky the Coyote could see what everyone was doing. Whenever he saw someone
doing something dishonest he would shout "HEY! That person is stealing meat
from the drying racks!" or "HEY! That person is cheating at the moccasin
game!" Finally, the people who wished to do things in secret got together
and said "Coyote is too noisy. Let's take him out of the sky." So someone
else became the moon. Coyote can no longer see what everyone else is doing but
he still tries to snoop into everyone else's business.
Title:
Fisher goes to Skyland
Tribe:
Anishinabe
Region: Great Lakes
Object: Big Dipper
Fisher
was a small animal but a great hunter. Hunting was difficult in those days because
it was always winter. "Come with me." he told his friends, "We
will go where the Earth is closest to Skyland. The Skyland is always warm and
we will bring some of the warmth down to Earth." The Otter, Lynx and Wolverine
traveled with Fisher up the mountains, closer and closer to Skyland. When they
were very close Fisher said "We must jump up and break through to the land
above the sky." The Otter jumped up and bumped his head on the sky. He
fell on his back and slid all the way down the mountain. Lynx jumped up and
bumped so hard it knocked him unconscious. Wolverine jumped up and bumped hard
against the sky. He jumped again and again until the sky cracked a little. He
jumped again and broke through. Fisher jumped through after him. They found
Skyland to be a beautiful place, full of warmth and plants and flowers. They
found cages full of birds which they released. The birds flew through the crack
in the sky to the world below. The warmth of Skyland began to flow to the Earth
and melt the snow. The Sky-People came out of the lodges and said "Thieves!
They are taking our warm weather!" Wolverine escaped back through the crack
but Fisher started working to make the crack bigger. He knew that if it were
too small the Sky-People might be able to patch it. The Sky-People began chasing
him and shooting arrows. Athough he was powerful, they eventually hit a fatal
spot. The great Gitchee Manitou took pity on poor Fisher because he had tried
to help his friends. He healed him and placed him in the sky (Big Dipper). Each
autumn as Fisher is falling towards Earth the Sky-People try to patch the crack
and Winter comes. Then in spring Fisher climbs back high in the sky and reopens
the crack and Summer comes.
Title:
Nanuk the Bear
Tribe: Inuit
Region:
Arctic, Subarctic
Object:
Pleiades
Nanuk the Bear was attacked by a pack of large fierce dogs. he tried to escape
by running away over the ice, but the dogs followed close behind. For many hours
the dogs chased Nanuk and he could not lose them. Eventually, they had came
to the very edge of the world, but neither Nanuk or the dogs noticed. Suddenly
they all fell off the edge into the sky, where they all turned into stars (Pleiades).
Title:Changing Woman
Tribe: Apache
Region:
Southern Plains
Object:
Sun, Earth
Changing Woman lived alone without a husband. One day she climbed up on a hill
and build a wickiup with four poles. She faced the door to the east so the first
rays of the sun would enter the lodge in the morning. As she lay inside, the
sun came up and saw her, and she saw him as a young man. "Who are you"
she asked. "You see me all the time." He said. "It is I that
takes care of all things, whatever there is on Earth. I am the sun's inner form."
That day they made a boy child together and Changing Woman called him Nayé
nazgháné (The Slayer of Monsters). Four days later she was bathing
and the young man appeared in the water. They made another child that day, a
twin to the first, which she named Túbaadeschine (Born of the Water-Old-Man).
There are many stories of the adventures of the two boys, as they made the Earth
a safer place for future generations.
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