
Hopewell mounds from the Mound City Group in Ohio
'Hopewell culture' is the term used to describe common aspects of the
Native American culture that flourished along rivers in the northeastern and midwestern
United States from 200 BC to 400 A.D. At its greatest extent, Hopewell culture stretched from western
New York to
Missouri and from
Wisconsin to
Mississippi, and included both the American and
Canadian shores of
Lake Ontario.
Hopewell can also be considered as a cultural climax. Origins of the Hopewell culture are still under discussion. "Hopewell populations originated in western New York and moved south into
Ohio where they built upon the local
Adena mortuary tradition. Or Hopewell was said to have originated in western Illinois and spread by diffusion - perhaps carried by a religious elite - to southern Ohio. Similarly, the Havana Hopewell tradition was thought to have spread up the Illinois River and into southwestern Michigan, spawning Goodall Hopewell" (Dancey, p.114). Aside from the more famous Ohio Hopewell, a number of other Middle
Woodland period cultures are known as "Hopewellian," including the
Swift Creek culture, 100-500 A.D., the
Santa Rosa-Swift Creek culture, 100-300 A.D., the
Marksville culture, 1-400 A.D., and the
Copena culture, 1-500 A.D.
Hopewell culture is known for its flamboyant burial ceremonialism, diversified material culture, and most importantly, exchange between other communities. Evidence for exchange can be found in exotic artifacts not native to the Hopewell region. With this exchange network, raw materials, as well as finished products were exported and imported. "It was thought that the distinctive Hopewellian artifacts were crafted specifically for mortuary ritual...however, many of the kinds of artifacts associated with human remains under the mounds were found also in settlement debris" (Dancey, p.117). Other features of Hopewell culture include the predominance of
agriculture as opposed to hunting and gathering. Chief crops included
squash,
sunflowers, and various
grasses, though
maize, which would later become a dietary staple in the region, was only rarely cultivated. The Hopewell employed
native copper,
silver,
mica,
meteoric iron,
obsidian and a large variety of exotic materials in their tools, weapons and material goods. Many of the exotic materials utilized by the Hopewell were obtained via a vast
network of trade.

Hand carved in
mica by the Hopewell
Today, the best-known feature of Hopewell culture is the mounds that they built for religious purposes and/or for burial. It is known to be one of the most considerable achievements of Native Americans throughout the ancient past. These mounds, especially along the
Ohio River valley could take various geometric shapes and rise to impressive heights. Samples of these mounds can still be seen today, especially in the
Hopewell Culture National Historical Park in
Chillicothe, Ohio. The
Rock Eagle and
Rock Hawk Effigy Mounds, in
Putnam County, Georgia are sometimes attributed to members of the Hopewell or
Adena cultures, but may have been created by a distinct group. Determining the function of the mounds is still under debate. "One popular proposition for the shapes of the earthworks is that they were laid out to record astronomical observations, such as the movement of the sun through the seasons, or of the Moon and Venus" (Dancey, p.123). Due to lack of evidence and poor condition of the mounds, little more information can be obtained. Bradley T. Lepper, Curator of Archaeology, Ohio Historical Society, has argued that the Octagonal mound complex at Newark, Ohio is actually a lunar observatory which records the 18.6 year cycle of 'moonrises' and 'moonsets'. William F. Romain, Ph.D. has written a book on the subject and several articles.
[1]
There are many ideas about the collapse of the Hopewellian culture. Apparently, they ceased to exist around 200 AD. Some suggest that probability of their fall was their society dissolved, rather than crashing. Breakdown in societal organization could have been a result of full-scale agriculture. Scholars Dunnell and Greenlee suggest an idea of waste behavior. "They argue that energy was diverted from biological reproduction during a period when climate irregularities favored small families. As climate became predictable from year to year, energy was turned from waste behavior to food production" (Dancey, p.131). Still, the true reasoning of their evident dispersal is yet to be discovered, and much more knowledge is needed.
The Hopewell shared some features with the
Mississippian culture that arose c. 900-1000 A.D. in the Eastern
United States. It is unclear how much continuity there was between the two cultures.
The
Center for American Archeology specializes in Hopewell culture.
Sources
★ Dancey, William. “The Enigmatic Hopewell of the Eastern Woodlands.” North American Archaeology. Ed. Timothy R. Pauketat and Diana Dipaolo Loren. Malden: Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 2005. 108-137.
See also
★
Hopewell Culture National Historical Park
★
Hopewell pottery
Footnotes
1. Newark Earthwork Cosmology
External Links
★
Octagon Moonrise website
★
Ohio Memory
★
Ohio Historical Society's Archaeology Page