Colonial Influences on Regalia

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Colonial Influences on Regalia

INITIATION DRAFT — Ayaawx teaching page explaining how colonial contact changed, disrupted, or altered traditional Tsm̱syen regalia practices.

Overview

Tsm̱syen regalia once followed strict ayaawx:

  • who could wear it,
  • what materials were allowed,
  • what crests could appear,
  • and when garments could be displayed.

Colonial contact introduced new materials, new expectations, and new pressures that changed regalia production and use. Some changes were adaptations for survival; others were imposed or misunderstood.

Understanding these influences protects our youth and our Houses from repeating harmful patterns.

Impact on Materials

Before colonization, regalia was made from:

  • mountain goat hair,
  • cedar bark,
  • sinew,
  • abalone,
  • tanned hides,
  • carved wood and bone,
  • and fur.

After trade ships arrived, new materials entered our system:

  • Milton cloth (broadcloth),
  • embroidery thread,
  • metal buttons,
  • flannel,
  • manufactured dyes,
  • shells and beads from global markets.

Some of these became deeply woven into feast culture. Others created confusion between traditional law and decoration.

Impact on Meaning

Traditionally:

  • regalia = law,
  • clothing = clothing.

Colonial society encouraged “costuming” Indigenous cultures for:

  • church pageants,
  • government displays,
  • tourism images,
  • museums,
  • photographs staged by outsiders.

This blurred the distinction between:

  • a robe worn under ayaawx, and
  • a garment worn for entertainment.

This confusion still affects our communities today.

Missionary Influence

Missionaries discouraged:

  • abalone use,
  • crest displays,
  • transformative masks,
  • naxnok dances,
  • noble regalia worn by matriarchs.

They attempted to replace regalia with:

  • church garments,
  • modest clothing requirements,
  • bans on feasts,
  • bans on masks and dances.

These pressures pushed some families to hide regalia or discontinue certain items.

Influence on Wealth Distribution

Regalia, wealth, and crest rights were traditionally exchanged through:

  • Gwiikxw,
  • name transmissions,
  • territory acknowledgements.

Colonial laws and the potlatch ban disrupted:

  • the ability to raise names,
  • the production of wealth items,
  • the public distribution of regalia.

House economies were damaged when wealth items were confiscated or hidden.

Commercialization of Indigenous Image

The rise of tourism and photography led to:

  • “studio regalia,”
  • props used by outsiders,
  • pan-Indigenous designs mixing nations together,
  • garments produced for sale instead of ceremony.

Some modern regalia styles originate from this pressure — not from ayaawx.

Loss of Specific Weaving Traditions

The cedar-bark and mountain-goat-hair robes suffered:

  • disruptions due to disease,
  • missionary suppression,
  • economic hardship,
  • loss of skilled weavers,
  • forced schooling,
  • goat population changes.

This led to a shift toward:

  • button blankets,
  • flannel robes,
  • machine-produced fabrics.

The noble meaning remained, but the materials changed.

Influence on Crest Usage

Colonial society introduced:

  • personal identity over House identity,
  • “DIY regalia,”
  • people choosing crests based on preference rather than lineage,
  • garments made without permission,
  • crest mixing across Nations.

Under ayaawx, crest misuse is a breach:

  • crest = law,
  • crest = House authority,
  • crest = inherited right.

Colonial individualism disrupted this understanding.

Vests and School Regalia

Modern school programs introduced:

  • vests for all children,
  • mixed crest patterns,
  • simplified clan symbols.

This increased cultural pride — but it also blurred the distinction between:

  • vest (clothing), and
  • robe (authority).

Ayaawx must be re-taught to correct this confusion.

Reasserting Ayaawx Today

Modern Tsm̱syen artists and Houses are restoring meaning by:

  • reviving goat-hair weaving,
  • restoring crest protocols,
  • teaching robe permissions,
  • documenting House histories,
  • correcting misuse through ha’lidzap or gentle teaching,
  • rebuilding relationships between matriarchs and regalia makers.

Restoration is not a return to the past — it is the re-strengthening of ayaawx in a modern world.

Summary

Colonial influence:

  • introduced new materials,
  • disrupted ancient regalia,
  • blurred meaning,
  • weakened crest law,
  • created confusion between clothing and ceremony.

Ayaawx restores the truth:

  • regalia is law,
  • crests are inherited,
  • permissions matter,
  • and House honour guides all decisions.

Notes

INITIATION DRAFT — Will expand with House-specific examples, weaving revival stories, and matriarch teachings.