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- Wewha abstract "We'wha (1849–1896, various spellings) was a Zuni Native American from New Mexico. They were the most famous lhamana, a traditional Zuni gender role, now described as mixed-gender or Two-Spirit. Lhamana were men who lived in part as women, wearing a mixture of women's and men's clothing and doing a great deal of women's work as well as serving as mediators.We'wha is the subject of the book The Zuni Man-Woman by Will Roscoe. The anthropologist Matilda Coxe Stevenson also wrote a great deal about We'wha, and even hosted them on their visit to Washington D.C. in 1886. During that visit, We'wha met President Grover Cleveland and was generally mistaken for a cisgender woman. One of the anthropologists close to them described We'wha as "the strongest character and the most intelligent of the Zuni tribe" (Roscoe, 1991, p. 29). She is historically known mainly for the fact that she was man but chose to live out her life as a woman. In the nineteenth century this status was called berdache, being anatomically one sex but performing tasks that were equated with the other (Roscoe, 1991, pg.29). In We'wha's case she was a man but performed tasks of a Zuni woman. During her lifetime she came in contact with many white settlers, teachers, soldiers, missionaries, and anthropologists. One anthropologist she met was Matilda Coxe Stevenson, who would later become a prominent figure in We'wha's life. Stevenson wrote down her observations of We'wha, going on to state, "She performs masculine religious and judicial functions at the same time that she performs feminine duties, tending to laundry and the garden" (Suzanne Bost, 2003, pg.139).".
- Wewha birthDate "1849".
- Wewha birthYear "1849".
- Wewha deathDate "1896".
- Wewha deathYear "1896".
- Wewha thumbnail Wewha1.gif?width=300.
- Wewha wikiPageExternalLink weiw1.html.
- Wewha wikiPageExternalLink weiwha01.html.
- Wewha wikiPageExternalLink index.php?title=Two-Spirit.
- Wewha wikiPageID "4179491".
- Wewha wikiPageLength "11724".
- Wewha wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Wewha wikiPageRevisionID "670559743".
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Apache.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Apaches.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Category:1849_births.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Category:1896_deaths.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Category:LGBT_Native_Americans.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Category:Two-Spirit_people.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Category:Zuni_culture.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Cisgender.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink File:Wewha1.gif.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Wingate.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink George_Wharton_James.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Grover_Cleveland.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Lhamana.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink List_of_national_museums.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Matilda_Coxe_Stevenson.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink National_Museum.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Native_Americans_in_the_United_States.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Navajo_and_Apaches.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Navajo_people.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Navajos.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink New_Mexico.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Presbyterian.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Presbyterianism.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Protestant.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Protestantism.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Smallpox.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Third_gender.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Two-Spirit.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Washington,_D.C..
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Washington_D.C..
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Washington_DC.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Will_Roscoe.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLink Zuni_people.
- Wewha wikiPageWikiLinkText "We'wha".
- Wewha dateOfBirth "1849".
- Wewha dateOfDeath "1896".
- Wewha hasPhotoCollection Wewha.
- Wewha name "We'wha".
- Wewha shortDescription "Zuni two-spirirt".
- Wewha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Wewha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Disambiguation_needed.
- Wewha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Wewha description "Zuni two-spirirt".
- Wewha description "Zuni two-spirirt".
- Wewha subject Category:1849_births.
- Wewha subject Category:1896_deaths.
- Wewha subject Category:LGBT_Native_Americans.
- Wewha subject Category:Two-Spirit_people.
- Wewha subject Category:Zuni_culture.
- Wewha hypernym American.
- Wewha type Agent.
- Wewha type Person.
- Wewha type Person.
- Wewha type Agent.
- Wewha type NaturalPerson.
- Wewha type Thing.
- Wewha type Q215627.
- Wewha type Q5.
- Wewha type Person.
- Wewha comment "We'wha (1849–1896, various spellings) was a Zuni Native American from New Mexico. They were the most famous lhamana, a traditional Zuni gender role, now described as mixed-gender or Two-Spirit. Lhamana were men who lived in part as women, wearing a mixture of women's and men's clothing and doing a great deal of women's work as well as serving as mediators.We'wha is the subject of the book The Zuni Man-Woman by Will Roscoe.".
- Wewha label "We'wha".
- Wewha sameAs Wewha.
- Wewha sameAs m.0bng4x.
- Wewha sameAs Q7977193.
- Wewha sameAs Q7977193.
- Wewha wasDerivedFrom Wewhaoldid=670559743.
- Wewha depiction Wewha1.gif.
- Wewha isPrimaryTopicOf Wewha.
- Wewha name "We'wha".