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Topic: Sihasapa


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In the News (Mon 30 Nov 09)

  
  Sihasapa   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The Sihasapa indians are a division of the Titonwan, or Teton, a Sioux tribe from, well, the Tetons.
Siksiká is the Sihasapa word from Blackfoot, which is synonymous with the Sihapa.
The Sihapa lived near the western Dekotas, in what was called the Great Plains, and consequently were members of the Plains Indians.
publicliterature.org /en/wikipedia/s/si/sihasapa.html   (66 words)

  
 Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Tourism
The Sihasapa name comes from walking across a burned prairie after an unsuccessful expedition and their feet flened, thus they were called the Blackfeet.
The Lakota Hunkpapas and Sihasapa are the northern plains people and practically divested themselves of all woodland traits of their Dakota ancestors.
Their Hunkpapas and Sihasapa ranged in the area between the Cheyenne River and Heart Rivers to the south and north and between the Missouri River on the east and Tongue River to the west.
www.standingrocktourism.com /history   (464 words)

  
 Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Tourism
The Hunkpapa and Sihasapa camped with the Ihunktonwan band on the James River during this time many intermarried with each other.
The Hunkpapa, Cheyenne, Sihasapa and Yanktonais attacked the Oglalas and Burles.
The Hunkpapa, Cheyenne, Sihasapa and yanktonais took Oglala and Burles wives.
www.standingrocktourism.com /history/timeLineView.asp?timeSpan=1   (275 words)

  
 Standing Rock History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The new culture revolved around the horse and buffalo; the people were nomadic and lived in tepees year round.
The Hunkpapa and Sihasapa ranged in the area between the Cheyenne and Heart Rivers to the south and north and between the Missouri River on the east and Tongue to the west.
Today the Lakota at Standing Rock live predominantly in communities located on the South Dakota portion of the reservation.
www.standingrock.org /history.htm   (327 words)

  
 GeoNative - Lakota, Dakota; Omaha, Ponca
Lakotaz mintzo diren taldeak: Oglala, Sicangu (Brule), Hunkpapa, Miniconjous, Sihasapa, Itazipacola (Sans Arcs) eta Oohenupa ("Katilu Bi").
The name Lakota seems to be in use nowadays to designate all the Sioux.
Among the Lakota-speaking groups we have the Oglala, Sicangu (Brule), Hunkpapa, Miniconjous, Sihasapa, Itazipacola (Sans Arcs) and Oohenupa ("Two Kettle").
www.geocities.com /Athens/9479/lakota.html   (397 words)

  
 lindberg.htm
This study is limited to the latter part of the nineteenth century because the ceremonies of today are influenced by the assimilation of Christianity into the Dakota culture, whereas the ceremony of a hundred years ago was based on the tenants of Siouan theology.
The Sioux people of a century ago were a diverse group; a nation composed of seven major divisions: the Oglala, the Sichangu, the Miniconjou, the Hunkpapa (or Uncpapa), the Sihasapa, the Itazipcho, and the Oohenonpa.
The Dakota Indians, a smaller division of the larger Oglala system, were in turn divided into three separate groups: the Santee, the Yankton, and the Teton.
www2.edutech.nodak.edu /NDSTA/lindberg.htm   (4034 words)

  
 S I H A S A P A
Na těchto stránkách najdete informace o lidech, činnosti a vůbec všem co se týká oddílu Sihasapa.
První – velká Sihasapa – se vyvinula z nejstarších členů a sdružuje starší 15ti let.
Druhá – malá Sihasapa – vznikla v roce 2002 a je dětským oddílem se zaměřením na střelbu a turistiku.
www.volny.cz /sihasapa   (110 words)

  
 AAA Native Arts - Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Overview
The four Tribes include the Minneconjou, Itazapcosni, Sihasapa and the Oehe Numpa.
The Reservation is located in north central South Dakota and borders the Standing Rock Reservation on the north.
The Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe is part of the Great Sioux Nation which includes the Minneconjou, No Bows, Sihasapa and Two Kettle bands.
www.aaanativearts.com /printout298.html   (2725 words)

  
 SE Blackfoot in Southern Illinois?? - Saponitown Forum
They can't take that away, even if they can lie to us about it and bribe the nations with gov handouts to try and continue the paper genocide which is meant to abolish our existence.
None of these Sihasapa warriors ever returned to their home villages are were given up for dead, but no tale was every told of their defeat and deaths.
The Lakota historian Bronco LeBeau agrees with me that these may be the same ones in So Illinois, as they too would have thought it dishonourable to leave the villages unprotected after the loss of the war.
www.saponitown.com /forum/showthread.php?p=2388   (3338 words)

  
 Starobělský zpravodaj 08/03 - LETNÍ TÁBOR ODDÍLU SIHASAPA
Ty letošní některým naším dětem zpříjemňoval dětský tábor pořádaný oddílem SIHASAPA v Raduni u Opavy.
Oddíl SIHASAPA začal v naší obci působit v roce 2002.
Oddíl SIHASAPA se sídlem Mitrovická 775 pořádá o víkendu ve dnech 27.9.- 28.9.2003 soutěž ve střelbě ze vzduchovky s názvem Starobělská pažba.
www.starabela.cz /zpravodaj/zprav2003/zprav0803/0803_03.htm   (413 words)

  
 New Page 1
Blue Thunder: "Sihasapa Tetons went out into hills.
Blue Thunder Variants I, II, and III: "Blackfoot [a member of the Sihasapa or Blackfoot band of the Teton Dakota, JH.] killed by Crow on a hill."
Swift Dog: "A Sioux killed a chief by the name of 'Wears Red Coat.' He was the only one who killed an enemy."
www.ulm.edu /~eller/amlit/focus/orature/1806_07.htm   (83 words)

  
 AAA Native Arts - Where did the Blackfoot Sioux live in the 1700-1800s?
The Blackfoot Sioux (Black Feet of the Lakota Nation is their official U.S. title, or Sihasapa in their native language) are a subdivision of the Teton Sioux, which are also known as the Western Sioux, which are part of the Lakota Nation.
The reservation that includes the Blackfoot Sioux (Sihasapa band) is officially located in North Dakota, but the southern portion of the reservation, where most of the Blackfoot Sioux live, is in northern South Dakota.
As white people pushed farther and farther west, so did the eastern Indian tribes of North America.
www.aaanativearts.com /printout654.html   (562 words)

  
 LaserLakota
The Lakota People (also known as the Teton or Titunwan) speak the Lakota dialect (also spelled Lakhota).
The Lakota include the Oglala, Sicangu or Brulé, Hunkpapa, Miniconjous, Hohwoju, Sihasapa or Blackfoot, O'ohunumpa or Oohenupa (also known as Two Kettle), and Itazipco or Itazipacola (also known as Sans Arc).
The Dakota People (also known as the Santee) speak the Dakota dialect (also spelled Dakhota).
www.linguistsoftware.com /llak.htm   (1256 words)

  
 Lewis and Clark . Classroom Resources . Lesson Plans . Native Americans, Part One | PBS
The Tetons were made up of seven subdivisions.
These subdivisions included the Oglala, Sicangu, Hunkpapa, Miniconju, Sihasapa, Oonhenunpa, and itazipco; it is important to note that despite many cultural similarities, each subdivision has qualities unique to its group.
For example, a music study done on the Standing Rock Reservation using the song of the Hunkpapa and putting them in a book called Teton Sioux Music would not be clear representation of all Teton music because other Teton tribes may have their own versions of the same music.
www.pbs.org /lewisandclark/class/l05.html   (1097 words)

  
 PowWows.com Gathering - Old Photos - Sihasapa Teton Lakota   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
PowWows.com Gathering - Old Photos - Sihasapa Teton Lakota
- - Old Photos - Sihasapa Teton Lakota (http://www.powwows.com/gathering/showthread.php?t=32376)
The following are old photos taken from the Smithsonian Institution's collection within the National Anthropological Archives, except where noted otherwise.
www.powwows.com /gathering/printthread.php?t=32376   (69 words)

  
 Sioux   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Collectively referred to as the Sioux, this confederacy includes four Santee divisions, the two Yankton and Yanktonai divisions, and the Lakota (Teton) as the seventh division.
The Lakota group is, in turn, made up of seven groups: the Oglala, Sicangu (BrulÈ), Miniconjou, Oohenumpa (Two Kettle), Itazipco (Sans Arcs, or No Bows), Sihasapa (Blackfoot), and Hunkpapa." Kevin Locke is a member of the Hunkpapa Lakota, Sitting Bull's people.
Quotation from "Standing In The Light" by Severt Young Bear and R.D. Theisz; Bison Books, University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln and London, 1994.
www.kevinlocke.com /sioux.htm   (210 words)

  
 New to forum - researching Blackfoot in SD and East Coast - Saponitown Forum
New to forum - researching Blackfoot in SD and East Coast
The Blackfeet in Montana and Canada, as I understand it, are "siksika", and there are Blackfoot people who are part of the Lakota people living in South Dakota on the Cheyenne River reservation, who are known as "sihasapa".
I'm thinking that they may be a remnant of the eastern Sioux people, the sissihapa (sp?) - the names seem very similar.
www.saponitown.com /forum/showthread.php?t=2605   (356 words)

  
 OEDILF
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Blackfoot, Blackfoot Confederacy, Blackfeet, Sihasapa by SheilaB (Sheila B. Blume)
It's a tribe you're most likely to meet
www.oedilf.com /db/Lim.php?Quote=64781&Popup=1   (322 words)

  
 forum.americanindiantribe.com :: View topic - Old Photos - Sihasapa Lakota
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Posted: Tue May 16, 2006 10:42 pm Post subject: Old Photos - Sihasapa Lakota
Red Fox, Bear Skin, Red Dog, Rocky Bear, Living Bear (Black Feet) no date
forum.americanindiantribe.com /archive/o_t__t_3696__start_0__index.html   (86 words)

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