Assiniboin

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Assiniboin

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Assiniboin , Native North Americans whose culture is that of the N Great Plains; their language belongs to the Siouan branch of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock (see Native American languages ). At the time of the first contact with European settlers they had no permanent village sites; they moved about as their search for food required. They were a branch of the Yanktonai Dakota, who moved north and westward prior to the 17th cent. to the region of Lake Winnipeg; later they went to the upper Saskatchewan and the upper Missouri rivers. After the acquisition of horses and firearms in the 18th cent. they became a typical Plains tribe. They were allied with the Cree against the Blackfoot. A large tribe at the time of contact, they were decimated by smallpox in the early 19th cent. There were 5,500 Assiniboin in the United States in 1990, most living on the Fort Belknap and Fort Peck reservations in Montana. Around 1,500 Assiniboin live on reserves in Saskatchewan and Alberta, Canada.

Bibliography: See M. S. Kennedy, ed., The Assiniboines (new ed. 1961); D. Kennedy, Recollections of an Assiniboine Chief, ed. by J. R. Stevens (1972); E. T. Denig, Five Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri (1975).

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Assiniboin

The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English | 2009 | © The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English 2009, originally published by Oxford University Press 2009. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

As·sin·i·boin / əˈsinəˌboin/ (also As·sin·i·boine) • n. (pl. same or -boins) 1. a member of an American Indian people formerly living in southern Manitoba, but now living in Montana, Alberta, and Saskatchewan. 2. the Siouan language of this people. • adj. of or relating to the Assiniboin or their language.

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Related articles from newspapers, magazines, and more

Cypress Hills: the land and its people.
Magazine article from: Manitoba History; 9/22/1996; 700+ words ; ...fine pelts) murdered at least twenty Assiniboin in cold blood. This led to the creation...the same time some 4,000 Cree and Assiniboin were also camped in the Cypress Hills...conquer" was applied against the Cree and Assiniboin. Recognizing that a large concentration...
Interdependence and power: Complexity in hunter-gatherer/farmer exchanges
Magazine article from: Plains Anthropologist; 8/1/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...phase (ca.1730s-1810) of Mandan-Hidatsa and Cree-Assiniboin exchanges suggest that this interdependent system was characterized...patterns between the Mandan-Hidatsa villagers and Cree-Assiniboin hunter-gatherers suggests that this perspective is inadequate...
EARLY AND MID-HOLOCENE DOGS IN SOUTHEASTERN NORTH AMERICA: EXAMPLES FROM DUST CAVE
Magazine article from: Southeastern Archaeology; 7/1/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...domestic items for people in a variety of ways. Among the Assiniboin, for example, dogs wore packs that consisted of two skin pouches cinched around their middle (Figure 1). Assiniboin dogs could have carried loads between 30 and 50 pounds...
Western wanderings. (paintings made by artist Karl Bodmer on the Montana-North Dakota border region)
Magazine article from: Sunset; 3/1/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...Fort Union was the center of the Upper Missouri fur trade: Assiniboin Indians brought in beaver pelts and left with rifles, liquor...greatest triumphs may be his portraits - of the Mandan, the Assiniboin, the Piegan Blackfeet. "Bodmer and Maximilian had to have...
Analysis: Native American tribes learning how to get phone service on their reservations
Transcript from: NPR Morning Edition; 9/28/2000; ; 680 words ; ...LYNETTE NYMAN reporting: Donald Longknife lives on the Assiniboin Reservation in northern Montana. When he dials 911, his...you know, if we really need them that bad. NYMAN: The Assiniboin Tribal Council sent Longknife to this telecom conference to...
Robert Smith // American Indian Economic Development Association
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 7/7/1995; 383 words ; ...lays claim to an ancient spiritual legacy. "I dance to reconnect with the Circle," says the 24-year-old Ojibway; Assiniboin, a Chicago native. Smith is a student at the School of the Art Institute who blends his interest in fine arts and performing...
History, Power, and Identity: Ethnogenesis in the Americas, 1492-1992
Magazine article from: Plains Anthropologist; 8/1/1997; ; 700+ words ; ...Patterns of Ethnicity in the Northeastern Plains, 1780-1870" by Patricia Albers offers an insightful look into Plains Assiniboin, Cree, and Ojibwa. Albers asserts that as these groups became fully adapted to a Plains way of life (1780-1820), they...
Write your own version of history - in a personal journal.(THE HOME FORUM)
Newspaper article from: The Christian Science Monitor; 1/18/2005; 700+ words ; ...a German prince who explored the American West in the early 1800s. Among the events he witnessed was a battle between the Assiniboin and Blackfoot Indians. He wrote: "They came galloping in groups, from three to twenty together, their horses covered...
Breathing free under Big Sky
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 1/21/1994; ; 700+ words ; ...Lewis, the great 19th-century explorer, noted cliffs that "exhibit a most romantic appearance." James L. Long, an Assiniboin storyteller who was known as First Boy and was recruited by the Montana Writers' Project during the Great Depression, was...
riding the breaks.(Missouri River)
Magazine article from: Sports Afield; 4/1/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...time on the river of the Old West. THE BREAKS and surrounding plains were once the home of the buffalo-hunting Blackfoot, Assiniboin and Crow Indians. Lewis and Clark traveled to the Pacific through the Breaks on their famous journey in the spring of 1805...

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