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Ojibwe

The Ojibwe, Ojibwa, Chippewa, or Saulteaux are an Anishinaabe people in what is currently southern Canada, the northern Midwestern United States, and Northern Plains. They are Indigenous peoples of the Subarctic and Northeastern Woodlands.

Ojibwe (Chippewa)
ᐅᒋᑉᐧᐁ (ᒋᑉᐯᐧᐊ)
Precontact distribution of Ojibwe-speaking people
Total population
170,742 in United States (2010)[1]
160,000 in Canada (2014)[2]
Regions with significant populations
Canada (Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta)
United States (Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota)
Languages
English, Ojibwe, French
Religion
Midewiwin, Catholicism, Methodism
Related ethnic groups
Odawa, Potawatomi, Saulteaux, Oji-Cree, and other Algonquian peoples
PersonOjibwe
PeopleOjibweg
LanguageOjibwemowin
CountryOjibwewaki

According to the U.S. census, Ojibwe people are one of the largest tribal populations among Native American peoples in the United States. In Canada, they are the second-largest First Nations population, surpassed only by the Cree. They are one of the most numerous Indigenous Peoples north of the Rio Grande.[3][better source needed] The Ojibwe population is approximately 320,000 people, with 170,742 living in the United States as of 2010,[1] and approximately 160,000 living in Canada.[2] In the United States, there are 77,940 mainline Ojibwe; 76,760 Saulteaux; and 8,770 Mississauga, organized in 125 bands. In Canada, they live from western Quebec to eastern British Columbia.

The Ojibwe language is Anishinaabemowin, a branch of the Algonquian language family.

They are part of the Council of Three Fires (which also include the Odawa and Potawatomi) and of the larger Anishinaabeg, which also include Algonquin, Nipissing, and Oji-Cree people. Historically, through the Saulteaux branch, they were a part of the Iron Confederacy with the Cree, Assiniboine, and Metis.[4]

The Ojibwe are known for their birchbark canoes, birchbark scrolls, mining and trade in copper, as well as their cultivation of wild rice and maple syrup.[5][failed verification] Their Midewiwin Society is well respected as the keeper of detailed and complex scrolls of events, oral history, songs, maps, memories, stories, geometry, and mathematics.[6][failed verification]

European powers, Canada, and the United States have colonized Ojibwe lands. The Ojibwe signed treaties with settler leaders to surrender land for settlement in exchange for compensation, land reserves and guarantees of traditional rights. Many European settlers moved into the Ojibwe ancestral lands.[7]

Etymology

The exonym for this Anishinaabe group is Ojibwe (plural: Ojibweg). This name is commonly anglicized as "Ojibwa" or "Ojibway". The name "Chippewa" is an alternative anglicization. Although many variations exist in the literature, "Chippewa" is more common in the United States, and "Ojibway" predominates in Canada,[8] but both terms are used in each country. In many Ojibwe communities throughout Canada and the U.S. since the late 20th century, more members have been using the generalized name Anishinaabe(-g).

The meaning of the name Ojibwe is not known; the most common explanations for the name derivations are:

  • ojiibwabwe (/o/ + /jiibw/ + /abwe/), meaning "those who cook/roast until it puckers", referring to their fire-curing of moccasin seams to make them waterproof.[9] Some 19th century sources say this name described a method of ritual torture that the Ojibwe applied to enemies.[10]
  • ozhibii'iwe (/o/ + /zhibii'/ + /iwe/), meaning "those who keep records [of a Vision]", referring to their form of pictorial writing, and pictographs used in Midewiwin sacred rites;[11] or
  • ojiibwe (/o/ + /jiib/ + /we/), meaning "those who speak stiffly" or "those who stammer", an exonym or name given to them by the Cree, who described the Ojibwe language for its differences from their own.[12]

Because many Ojibwe were formerly located around the outlet of Lake Superior, which the French colonists called Sault Ste. Marie for its rapids, the early Canadian settlers referred to the Ojibwe as Saulteurs. Ojibwe who subsequently moved to the prairie provinces of Canada have retained the name Saulteaux. This is disputed since some scholars believe that only the name migrated west.[13][page needed] Ojibwe who were originally located along the Mississagi River and made their way to southern Ontario are known as the Mississaugas.[14]

Language

The Ojibwe language is known as Anishinaabemowin or Ojibwemowin, and is still widely spoken, although the number of fluent speakers has declined sharply.[15] Today, most of the language's fluent speakers are elders. Since the early 21st century, there is a growing movement to revitalize the language and restore its strength as a central part of Ojibwe culture. The language belongs to the Algonquian linguistic group and is descended from Proto-Algonquian. Its sister languages include Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Cree, Fox, Menominee, Potawatomi, and Shawnee among the northern Plains tribes. Anishinaabemowin is frequently referred to as a "Central Algonquian" language; Central Algonquian is an area grouping, however, rather than a linguistic genetic one.

Ojibwemowin is the fourth-most spoken Native language in North America after Navajo, Cree, and Inuktitut. Many decades of fur trading with the French established the language as one of the key trade languages of the Great Lakes and the northern Great Plains.

The popularity of the epic poem The Song of Hiawatha, written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1855, publicized the Ojibwe culture. The epic contains many toponyms that originate from Ojibwe words.

History

Precontact and spiritual beliefs

According to Ojibwe oral history and from recordings in birch bark scrolls, the Ojibwe originated from the mouth of the Saint Lawrence River on the Atlantic coast of what is now Quebec.[16] They traded widely across the continent for thousands of years as they migrated, and knew of the canoe routes to move north, west to east, and then south in the Americas. The identification of the Ojibwe as a culture or people may have occurred in response to contact with Europeans. The Europeans preferred to deal with groups, and tried to identify those they encountered.[17]

According to Ojibwe oral history, seven great miigis (Cowrie shells) appeared to them in the Waabanakiing (Land of the Dawn, i.e., Eastern Land) to teach them the mide way of life. One of the miigis was too spiritually powerful and killed the people in the Waabanakiing when they were in its presence. The six others remained to teach, while the one returned into the ocean. The six established doodem (clans) for people in the east, symbolized by animals. The five original Anishinaabe doodem were the Wawaazisii (Bullhead), Baswenaazhi (Echo-maker, i.e., Crane), Aan'aawenh (Pintail Duck), Nooke (Tender, i.e., Bear) and Moozoonsii (Little Moose). The six miigis then returned to the ocean as well. If the seventh had stayed, it would have established the Thunderbird doodem.

At a later time, one of these miigis appeared in a vision to relate a prophecy. It said that if the Anishinaabeg did not move farther west, they would not be able to keep their traditional ways alive because of the many new pale-skinned settlers who would arrive soon in the east. Their migration path would be symbolized by a series of smaller Turtle Islands, which was confirmed with miigis shells (i.e., cowry shells). After receiving assurance from their "Allied Brothers" (i.e., Mi'kmaq) and "Father" (i.e., Abenaki) of their safety to move inland, the Anishinaabeg gradually migrated west along the Saint Lawrence River to the Ottawa River to Lake Nipissing, and then to the Great Lakes.

The first of the smaller Turtle Islands was Mooniyaa, where Mooniyaang (present-day Montreal) [18] developed. The "second stopping place" was in the vicinity of the Wayaanag-gakaabikaa (Concave Waterfalls, i.e., Niagara Falls). At their "third stopping place", near the present-day city of Detroit, Michigan, the Anishinaabeg divided into six groups, of which the Ojibwe was one.

The first significant new Ojibwe culture-center was their "fourth stopping place" on Manidoo Minising (Manitoulin Island). Their first new political-center was referred to as their "fifth stopping place", in their present country at Baawiting (Sault Ste. Marie). Continuing their westward expansion, the Ojibwe divided into the "northern branch", following the north shore of Lake Superior, and the "southern branch", along its south shore.

As the people continued to migrate westward, the "northern branch" divided into a "westerly group" and a "southerly group". The "southern branch" and the "southerly group" of the "northern branch" came together at their "sixth stopping place" on Spirit Island (46°41′15″N 092°11′21″W / 46.68750°N 92.18917°W / 46.68750; -92.18917) located in the Saint Louis River estuary at the western end of Lake Superior. (This has since been developed as the present-day Duluth/Superior cities.) The people were directed in a vision by the miigis being to go to the "place where there is food (i.e., wild rice) upon the waters." Their second major settlement, referred to as their "seventh stopping place", was at Shaugawaumikong (or Zhaagawaamikong, French, Chequamegon) on the southern shore of Lake Superior, near the present La Pointe, Wisconsin.

The "westerly group" of the "northern branch" migrated along the Rainy River, Red River of the North, and across the northern Great Plains until reaching the Pacific Northwest. Along their migration to the west, they came across many miigis, or cowry shells, as told in the prophecy.

Contact with Europeans

 
Five Ojibwe chiefs in the 19th century.

The first historical mention of the Ojibwe occurs in the French Jesuit Relation of 1640, a report by the missionary priests to their superiors in France. Through their friendship with the French traders (coureurs des bois and voyageurs), the Ojibwe gained guns, began to use European goods, and began to dominate their traditional enemies, the Lakota and Fox to their west and south. They drove the Sioux from the Upper Mississippi region to the area of the present-day Dakotas, and forced the Fox down from northern Wisconsin. The latter allied with the Sauk for protection.

By the end of the 18th century, the Ojibwe controlled nearly all of present-day Michigan, northern Wisconsin, and Minnesota, including most of the Red River area. They also controlled the entire northern shores of lakes Huron and Superior on the Canadian side and extending westward to the Turtle Mountains of North Dakota. In the latter area, the French Canadians called them Ojibwe or Saulteaux.

 
An Ojibwe named Boy Chief, by the noted American painter George Catlin, who made portraits at Fort Snelling in 1835. In 1845 he traveled to Paris with eleven Ojibwe, who had their portraits painted and danced for King Louis Philippe.

The Ojibwe were part of a long-term alliance with the Anishinaabe Odawa and Potawatomi peoples, called the Council of Three Fires. They fought against the Iroquois Confederacy, based mainly to the southeast of the Great Lakes in present-day New York, and the Sioux to the west. The Ojibwa stopped the Iroquois advance into their territory near Lake Superior in 1662. Then they formed an alliance with other tribes such as the Huron and the Odawa who had been displaced by the Iroquois invasion. Together they launched a massive counterattack against the Iroquois and drove them out of Michigan and southern Ontario until they were forced to flee back to their original homeland in upstate New York. At the same time the Iroquois were subjected to attacks by the French. This was the beginning of the end of the Iroquois Confederacy as they were put on the defensive. The Ojibwe expanded eastward, taking over the lands along the eastern shores of Lake Huron and Georgian Bay.

In 1745, they adopted guns from the British in order to repel the Dakota people in the Lake Superior area, pushing them to the south and west. In the 1680s the Ojibwa defeated the Iroquois who dispersed their Huron allies and trading partners. This victory allowed them a "golden age" in which they ruled uncontested in southern Ontario.[19]

Often, treaties known as "peace and friendship treaties" were made to establish community bonds between the Ojibwe and the European settlers. These established the groundwork for cooperative resource-sharing between the Ojibwe and the settlers. The United States and Canada viewed later treaties offering land cessions as offering territorial advantages. The Ojibwe did not understand the land cession terms in the same way because of the cultural differences in understanding the uses of land. The governments of the U.S. and Canada considered land a commodity of value that could be freely bought, owned and sold. The Ojibwe believed it was a fully shared resource, along with air, water and sunlight—despite having an understanding of "territory". At the time of the treaty councils, they could not conceive of separate land sales or exclusive ownership of land. Consequently, today, in both Canada and the U.S., legal arguments in treaty-rights and treaty interpretations often bring to light the differences in cultural understanding of treaty terms to come to legal understanding of the treaty obligations.[20]

 
A Chippeway Widow, 1838

In part because of its long trading alliance, the Ojibwe allied with the French against Great Britain and its colonists in the Seven Years' War (also called the French and Indian War).[21] After losing the war in 1763, France was forced to cede its colonial claims to lands in Canada and east of the Mississippi River to Britain. After Pontiac's War and adjusting to British colonial rule, the Ojibwe allied with British forces and against the United States in the War of 1812. They had hoped that a British victory could protect them against United States settlers' encroachment on their territory.

Following the war, the United States government tried to forcibly remove all the Ojibwe to Minnesota, west of the Mississippi River. The Ojibwe resisted, and there were violent confrontations. In the Sandy Lake Tragedy, several hundred Ojibwe died because of the federal government's failure to deliver fall annuity payments.[22] The government attempted to do this in the Keweenaw Peninsula in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Through the efforts of Chief Buffalo and the rise of popular opinion in the U.S. against Ojibwe removal, the bands east of the Mississippi were allowed to return to reservations on ceded territory. A few families were removed to Kansas as part of the Potawatomi removal.

 
Plains Ojibwe Chief Sha-có-pay (The Six). In addition to the northern and eastern woodlands, Ojibwe people also lived on the prairies of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, North Dakota, western Minnesota and Montana.

In British North America, the Royal Proclamation of 1763 following the Seven Years' War governed the cession of land by treaty or purchase . Subsequently, France ceded most of the land in Upper Canada to Great Britain. Even with the Jay Treaty signed between Great Britain and the United States following the American Revolutionary War, the newly formed United States did not fully uphold the treaty. As it was still preoccupied by war with France, Great Britain ceded to the United States much of the lands in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, parts of Illinois and Wisconsin, and northern Minnesota and North Dakota to settle the boundary of their holdings in Canada.

In 1807, the Ojibwe joined three other tribes, the Odawa, Potawatomi and Wyandot people, in signing the Treaty of Detroit. The agreement, between the tribes and William Hull, representing the Michigan Territory, gave the United States a portion of today's Southeastern Michigan and a section of Ohio near the Maumee River. The tribes were able to retain small pockets of land in the territory.[23]

The Battle of the Brule was an October 1842 battle between the La Pointe Band of Ojibwe Indians and a war party of Dakota Indians. The battle took place along the Brule River (Bois Brûlé) in what is today northern Wisconsin and resulted in a decisive victory for the Ojibwe.

In Canada, many of the land cession treaties the British made with the Ojibwe provided for their rights for continued hunting, fishing and gathering of natural resources after land sales. The government signed numbered treaties in northwestern Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. British Columbia had not signed treaties until the late 20th century, and most areas have no treaties yet. The government and First Nations are continuing to negotiate treaty land entitlements and settlements. The treaties are constantly being reinterpreted by the courts because many of them are vague and difficult to apply in modern times. The numbered treaties were some of the most detailed treaties signed for their time. The Ojibwe Nation set the agenda and negotiated the first numbered treaties before they would allow safe passage of many more British settlers to the prairies.

Ojibwe communities have a strong history of political and social activism. Long before contact, they were closely aligned with Odawa and Potawatomi people in the Council of the Three Fires. From the 1870s to 1938, the Grand General Indian Council of Ontario attempted to reconcile multiple traditional models into one cohesive voice to exercise political influence over colonial legislation. In the West, 16 Plains Cree and Ojibwe bands formed the Allied Bands of Qu'Appelle in 1910 in order to redress concerns about the failure of the government to uphold Treaty 4's promises.

Culture

 
Plains Ojibwe performing a snowshoe dance. By George Catlin

The Ojibwe have traditionally organized themselves into groups known as bands. Most Ojibwe, except for the Great Plains bands, have historically lived a settled (as opposed to nomadic) lifestyle, relying on fishing and hunting to supplement the cultivation of numerous varieties of maize and squash, and the harvesting of manoomin (wild rice) for food. Historically their typical dwelling has been the wiigiwaam (wigwam), built either as a waginogaan (domed-lodge) or as a nasawa'ogaan (pointed-lodge), made of birch bark, juniper bark and willow saplings. In the contemporary era, most of the people live in modern housing, but traditional structures are still used for special sites and events.

They have a culturally-specific form of pictorial writing, used in the religious rites of the Midewiwin and recorded on birch bark scrolls and possibly on rock. The many complex pictures on the sacred scrolls communicate much historical, geometrical, and mathematical knowledge. The use of petroforms, petroglyphs, and pictographs has been common throughout the Ojibwe traditional territories. Petroforms and medicine wheels have been used to teach important spiritual concepts, record astronomical events, and to use as a mnemonic device for certain stories and beliefs. The script is still in use, among traditional people as well as among youth on social media.

Some ceremonies use the miigis shell (cowry shell), which is found naturally in distant coastal areas. Their use of such shells demonstrates there is a vast, longstanding trade network across the continent. The use and trade of copper across the continent has also been proof of a large trading network that took place for thousands of years, as far back as the Hopewell tradition. Certain types of rock used for spear and arrow heads have also been traded over large distances precontact.

During the summer months, the people attend jiingotamog for the spiritual and niimi'idimaa for a social gathering (powwows) at various reservations in the Anishinaabe-Aki (Anishinaabe Country). Many people still follow the traditional ways of harvesting wild rice, picking berries, hunting, making medicines, and making maple sugar.

The Ojibwe bury their dead in burial mounds. Many erect a jiibegamig or a "spirit-house" over each mound. An historical burial mound would typically have a wooden marker, inscribed with the deceased's doodem (clan sign). Because of the distinct features of these burials, Ojibwe graves have been often looted by grave robbers. In the United States, many Ojibwe communities safe-guard their burial mounds through the enforcement of the 1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

Several Ojibwe bands in the United States cooperate in the Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission, which manages the treaty hunting and fishing rights in the Lake Superior-Lake Michigan areas. The commission follows the directives of U.S. agencies to run several wilderness areas. Some Minnesota Ojibwe tribal councils cooperate in the 1854 Treaty Authority, which manages their treaty hunting and fishing rights in the Arrowhead Region. In Michigan, the Chippewa-Ottawa Resource Authority manages the hunting, fishing and gathering rights about Sault Ste. Marie, and the resources of the waters of lakes Michigan and Huron. In Canada, the Grand Council of Treaty No. 3 manages the Treaty 3 hunting and fishing rights related to the area around Lake of the Woods.

Cuisine

 
Wild rice harvesting - 1934
 
Vintage photo entitled, "Paul Buffalo and wife parching wild rice at their camp" - 1934

There is renewed interest in nutritious eating among the Ojibwe, who have been expanding community gardens in food deserts, and have started a mobile kitchen to teach their communities about nutritious food preparation.[24] The traditional Native American diet was seasonally dependent on hunting, fishing and the foraging and farming of produce and grains. The modern diet has substituted some other types of food like frybread and "Indian tacos" in place of these traditionally prepared meals. The Native Americans loss of connection to their culture is part of the "quest to reconnect to their food traditions" sparking an interest in traditional ingredients like wild rice, that is the official state grain of Minnesota and was part of the pre-colonial diet of the Ojibwe. Other staple foods of the Ojibwe were fish, maple sugar, venison and corn. They grew beans, squash, corn and potatoes and foraged for blueberries, blackberries, choke cherries, raspberries, gooseberries and huckleberries. During the summer game animals like deer, beaver, moose, goose, duck, rabbits and bear were hunted.[25][26]

One traditional method of making granulated sugar known among the Anishinabe was to boil maple syrup until reduced and pour into a trough, where the rapidly cooling syrup was quickly processed into maple sugar using wooden paddles.[27]

Kinship and clan system

Traditionally, the Ojibwe had a patrilineal system, in which children were considered born to the father's clan.[28] For this reason, children with French or English fathers were considered outside the clan and Ojibwe society unless adopted by an Ojibwe male. They were sometimes referred to as "white" because of their fathers, regardless if their mothers were Ojibwe, as they had no official place in the Ojibwe society. The people would shelter the woman and her children, but they did not have the same place in the culture as children born to Ojibwe fathers.

Ojibwe understanding of kinship is complex and includes the immediate family as well as extended family. It is considered a modified bifurcate merging kinship system. As with any bifurcate-merging kinship system, siblings generally share the same kinship term with parallel cousins because they are all part of the same clan. The modified system allows for younger siblings to share the same kinship term with younger cross-cousins. Complexity wanes further from the person's immediate generation, but some complexity is retained with female relatives. For example, ninooshenh is "my mother's sister" or "my father's sister-in-law"—i.e., my parallel-aunt, but also "my parent's female cross-cousin". Great-grandparents and older generations, as well as great-grandchildren and younger generations, are collectively called aanikoobijigan. This system of kinship reflects the Anishinaabe philosophy of interconnectedness and balance among all living generations, as well as of all generations of the past and of the future.

The Ojibwe people were divided into a number of doodemag (clans; singular: doodem) named primarily for animals and birds totems (pronounced doodem). The word in the Ojibwe language means "my fellow clansman."[29] The five original totems were Wawaazisii (Bullhead), Baswenaazhi/"Ajiijaak" ("Echo-maker", i.e., Crane), Aan'aawenh (Pintail Duck), Nooke ("Tender", i.e., Bear) and Moozwaanowe ("Little" Moose-tail). The Crane totem was the most vocal among the Ojibwe, and the Bear was the largest – so large, that it was sub-divided into body parts such as the head, the ribs and the feet. Each clan had certain responsibilities among the people. People had to marry a spouse from a different clan.

Traditionally, each band had a self-regulating council consisting of leaders of the communities' clans, or odoodemaan. The band was often identified by the principal doodem. In meeting others, the traditional greeting among the Ojibwe people is, "What is your 'doodem'?" ("Aaniin gidoodem?" or "Awanen gidoodem?") The response allows the parties to establish social conduct by identifying as family, friends or enemies. Today, the greeting has been shortened to "Aanii" (pronounced "Ah-nee").[30]

Spiritual beliefs

 
Pictorial notation of an Ojibwe music board
 
Frame of Ojibwe sweatlodge

The Ojibwe have spiritual beliefs that have been passed down by oral tradition under the Midewiwin teachings. These include a creation story and a recounting of the origins of ceremonies and rituals. Spiritual beliefs and rituals were very important to the Ojibwe because spirits guided them through life. Birch bark scrolls and petroforms were used to pass along knowledge and information, as well as for ceremonies. Pictographs were also used for ceremonies.

The sweatlodge is still used during important ceremonies about the four directions, when oral history is recounted. Teaching lodges are common today to teach the next generations about the language and ancient ways of the past. The traditional ways, ideas, and teachings are preserved and practiced in such living ceremonies.

 
"Spider web" charm, hung on infant's cradle (shown alongside a "Mask used in game" and "Ghost leg), to frighten children", Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin (1929).

The modern dreamcatcher, adopted by the Pan-Indian Movement and New Age groups, originated in the Ojibwe "spider web charm",[31] a hoop with woven string or sinew meant to replicate a spider's web, used as a protective charm for infants.[32] According to Ojibwe legend, the protective charms originate with the Spider Woman, known as Asibikaashi; who takes care of the children and the people on the land and as the Ojibwe Nation spread to the corners of North America it became difficult for Asibikaashi to reach all the children, so the mothers and grandmothers wove webs for the children, which had an apotropaic purpose and were not explicitly connected with dreams.[32]

Funeral practices

Traditional

In Ojibwe tradition, the main task after a death is to bury the body as soon as possible, the very next day or even on the day of death. This was important because it allowed the spirit of the dead to journey to its place of joy and happiness. The land of happiness where the dead reside is called Gaagige Minawaanigozigiwining.[33] This was a journey that took four days. If burial preparations could not be completed the day of the death, guests and medicine men were required to stay with the deceased and the family in order to help mourn, while also singing songs and dancing throughout the night. Once preparations were complete, the body would be placed in an inflexed position with their knees towards their chest.[34] Over the course of the four days it takes the spirit to journey to its place of joy, it is customary to have food kept alongside the grave at all times. A fire is set when the sun sets and is kept going throughout the night. The food is to help feed the spirit over the course of the journey, while the smoke from the fire is a directional guide. Once the four day journey is over, a feast is held, which is led by the chief medicine man. At the feast, it is the chief medicine man's duty to give away certain belongings of the deceased. Those who were chosen to receive items from the deceased are required to trade in a new piece of clothing, all of which would be turned into a bundle. The bundle of new cloths and a dish is then given to the closest relative. The recipient of the bundle must then find individuals that he or she believes to be worthy, and pass on one of the new pieces of clothing.[35]

Contemporary

According to Lee Staples, an Ojibwe spiritual leader from the Mille Lacs Indian Reservation, present day practices follow the same spiritual beliefs and remain fairly similar. When an individual dies, a fire is lit in the home of the family, who are also expected to continuously maintain the fire for four days. Over the four days, food is also offered to the spirit. Added to food offerings, tobacco is also offered as it is considered one of four sacred medicines traditionally used by Ojibwe communities. On the last night of food offerings, a feast is also held by the relatives which ends with a final smoke of the offering tobacco or the tobacco being thrown in the fire. Although conventional caskets are mainly used in today's communities, birch bark fire matches are buried along with the body as a tool to help light fires to guide their journey to Gaagige Minawaanigozigiwining.[33]

Ethnobotany

Plants used by the Ojibwe include Agrimonia gryposepala, used for urinary problems,[36] and Pinus strobus, the resin of which was used to treat infections and gangrene. The roots of Symphyotrichum novae-angliae are smoked in pipes to attract game.[37] Allium tricoccum is eaten as part of Ojibwe cuisine.[38] They also use a decoction as a quick-acting emetic.[39] An infusion of the alba subspecies of Silene latifolia is used as physic.[40] The South Ojibwa use a decoction of the root Viola canadensis for pains near the bladder.[41] The Ojibwa are documented to use the root of Uvularia grandiflora for pain in the solar plexus, which may refer to pleurisy.[42] They take a compound decoction of the root of Ribes glandulosum for back pain and for "female weakness".[43]

The Ojibwe eat the corms of Sagittaria cuneata for indigestion, and also as a food, eaten boiled fresh, dried or candied with maple sugar. Muskrat and beavers store them in large caches, which they have learned to recognize and appropriate.[44] They take an infusion of the Antennaria howellii ssp. neodioica after childbirth to purge afterbirth and to heal.[45] They use the roots of Solidago rigida, using a decoction of root as an enema[46] and take an infusion of the root for "stoppage of urine".[47] They use Abies balsamea; melting the gum on warm stones and inhaling the fumes for headache.[48] They also use a decoction of the root as an herbal steam for rheumatic joints.[48] They also combine the gum with bear grease and use it as an ointment for hair.[49] They use the needle-like leaves in as part of ceremony involving the sweatbath, and use the gum for colds and inhale the leaf smoke for colds.[50] They use the plant as a cough medicine.[51] The gum is used for sores and a compound containing leaves is used as wash. The liquid balsam from bark blisters is used for sore eyes.[50] They boil the resin twice and add it to suet or fat to make a canoe pitch.[52] The bark gum is taken for chest soreness from colds, applied to cuts and sores, and decoction of the bark is used to induce sweating. The bark gum is also taken for gonorrhea.[53] A decoction (tea) of powdered, dried Onoclea sensibilis root is used to stimulate milk flow in female patients.[54]

Bands

In his History of the Ojibway People (1855), William W. Warren recorded 10 major divisions of the Ojibwe in the United States. He mistakenly omitted the Ojibwe located in Michigan, western Minnesota and westward, and all of Canada. When identified major historical bands located in Michigan and Ontario are added, the count becomes 15:[citation needed]

English Name Ojibwe Name
(in double-vowel spelling)
Location
Saulteaux Baawitigowininiwag Sault Ste. Marie area of Ontario and Michigan
Border-Sitters Biitan-akiing-enabijig St. Croix-Namekagon River valleys in eastern Minnesota and northern Wisconsin
Lake Superior Band Gichi-gamiwininiwag south shore of Lake Superior
Mississippi River Band Gichi-ziibiwininiwag upper Mississippi River in Minnesota
Rainy Lake Band Goojijiwininiwag Rainy Lake and River, about the northern boundary of Minnesota
Ricing-Rails Manoominikeshiinyag along headwaters of St. Croix River in Wisconsin and Minnesota
Pillagers Makandwewininiwag North-central Minnesota and Mississippi River headwaters
Mississaugas Misi-zaagiwininiwag north of Lake Erie, extending north of Lake Huron about the Mississaugi River
Dokis Band (Dokis's and Restoule's bands) N/A Along French River (Wemitigoj-Sibi) region (including Little French River (Ziibiins) and Restoule River) in Ontario, near Lake Nipissing
Ottawa Lake (Lac Courte Oreilles) Band Odaawaa-zaaga'iganiwininiwag Lac Courte Oreilles, Wisconsin
Bois Forte Band Zagaakwaandagowininiwag north of Lake Superior
Lac du Flambeau Band Waaswaaganiwininiwag head of Wisconsin River
Muskrat Portage Band Wazhashk-Onigamininiwag northwest side of Lake Superior at the Canada–US border
Nopeming Band Noopiming Azhe-ininiwag northeast of Lake Superior and west of Lake Nipissing

These 15 major divisions developed into the following Ojibwe Bands and First Nations of today. Bands are listed under their respective tribes where possible.[citation needed] See also the listing of Saulteaux communities.

Notable Ojibwe people

Ojibwe people from the 20th and 21st centuries should be listed under their specific tribes.

Ojibwe treaties

Treaties with France
Treaties with Great Britain and the United Kingdom
  • Treaty of Fort Niagara (1764)
  • Treaty of Fort Niagara (1781)
  • Indian Officers' Land Treaty (1783)
  • The Crawford Purchases (1783)
  • Between the Lakes Purchase (1784)
  • Treaty of Peace with Sioux, Chippewa and Winnebago (1787)
  • Toronto Purchase (1787)
    • Indenture to the Toronto Purchase (1805)
  • The McKee Purchase (1790)
  • Between the Lakes Purchase (1792)
  • Chenail Ecarte (Sombra Township) Purchase (1796)
  • London Township Purchase (1796)
  • Land for Joseph Brant (1797)
  • Penetanguishene Bay Purchase (1798)
  • St. Joseph Island (1798)
  • Head-of-the-Lake Purchase (1806)
  • Lake Simcoe-Lake Huron Purchase (1815)
  • Lake Simcoe-Nottawasaga Purchase (1818)
  • Ajetance Purchase (1818)
  • Rice Lake Purchase (1818)
  • The Rideau Purchase (1819)
  • Long Woods Purchase (1822)
  • Huron Tract Purchase (1827)
  • Saugeen Tract Agreement (1836)
  • Manitoulin Agreement (1836)
  • The Robinson Treaties
  • Manitoulin Island Treaty (1862)
Treaties with Canada
Treaties with the United States

Gallery

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b . 2 December 2012. Archived from the original on 2 December 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ a b "Ojibwe – The Canadian Encyclopedia".
  3. ^ Spencer, Kelly (August 31, 2020). "The rock carvings of Kinoomaagewaabkong". Norfolk & Tillsonburg News. Retrieved January 31, 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ . YouTube. Archived from the original on 2018-06-30.
  5. ^ "Science Buzz".
  6. ^ . eMuseum @ Minnesota State University. Minnesota State University. Mankato. Archived from the original on 2010-04-09. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  7. ^ "Ojibwe | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 2021-01-31.
  8. ^ "Batchewana – History". batchewana.ca. Retrieved 2021-01-31.
  9. ^ "Microsoft Word – dictionary best for printing 2004 ever finalpdf.doc" (PDF). Retrieved 2011-01-02.
  10. ^ Warren, William W. (1984) [1885]. History of the Ojibway People. p. 36. ISBN 0-87351-162-X.
  11. ^ Louise Erdrich, Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country (2003) September 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Johnston, Basil. (2007) Anishinaubae Thesaurus ISBN 0-87013-753-0
  13. ^ Three Fires Unity: The Anishnaabeg of the Lake Huron Borderlands. Phil Bellfy. 2011. University of Nebraska.
  14. ^ "First Nations Culture Areas Index". the Canadian Museum of Civilization.
  15. ^ "Anishinaabemowin: Ojibwe Language | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 2021-01-31.
  16. ^ Roy, Loriene. "Ojibwa". Countries and Their Cultures. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  17. ^ Anthony, David. The Horse, the Wheel and Language, Princeton University Press, 2007, p. 102
  18. ^ "Conversations on Reconciliation: "Tiotiá:ke and Mooniyaang: Land Acknowledgement."". Onishka. Montréal. 6 June 2017 – via Indigenous Contemporary Scene.
  19. ^ Schmalz, Peter (May 1992). "The Ojibwa of southern Ontario". Histoire Sociale / Social History. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  20. ^ "The Atlas of Canada: Historical Indian Treaties". Retrieved March 1, 2018.
  21. ^ Gevinson, Alan. "Which Native American Tribes Allied Themselves with the French?". www.teachinghistory.org. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
  22. ^ James A. Clifton, "Wisconsin Death March: Explaining the Extremes in Old Northwest Indian Removal", in Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, 1987, 5:1–40, accessed 2 March 2010
  23. ^ "Treaty Between the Ottawa, Chippewa, Wyandot, and Potawatomi Indians". World Digital Library. 1807-11-17. Retrieved 2013-08-03.
  24. ^ "In tribes across Minnesota, indigenous food movement takes root". Star Tribune.
  25. ^ "Eating indigenously changes diets and lives of Native Americans".
  26. ^ "Anishinabe".
  27. ^ Child, Brenda J. (16 February 2012). Holding Our World Together: Ojibwe Women and the Survival of Community. ISBN 9781101560259.
  28. ^ "Ojibwe Culture" 2015-06-23 at the Wayback Machine, Milwaukee Public Museum, accessed 10 December 2011
  29. ^ Billard, Jules, B. (1989). "N. Scott Momaday "I am Alive ..."". The World of the American Indian, A volume in the Story of Man Library. Washington, D.C. p. 13. ISBN 0-87044-799-8.
  30. ^ Team, Forvo. "Aanii pronunciation: How to pronounce Aanii in Ojibwa". Forvo.com. Retrieved 2021-03-07.
  31. ^ Jim Great Elk Waters (2002), View from the Medicine Lodge, Seven Locks Press, p. 111.
  32. ^ a b Densmore 1970, p. 113.
  33. ^ a b Allis, Ellary. “The Spirit of The Dead According To Ojibwe Beliefs.” SevenPonds, Seven Ponds, 8 Dec. 2016, blog.sevenponds.com/cultural-perspectives/the-spirit-of-the-dead-according-to-ojibwe-beliefs.   
  34. ^ Hilger, M. Inez (1944), Chippewa Burial and Mourning Customs. American Anthropologist,     46: 564–568. doi:10.1525/aa.1944.46.4.02a00240
  35. ^ James A. Clifton, "Wisconsin Death March: Explaining the Extremes in Old Northwest Indian Removal", in Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, 1987, 5:1–40
  36. ^ Daniel E. Moerman (2009). Native American Medicinal Plants: An Ethnobotanical Dictionary. Timber Press. pp. 52–53. ISBN 978-0-88192-987-4.
  37. ^ Densmore, Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians. SI-BAE Annual Report #44:273–379 (p. 376)
  38. ^ Smith 1932, p. 104.
  39. ^ Densmore, Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians. SI-BAE Annual Report #44:273–379 (p. 346)
  40. ^ Smith 1932, p. 361.
  41. ^ Hoffman, W.J., 1891, The Midewiwin or 'Grand Medicine Society' of the Ojibwa, SI-BAE Annual Report #7, page 201
  42. ^ Smith, Huron H., 1932, Ethnobotany of the Ojibwe Indians, Bulletin of the Public Museum of Milwaukee 4:327–525, page 374
  43. ^ Densmore, Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians. SI-BAE Annual Report #44:273–379 (p. 356)
  44. ^ Smith 1932, p. 396.
  45. ^ Smith 1932, p. 363.
  46. ^ Densmore, Frances, 1928, Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians, SI-BAE Annual Report #44:273–379, page 364 (Note: This source comes from the Native American ethnobotany database <http://naeb.brit.org/> which lists the plant as Oligoneuron rigidum var. rigidum.) Accessed 19 January 2018
  47. ^ Densmore, Frances, 1928, Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians, SI-BAE Annual Report #44:273–379, page 348 (Note: This source comes from the Native American ethnobotany database <http://naeb.brit.org/> which lists the plant as Oligoneuron rigidum var. rigidum). Accessed 19 January 2018
  48. ^ a b Densmore, Frances, 1928, Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians, SI-BAE Annual Report #44:273–379, page 338
  49. ^ Densmore, Frances, 1928, Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians, SI-BAE Annual Report #44:273–379, page 350
  50. ^ a b Smith, Huron H., 1932, Ethnobotany of the Ojibwe Indians, Bulletin of the Public Museum of Milwaukee 4:327–525, page 378
  51. ^ Reagan, Albert B., 1928, Plants Used by the Bois Fort Chippewa (Ojibwa) Indians of Minnesota, Wisconsin Archeologist 7(4):230–248, page 244
  52. ^ Smith 1932, p. 420.
  53. ^ Hoffman, W.J., 1891, The Midewiwin or 'Grand Medicine Society' of the Ojibwa, SI-BAE Annual Report #7, page 198
  54. ^ Smith 1932, p. 382.
  55. ^ "Portrait of Stephen Bonga", Wisconsin Historical Images, accessed 23 January 2014
  56. ^ "Q&A: Trixie Mattel". 8 September 2015.

Bibliography

  • Densmore, Frances (1970) [1929]. Chippewa Customs. Minnesota Historical Society Press.
  • H. Hickerson, The Chippewa and Their Neighbors (1970)
  • R. Landes, Ojibwa Sociology (1937, repr. 1969)
  • R. Landes, Ojibwa Woman (1938, repr. 1971)
  • Smith, Huron H. (1932). "Ethnobotany of the Ojibwe Indians". Bulletin of the Public Museum of Milwaukee (4): 327–525.
  • F. Symington, The Canadian Indian (1969)

Further reading

  • Aaniin Ekidong: Ojibwe Vocabulary Project. St. Paul: Minnesota Humanities Center, 2009
  • Baker, Jocelyn (1936). "Ojibwa of the Lake of the Woods". Canadian Geographic Journal. 12 (1): 47–54.
  • Bento-Banai, Edward (2004). Creation- From the Ojibwa. The Mishomis Book.
  • Child, Brenda J. (2014). My Grandfather's Knocking Sticks: Ojibwe Family Life and Labor on the Reservation. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press.
  • Danziger, E.J., Jr. (1978). The Chippewa of Lake Superior. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Denial, Catherine J. (2013). Making Marriage: Husbands, Wives, and the American State in Dakota and Ojibwe Country. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press.
  • Densmore, F. (1979). Chippewa customs. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press. (Published originally 1929)
  • Grim, J.A. (1983). The shaman: Patterns of religious healing among the Ojibway Indians. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Gross, L.W. (2002). The comic vision of Anishinaabe culture and religion. American Indian Quarterly, 26, 436–459.
  • Howse, Joseph. A Grammar of the Cree Language; With which is combined an analysis of the Chippeway dialect. London: J.G.F. & J. Rivington, 1844.
  • Johnston, B. (1976). Ojibway heritage. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.
  • Long, J. Voyages and Travels of an Indian Interpreter and Trader Describing the Manners and Customs of the North American Indians, with an Account of the Posts Situated on the River Saint Laurence, Lake Ontario, & C., to Which Is Added a Vocabulary of the Chippeway Language ... a List of Words in the Iroquois, Mehegan, Shawanee, and Esquimeaux Tongues, and a Table, Shewing the Analogy between the Algonkin and the Chippeway Languages. London: Robson, 1791.
  • Nichols, J.D., & Nyholm, E. (1995). A concise dictionary of Minnesota Ojibwe. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Treuer, Anton. . St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2012.
  • Treuer, Anton. . St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2011.
  • Treuer, Anton. Ojibwe in Minnesota. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 2010. Ojibwe in Minnesota. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2010.
  • Treuer, Anton. Living Our Language: Ojibwe Tales & Oral Histories. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2001.
  • Vizenor, G. (1972). The everlasting sky: New voices from the people named the Chippewa. New York: Crowell-Collier Press.
  • Vizenor, G. (1981). Summer in the spring: Ojibwe lyric poems and tribal stories. Minneapolis: The Nodin Press.
  • Vizenor, G. (1984). The people named the Chippewa: Narrative histories. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Warren, William W. (1851). History of the Ojibway People.
  • White, Richard (1991). The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650–1815 (Studies in North American Indian History) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England.
  • White, Richard (July 31, 2000). Chippewas of the Sault. The Sault Tribe News.
  • Wub-e-ke-niew. (1995). We have the right to exist: A translation of aboriginal indigenous thought. New York: Black Thistle Press.

External links

  • Ojibwe Song Pictures, recorded by Frances Desmore
  • Ojibwe People's Dictionary
  • PBS documentary featuring the history and culture of the Anishinaabe-Ojibwe people of the Great Lakes (United States–focused).
    • Ojibwe migratory map from Ojibwe Waasa-Inaabidaa
  • Batchewana First Nation of Ojibways
  • Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
  • Mississaugi First Nation
  • Wabun Tribal Council
  • Ojibwe Stories: Gaganoonididaa from the Public Radio Exchange
  • [1]Ojibwe Astronomy

ojibwe, chippewa, ojibway, redirect, here, other, uses, chippewa, disambiguation, ojibway, disambiguation, ojibwa, chippewa, saulteaux, anishinaabe, people, what, currently, southern, canada, northern, midwestern, united, states, northern, plains, they, indige. Chippewa and Ojibway redirect here For other uses see Chippewa disambiguation and Ojibway disambiguation The Ojibwe Ojibwa Chippewa or Saulteaux are an Anishinaabe people in what is currently southern Canada the northern Midwestern United States and Northern Plains They are Indigenous peoples of the Subarctic and Northeastern Woodlands Ojibwe Chippewa ᐅᒋᑉᐧᐁ ᒋᑉᐯᐧᐊ Precontact distribution of Ojibwe speaking peopleTotal population170 742 in United States 2010 1 160 000 in Canada 2014 2 Regions with significant populationsCanada Quebec Ontario Manitoba Saskatchewan Alberta United States Michigan Wisconsin Minnesota North Dakota LanguagesEnglish Ojibwe FrenchReligionMidewiwin Catholicism MethodismRelated ethnic groupsOdawa Potawatomi Saulteaux Oji Cree and other Algonquian peoplesPersonOjibwePeopleOjibwegLanguageOjibwemowinCountryOjibwewakiAccording to the U S census Ojibwe people are one of the largest tribal populations among Native American peoples in the United States In Canada they are the second largest First Nations population surpassed only by the Cree They are one of the most numerous Indigenous Peoples north of the Rio Grande 3 better source needed The Ojibwe population is approximately 320 000 people with 170 742 living in the United States as of 2010 update 1 and approximately 160 000 living in Canada 2 In the United States there are 77 940 mainline Ojibwe 76 760 Saulteaux and 8 770 Mississauga organized in 125 bands In Canada they live from western Quebec to eastern British Columbia The Ojibwe language is Anishinaabemowin a branch of the Algonquian language family They are part of the Council of Three Fires which also include the Odawa and Potawatomi and of the larger Anishinaabeg which also include Algonquin Nipissing and Oji Cree people Historically through the Saulteaux branch they were a part of the Iron Confederacy with the Cree Assiniboine and Metis 4 The Ojibwe are known for their birchbark canoes birchbark scrolls mining and trade in copper as well as their cultivation of wild rice and maple syrup 5 failed verification Their Midewiwin Society is well respected as the keeper of detailed and complex scrolls of events oral history songs maps memories stories geometry and mathematics 6 failed verification European powers Canada and the United States have colonized Ojibwe lands The Ojibwe signed treaties with settler leaders to surrender land for settlement in exchange for compensation land reserves and guarantees of traditional rights Many European settlers moved into the Ojibwe ancestral lands 7 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Language 3 History 3 1 Precontact and spiritual beliefs 3 2 Contact with Europeans 4 Culture 4 1 Cuisine 4 2 Kinship and clan system 4 3 Spiritual beliefs 4 4 Funeral practices 4 4 1 Traditional 4 4 2 Contemporary 4 5 Ethnobotany 5 Bands 6 Notable Ojibwe people 7 Ojibwe treaties 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology EditFurther information List of Ojibwa ethnonyms The exonym for this Anishinaabe group is Ojibwe plural Ojibweg This name is commonly anglicized as Ojibwa or Ojibway The name Chippewa is an alternative anglicization Although many variations exist in the literature Chippewa is more common in the United States and Ojibway predominates in Canada 8 but both terms are used in each country In many Ojibwe communities throughout Canada and the U S since the late 20th century more members have been using the generalized name Anishinaabe g The meaning of the name Ojibwe is not known the most common explanations for the name derivations are ojiibwabwe o jiibw abwe meaning those who cook roast until it puckers referring to their fire curing of moccasin seams to make them waterproof 9 Some 19th century sources say this name described a method of ritual torture that the Ojibwe applied to enemies 10 ozhibii iwe o zhibii iwe meaning those who keep records of a Vision referring to their form of pictorial writing and pictographs used in Midewiwin sacred rites 11 or ojiibwe o jiib we meaning those who speak stiffly or those who stammer an exonym or name given to them by the Cree who described the Ojibwe language for its differences from their own 12 Because many Ojibwe were formerly located around the outlet of Lake Superior which the French colonists called Sault Ste Marie for its rapids the early Canadian settlers referred to the Ojibwe as Saulteurs Ojibwe who subsequently moved to the prairie provinces of Canada have retained the name Saulteaux This is disputed since some scholars believe that only the name migrated west 13 page needed Ojibwe who were originally located along the Mississagi River and made their way to southern Ontario are known as the Mississaugas 14 Language EditMain article Ojibwe language The Ojibwe language is known as Anishinaabemowin or Ojibwemowin and is still widely spoken although the number of fluent speakers has declined sharply 15 Today most of the language s fluent speakers are elders Since the early 21st century there is a growing movement to revitalize the language and restore its strength as a central part of Ojibwe culture The language belongs to the Algonquian linguistic group and is descended from Proto Algonquian Its sister languages include Blackfoot Cheyenne Cree Fox Menominee Potawatomi and Shawnee among the northern Plains tribes Anishinaabemowin is frequently referred to as a Central Algonquian language Central Algonquian is an area grouping however rather than a linguistic genetic one Ojibwemowin is the fourth most spoken Native language in North America after Navajo Cree and Inuktitut Many decades of fur trading with the French established the language as one of the key trade languages of the Great Lakes and the northern Great Plains The popularity of the epic poem The Song of Hiawatha written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1855 publicized the Ojibwe culture The epic contains many toponyms that originate from Ojibwe words History EditPrecontact and spiritual beliefs Edit According to Ojibwe oral history and from recordings in birch bark scrolls the Ojibwe originated from the mouth of the Saint Lawrence River on the Atlantic coast of what is now Quebec 16 They traded widely across the continent for thousands of years as they migrated and knew of the canoe routes to move north west to east and then south in the Americas The identification of the Ojibwe as a culture or people may have occurred in response to contact with Europeans The Europeans preferred to deal with groups and tried to identify those they encountered 17 According to Ojibwe oral history seven great miigis Cowrie shells appeared to them in the Waabanakiing Land of the Dawn i e Eastern Land to teach them the mide way of life One of the miigis was too spiritually powerful and killed the people in the Waabanakiing when they were in its presence The six others remained to teach while the one returned into the ocean The six established doodem clans for people in the east symbolized by animals The five original Anishinaabe doodem were the Wawaazisii Bullhead Baswenaazhi Echo maker i e Crane Aan aawenh Pintail Duck Nooke Tender i e Bear and Moozoonsii Little Moose The six miigis then returned to the ocean as well If the seventh had stayed it would have established the Thunderbird doodem At a later time one of these miigis appeared in a vision to relate a prophecy It said that if the Anishinaabeg did not move farther west they would not be able to keep their traditional ways alive because of the many new pale skinned settlers who would arrive soon in the east Their migration path would be symbolized by a series of smaller Turtle Islands which was confirmed with miigis shells i e cowry shells After receiving assurance from their Allied Brothers i e Mi kmaq and Father i e Abenaki of their safety to move inland the Anishinaabeg gradually migrated west along the Saint Lawrence River to the Ottawa River to Lake Nipissing and then to the Great Lakes The first of the smaller Turtle Islands was Mooniyaa where Mooniyaang present day Montreal 18 developed The second stopping place was in the vicinity of the Wayaanag gakaabikaa Concave Waterfalls i e Niagara Falls At their third stopping place near the present day city of Detroit Michigan the Anishinaabeg divided into six groups of which the Ojibwe was one The first significant new Ojibwe culture center was their fourth stopping place on Manidoo Minising Manitoulin Island Their first new political center was referred to as their fifth stopping place in their present country at Baawiting Sault Ste Marie Continuing their westward expansion the Ojibwe divided into the northern branch following the north shore of Lake Superior and the southern branch along its south shore As the people continued to migrate westward the northern branch divided into a westerly group and a southerly group The southern branch and the southerly group of the northern branch came together at their sixth stopping place on Spirit Island 46 41 15 N 092 11 21 W 46 68750 N 92 18917 W 46 68750 92 18917 located in the Saint Louis River estuary at the western end of Lake Superior This has since been developed as the present day Duluth Superior cities The people were directed in a vision by the miigis being to go to the place where there is food i e wild rice upon the waters Their second major settlement referred to as their seventh stopping place was at Shaugawaumikong or Zhaagawaamikong French Chequamegon on the southern shore of Lake Superior near the present La Pointe Wisconsin The westerly group of the northern branch migrated along the Rainy River Red River of the North and across the northern Great Plains until reaching the Pacific Northwest Along their migration to the west they came across many miigis or cowry shells as told in the prophecy Contact with Europeans Edit Five Ojibwe chiefs in the 19th century The first historical mention of the Ojibwe occurs in the French Jesuit Relation of 1640 a report by the missionary priests to their superiors in France Through their friendship with the French traders coureurs des bois and voyageurs the Ojibwe gained guns began to use European goods and began to dominate their traditional enemies the Lakota and Fox to their west and south They drove the Sioux from the Upper Mississippi region to the area of the present day Dakotas and forced the Fox down from northern Wisconsin The latter allied with the Sauk for protection By the end of the 18th century the Ojibwe controlled nearly all of present day Michigan northern Wisconsin and Minnesota including most of the Red River area They also controlled the entire northern shores of lakes Huron and Superior on the Canadian side and extending westward to the Turtle Mountains of North Dakota In the latter area the French Canadians called them Ojibwe or Saulteaux An Ojibwe named Boy Chief by the noted American painter George Catlin who made portraits at Fort Snelling in 1835 In 1845 he traveled to Paris with eleven Ojibwe who had their portraits painted and danced for King Louis Philippe The Ojibwe were part of a long term alliance with the Anishinaabe Odawa and Potawatomi peoples called the Council of Three Fires They fought against the Iroquois Confederacy based mainly to the southeast of the Great Lakes in present day New York and the Sioux to the west The Ojibwa stopped the Iroquois advance into their territory near Lake Superior in 1662 Then they formed an alliance with other tribes such as the Huron and the Odawa who had been displaced by the Iroquois invasion Together they launched a massive counterattack against the Iroquois and drove them out of Michigan and southern Ontario until they were forced to flee back to their original homeland in upstate New York At the same time the Iroquois were subjected to attacks by the French This was the beginning of the end of the Iroquois Confederacy as they were put on the defensive The Ojibwe expanded eastward taking over the lands along the eastern shores of Lake Huron and Georgian Bay In 1745 they adopted guns from the British in order to repel the Dakota people in the Lake Superior area pushing them to the south and west In the 1680s the Ojibwa defeated the Iroquois who dispersed their Huron allies and trading partners This victory allowed them a golden age in which they ruled uncontested in southern Ontario 19 Often treaties known as peace and friendship treaties were made to establish community bonds between the Ojibwe and the European settlers These established the groundwork for cooperative resource sharing between the Ojibwe and the settlers The United States and Canada viewed later treaties offering land cessions as offering territorial advantages The Ojibwe did not understand the land cession terms in the same way because of the cultural differences in understanding the uses of land The governments of the U S and Canada considered land a commodity of value that could be freely bought owned and sold The Ojibwe believed it was a fully shared resource along with air water and sunlight despite having an understanding of territory At the time of the treaty councils they could not conceive of separate land sales or exclusive ownership of land Consequently today in both Canada and the U S legal arguments in treaty rights and treaty interpretations often bring to light the differences in cultural understanding of treaty terms to come to legal understanding of the treaty obligations 20 A Chippeway Widow 1838 In part because of its long trading alliance the Ojibwe allied with the French against Great Britain and its colonists in the Seven Years War also called the French and Indian War 21 After losing the war in 1763 France was forced to cede its colonial claims to lands in Canada and east of the Mississippi River to Britain After Pontiac s War and adjusting to British colonial rule the Ojibwe allied with British forces and against the United States in the War of 1812 They had hoped that a British victory could protect them against United States settlers encroachment on their territory Following the war the United States government tried to forcibly remove all the Ojibwe to Minnesota west of the Mississippi River The Ojibwe resisted and there were violent confrontations In the Sandy Lake Tragedy several hundred Ojibwe died because of the federal government s failure to deliver fall annuity payments 22 The government attempted to do this in the Keweenaw Peninsula in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan Through the efforts of Chief Buffalo and the rise of popular opinion in the U S against Ojibwe removal the bands east of the Mississippi were allowed to return to reservations on ceded territory A few families were removed to Kansas as part of the Potawatomi removal Plains Ojibwe Chief Sha co pay The Six In addition to the northern and eastern woodlands Ojibwe people also lived on the prairies of Manitoba Saskatchewan Alberta North Dakota western Minnesota and Montana In British North America the Royal Proclamation of 1763 following the Seven Years War governed the cession of land by treaty or purchase Subsequently France ceded most of the land in Upper Canada to Great Britain Even with the Jay Treaty signed between Great Britain and the United States following the American Revolutionary War the newly formed United States did not fully uphold the treaty As it was still preoccupied by war with France Great Britain ceded to the United States much of the lands in Ohio Indiana Michigan parts of Illinois and Wisconsin and northern Minnesota and North Dakota to settle the boundary of their holdings in Canada In 1807 the Ojibwe joined three other tribes the Odawa Potawatomi and Wyandot people in signing the Treaty of Detroit The agreement between the tribes and William Hull representing the Michigan Territory gave the United States a portion of today s Southeastern Michigan and a section of Ohio near the Maumee River The tribes were able to retain small pockets of land in the territory 23 The Battle of the Brule was an October 1842 battle between the La Pointe Band of Ojibwe Indians and a war party of Dakota Indians The battle took place along the Brule River Bois Brule in what is today northern Wisconsin and resulted in a decisive victory for the Ojibwe In Canada many of the land cession treaties the British made with the Ojibwe provided for their rights for continued hunting fishing and gathering of natural resources after land sales The government signed numbered treaties in northwestern Ontario Manitoba Saskatchewan and Alberta British Columbia had not signed treaties until the late 20th century and most areas have no treaties yet The government and First Nations are continuing to negotiate treaty land entitlements and settlements The treaties are constantly being reinterpreted by the courts because many of them are vague and difficult to apply in modern times The numbered treaties were some of the most detailed treaties signed for their time The Ojibwe Nation set the agenda and negotiated the first numbered treaties before they would allow safe passage of many more British settlers to the prairies Ojibwe communities have a strong history of political and social activism Long before contact they were closely aligned with Odawa and Potawatomi people in the Council of the Three Fires From the 1870s to 1938 the Grand General Indian Council of Ontario attempted to reconcile multiple traditional models into one cohesive voice to exercise political influence over colonial legislation In the West 16 Plains Cree and Ojibwe bands formed the Allied Bands of Qu Appelle in 1910 in order to redress concerns about the failure of the government to uphold Treaty 4 s promises Culture Edit Plains Ojibwe performing a snowshoe dance By George Catlin The Ojibwe have traditionally organized themselves into groups known as bands Most Ojibwe except for the Great Plains bands have historically lived a settled as opposed to nomadic lifestyle relying on fishing and hunting to supplement the cultivation of numerous varieties of maize and squash and the harvesting of manoomin wild rice for food Historically their typical dwelling has been the wiigiwaam wigwam built either as a waginogaan domed lodge or as a nasawa ogaan pointed lodge made of birch bark juniper bark and willow saplings In the contemporary era most of the people live in modern housing but traditional structures are still used for special sites and events They have a culturally specific form of pictorial writing used in the religious rites of the Midewiwin and recorded on birch bark scrolls and possibly on rock The many complex pictures on the sacred scrolls communicate much historical geometrical and mathematical knowledge The use of petroforms petroglyphs and pictographs has been common throughout the Ojibwe traditional territories Petroforms and medicine wheels have been used to teach important spiritual concepts record astronomical events and to use as a mnemonic device for certain stories and beliefs The script is still in use among traditional people as well as among youth on social media Some ceremonies use the miigis shell cowry shell which is found naturally in distant coastal areas Their use of such shells demonstrates there is a vast longstanding trade network across the continent The use and trade of copper across the continent has also been proof of a large trading network that took place for thousands of years as far back as the Hopewell tradition Certain types of rock used for spear and arrow heads have also been traded over large distances precontact During the summer months the people attend jiingotamog for the spiritual and niimi idimaa for a social gathering powwows at various reservations in the Anishinaabe Aki Anishinaabe Country Many people still follow the traditional ways of harvesting wild rice picking berries hunting making medicines and making maple sugar The Ojibwe bury their dead in burial mounds Many erect a jiibegamig or a spirit house over each mound An historical burial mound would typically have a wooden marker inscribed with the deceased s doodem clan sign Because of the distinct features of these burials Ojibwe graves have been often looted by grave robbers In the United States many Ojibwe communities safe guard their burial mounds through the enforcement of the 1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act Several Ojibwe bands in the United States cooperate in the Great Lakes Indian Fish amp Wildlife Commission which manages the treaty hunting and fishing rights in the Lake Superior Lake Michigan areas The commission follows the directives of U S agencies to run several wilderness areas Some Minnesota Ojibwe tribal councils cooperate in the 1854 Treaty Authority which manages their treaty hunting and fishing rights in the Arrowhead Region In Michigan the Chippewa Ottawa Resource Authority manages the hunting fishing and gathering rights about Sault Ste Marie and the resources of the waters of lakes Michigan and Huron In Canada the Grand Council of Treaty No 3 manages the Treaty 3 hunting and fishing rights related to the area around Lake of the Woods Cuisine Edit Wild rice harvesting 1934 Vintage photo entitled Paul Buffalo and wife parching wild rice at their camp 1934 There is renewed interest in nutritious eating among the Ojibwe who have been expanding community gardens in food deserts and have started a mobile kitchen to teach their communities about nutritious food preparation 24 The traditional Native American diet was seasonally dependent on hunting fishing and the foraging and farming of produce and grains The modern diet has substituted some other types of food like frybread and Indian tacos in place of these traditionally prepared meals The Native Americans loss of connection to their culture is part of the quest to reconnect to their food traditions sparking an interest in traditional ingredients like wild rice that is the official state grain of Minnesota and was part of the pre colonial diet of the Ojibwe Other staple foods of the Ojibwe were fish maple sugar venison and corn They grew beans squash corn and potatoes and foraged for blueberries blackberries choke cherries raspberries gooseberries and huckleberries During the summer game animals like deer beaver moose goose duck rabbits and bear were hunted 25 26 One traditional method of making granulated sugar known among the Anishinabe was to boil maple syrup until reduced and pour into a trough where the rapidly cooling syrup was quickly processed into maple sugar using wooden paddles 27 Kinship and clan system Edit Main article Anishinaabe clan system Traditionally the Ojibwe had a patrilineal system in which children were considered born to the father s clan 28 For this reason children with French or English fathers were considered outside the clan and Ojibwe society unless adopted by an Ojibwe male They were sometimes referred to as white because of their fathers regardless if their mothers were Ojibwe as they had no official place in the Ojibwe society The people would shelter the woman and her children but they did not have the same place in the culture as children born to Ojibwe fathers Ojibwe understanding of kinship is complex and includes the immediate family as well as extended family It is considered a modified bifurcate merging kinship system As with any bifurcate merging kinship system siblings generally share the same kinship term with parallel cousins because they are all part of the same clan The modified system allows for younger siblings to share the same kinship term with younger cross cousins Complexity wanes further from the person s immediate generation but some complexity is retained with female relatives For example ninooshenh is my mother s sister or my father s sister in law i e my parallel aunt but also my parent s female cross cousin Great grandparents and older generations as well as great grandchildren and younger generations are collectively called aanikoobijigan This system of kinship reflects the Anishinaabe philosophy of interconnectedness and balance among all living generations as well as of all generations of the past and of the future The Ojibwe people were divided into a number of doodemag clans singular doodem named primarily for animals and birds totems pronounced doodem The word in the Ojibwe language means my fellow clansman 29 The five original totems were Wawaazisii Bullhead Baswenaazhi Ajiijaak Echo maker i e Crane Aan aawenh Pintail Duck Nooke Tender i e Bear and Moozwaanowe Little Moose tail The Crane totem was the most vocal among the Ojibwe and the Bear was the largest so large that it was sub divided into body parts such as the head the ribs and the feet Each clan had certain responsibilities among the people People had to marry a spouse from a different clan Traditionally each band had a self regulating council consisting of leaders of the communities clans or odoodemaan The band was often identified by the principal doodem In meeting others the traditional greeting among the Ojibwe people is What is your doodem Aaniin gidoodem or Awanen gidoodem The response allows the parties to establish social conduct by identifying as family friends or enemies Today the greeting has been shortened to Aanii pronounced Ah nee 30 Spiritual beliefs Edit Main article Anishinaabe traditional beliefs Pictorial notation of an Ojibwe music board Frame of Ojibwe sweatlodge The Ojibwe have spiritual beliefs that have been passed down by oral tradition under the Midewiwin teachings These include a creation story and a recounting of the origins of ceremonies and rituals Spiritual beliefs and rituals were very important to the Ojibwe because spirits guided them through life Birch bark scrolls and petroforms were used to pass along knowledge and information as well as for ceremonies Pictographs were also used for ceremonies The sweatlodge is still used during important ceremonies about the four directions when oral history is recounted Teaching lodges are common today to teach the next generations about the language and ancient ways of the past The traditional ways ideas and teachings are preserved and practiced in such living ceremonies Spider web charm hung on infant s cradle shown alongside a Mask used in game and Ghost leg to frighten children Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 1929 The modern dreamcatcher adopted by the Pan Indian Movement and New Age groups originated in the Ojibwe spider web charm 31 a hoop with woven string or sinew meant to replicate a spider s web used as a protective charm for infants 32 According to Ojibwe legend the protective charms originate with the Spider Woman known as Asibikaashi who takes care of the children and the people on the land and as the Ojibwe Nation spread to the corners of North America it became difficult for Asibikaashi to reach all the children so the mothers and grandmothers wove webs for the children which had an apotropaic purpose and were not explicitly connected with dreams 32 Funeral practices Edit Traditional Edit In Ojibwe tradition the main task after a death is to bury the body as soon as possible the very next day or even on the day of death This was important because it allowed the spirit of the dead to journey to its place of joy and happiness The land of happiness where the dead reside is called Gaagige Minawaanigozigiwining 33 This was a journey that took four days If burial preparations could not be completed the day of the death guests and medicine men were required to stay with the deceased and the family in order to help mourn while also singing songs and dancing throughout the night Once preparations were complete the body would be placed in an inflexed position with their knees towards their chest 34 Over the course of the four days it takes the spirit to journey to its place of joy it is customary to have food kept alongside the grave at all times A fire is set when the sun sets and is kept going throughout the night The food is to help feed the spirit over the course of the journey while the smoke from the fire is a directional guide Once the four day journey is over a feast is held which is led by the chief medicine man At the feast it is the chief medicine man s duty to give away certain belongings of the deceased Those who were chosen to receive items from the deceased are required to trade in a new piece of clothing all of which would be turned into a bundle The bundle of new cloths and a dish is then given to the closest relative The recipient of the bundle must then find individuals that he or she believes to be worthy and pass on one of the new pieces of clothing 35 Contemporary Edit According to Lee Staples an Ojibwe spiritual leader from the Mille Lacs Indian Reservation present day practices follow the same spiritual beliefs and remain fairly similar When an individual dies a fire is lit in the home of the family who are also expected to continuously maintain the fire for four days Over the four days food is also offered to the spirit Added to food offerings tobacco is also offered as it is considered one of four sacred medicines traditionally used by Ojibwe communities On the last night of food offerings a feast is also held by the relatives which ends with a final smoke of the offering tobacco or the tobacco being thrown in the fire Although conventional caskets are mainly used in today s communities birch bark fire matches are buried along with the body as a tool to help light fires to guide their journey to Gaagige Minawaanigozigiwining 33 Ethnobotany Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2013 Plants used by the Ojibwe include Agrimonia gryposepala used for urinary problems 36 and Pinus strobus the resin of which was used to treat infections and gangrene The roots of Symphyotrichum novae angliae are smoked in pipes to attract game 37 Allium tricoccum is eaten as part of Ojibwe cuisine 38 They also use a decoction as a quick acting emetic 39 An infusion of the alba subspecies of Silene latifolia is used as physic 40 The South Ojibwa use a decoction of the root Viola canadensis for pains near the bladder 41 The Ojibwa are documented to use the root of Uvularia grandiflora for pain in the solar plexus which may refer to pleurisy 42 They take a compound decoction of the root of Ribes glandulosum for back pain and for female weakness 43 The Ojibwe eat the corms of Sagittaria cuneata for indigestion and also as a food eaten boiled fresh dried or candied with maple sugar Muskrat and beavers store them in large caches which they have learned to recognize and appropriate 44 They take an infusion of the Antennaria howellii ssp neodioica after childbirth to purge afterbirth and to heal 45 They use the roots of Solidago rigida using a decoction of root as an enema 46 and take an infusion of the root for stoppage of urine 47 They use Abies balsamea melting the gum on warm stones and inhaling the fumes for headache 48 They also use a decoction of the root as an herbal steam for rheumatic joints 48 They also combine the gum with bear grease and use it as an ointment for hair 49 They use the needle like leaves in as part of ceremony involving the sweatbath and use the gum for colds and inhale the leaf smoke for colds 50 They use the plant as a cough medicine 51 The gum is used for sores and a compound containing leaves is used as wash The liquid balsam from bark blisters is used for sore eyes 50 They boil the resin twice and add it to suet or fat to make a canoe pitch 52 The bark gum is taken for chest soreness from colds applied to cuts and sores and decoction of the bark is used to induce sweating The bark gum is also taken for gonorrhea 53 A decoction tea of powdered dried Onoclea sensibilis root is used to stimulate milk flow in female patients 54 Bands EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message In his History of the Ojibway People 1855 William W Warren recorded 10 major divisions of the Ojibwe in the United States He mistakenly omitted the Ojibwe located in Michigan western Minnesota and westward and all of Canada When identified major historical bands located in Michigan and Ontario are added the count becomes 15 citation needed English Name Ojibwe Name in double vowel spelling LocationSaulteaux Baawitigowininiwag Sault Ste Marie area of Ontario and MichiganBorder Sitters Biitan akiing enabijig St Croix Namekagon River valleys in eastern Minnesota and northern WisconsinLake Superior Band Gichi gamiwininiwag south shore of Lake SuperiorMississippi River Band Gichi ziibiwininiwag upper Mississippi River in MinnesotaRainy Lake Band Goojijiwininiwag Rainy Lake and River about the northern boundary of MinnesotaRicing Rails Manoominikeshiinyag along headwaters of St Croix River in Wisconsin and MinnesotaPillagers Makandwewininiwag North central Minnesota and Mississippi River headwatersMississaugas Misi zaagiwininiwag north of Lake Erie extending north of Lake Huron about the Mississaugi RiverDokis Band Dokis s and Restoule s bands N A Along French River Wemitigoj Sibi region including Little French River Ziibiins and Restoule River in Ontario near Lake NipissingOttawa Lake Lac Courte Oreilles Band Odaawaa zaaga iganiwininiwag Lac Courte Oreilles WisconsinBois Forte Band Zagaakwaandagowininiwag north of Lake SuperiorLac du Flambeau Band Waaswaaganiwininiwag head of Wisconsin RiverMuskrat Portage Band Wazhashk Onigamininiwag northwest side of Lake Superior at the Canada US borderNopeming Band Noopiming Azhe ininiwag northeast of Lake Superior and west of Lake NipissingThese 15 major divisions developed into the following Ojibwe Bands and First Nations of today Bands are listed under their respective tribes where possible citation needed See also the listing of Saulteaux communities Aamjiwnaang First Nation Aroland First Nation Batchewana First Nation of Ojibways Bay Mills Indian Community Biinjitiwabik Zaaging Anishnabek First Nation Burt Lake Band of Chippewa and Ottawa Indians Caldwell First Nation Chapleau Ojibway First Nation Chippewas of Kettle and Stony Point Chippewas of Lake Simcoe and Huron Historical Beausoleil First Nation Chippewas of Georgina Island First Nation Chippewas of Rama First Nation formerly known as Chippewas of Mnjikaning First Nation Chippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation Chippewa of the Thames First Nation Chippewas of Saugeen Ojibway Territory Historical Chippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation Saugeen First Nation Chippewa Cree Tribe of Rocky Boys Indian Reservation Curve Lake First Nation Cutler First Nation Dokis First Nation Eabametoong First Nation First Nation of Ojibwe California Fort William First Nation Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians Garden River First Nation Henvey Inlet First Nation Grassy Narrows First Nation Asabiinyashkosiwagong Nitam Anishinaabeg Islands in the Trent Waters Keeseekoowenin Ojibway First Nation also known as Riding Mountain Band Koocheching First Nation Lac des Mille Lacs First Nation Lac La Croix First Nation Lac Seul First Nation Lake Nipigon Ojibway First Nation Lake Superior Chippewa Tribe Bad River Chippewa Band Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Keweenaw Bay Indian Community L Anse Band of Chippewa Indians Ontonagon Band of Chippewa Indians Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians Bois Brule River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Chippewa River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians Removable St Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Sokaogon Chippewa Community St Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin Little Shell Tribe of Chippewa Indians of Montana Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Mackinac Bands of Chippewa and Ottawa Indians Magnetawan First Nation Minnesota Chippewa Tribe Bois Forte Band of Chippewa Bois Forte Band of Chippewa Lake Vermilion Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Little Forks Band of Rainy River Saulteaux Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Grand Portage Band of Chippewa Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe Cass Lake Band of Chippewa Lake Winnibigoshish Band of Chippewa Leech Lake Band of Pillagers Removable Lake Superior Bands of Chippewa of the Chippewa Reservation White Oak Point Band of Mississippi Chippewa Pokegama Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa Removable Sandy Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe Mille Lacs Indians Sandy Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa Rice Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa St Croix Band of Chippewa Indians of Minnesota Kettle River Band of Chippewa Indians Snake and Knife Rivers Band of Chippewa Indians White Earth Band of Chippewa Gull Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa Otter Tail Band of Pillagers Rabbit Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa Removable Mille Lacs Indians Rice Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa Mississaugi First Nation North Caribou Lake First Nation Ojibway Nation of Saugeen First Nation Ojibways of the Pic River First Nation Osnaburg House Band of Ojibway and Cree Historical Cat Lake First Nation Mishkeegogamang First Nation formerly known as New Osnaburgh First Nation Slate Falls First Nation Pembina Band of Chippewa Indians Historical Pikangikum First Nation Poplar Hill First Nation Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians Lac des Bois Band of Chippewa Indians Rolling River First Nation Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation Saginaw Chippewa Tribal Council Sault Tribe of Chippewa Indians Saulteaux First Nation Shawanaga First Nation Southeast Tribal Council Berens River First Nation Bloodvein First Nation Brokenhead First Nation Buffalo Point First Nation Saulteaux Hollow Water First Nation Black River First Nation Little Grand Rapids First Nation Pauingassi First Nation Saulteaux Poplar River First Nation Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians Wabaseemoong Independent Nation Wabauskang First Nation Wabun Tribal Council Beaverhouse First Nation Brunswick House First Nation Chapleau Ojibwe First Nation Matachewan First Nation Mattagami First Nation Wahgoshig First Nation Wabigoon Lake Ojibway Nation Wahnapitae First Nation Walpole Island First Nation Washagamis Bay First Nation Whitefish Bay First Nation Whitefish Lake First Nation Whitefish River First Nation Whitesand First Nation Whitewater Lake First Nation Wikwemikong Unceded First NationNotable Ojibwe people EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ojibwe people from the 20th and 21st centuries should be listed under their specific tribes Francis Assikinack 1824 1863 historian from Manitoulin Island Stephen Bonga Ojibwe African American fur trader and interpreter 55 George Bonga 1802 1880 Ojibwe African American fur trader and interpreter Jeanne L Strange Cappel 1873 1949 writer teacher and clubwoman Hanging Cloud 19th c Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe woman warrior George Copway 1818 1869 missionary and writer Margaret Bonga Fahlstrom c 1797 1880 Ojibwe African American woman in the early Methodist Episcopal Church in Minnesota Cara Gee 1983 Canadian actress Fr Philip B Gordon 1885 1948 Roman Catholic priest and activist from Gordon Wisconsin Hole in the Day 1825 1868 Chief of the Mississippi Band of the Minnesota Ojibwe Michael Hudson born 1939 economics professor Peter Jones 1802 1856 Mississauga missionary and writer Kechewaishke Gichi Weshkiinh Buffalo ca 1759 1855 chief Edmonia Lewis ca 1844 1907 Mississauga Ojibwe African American sculptor Trixie Mattel 1989 American drag queen 56 Maungwudaus 1811 1888 performer interpreter mission worker and herbalist Medweganoonind 19th century Red Lake Ojibwe chief T J Oshie 1986 American professional ice hockey player and Stanley Cup champion Ozaawindib Yellow Head early 19th c nonbinary warrior guide Keewaydinoquay Peschel 1919 1999 teacher ethnobotanist Chief Rocky Boy fl late 19th c chief Jane Johnston Schoolcraft 1800 1842 author wife of Henry Rowe Schoolcraft born in Sault Ste Marie John Smith ca 1824 1922 chief from Cass Lake Minnesota Alfred Michael Chief Venne 1879 1971 athletic manager and coach from Leroy North Dakota Waabaanakwad White Cloud ca 1830 1898 Gull Lake chief William Whipple Warren 1825 1853 first historical writer of the Ojibwe people territorial legislator Zheewegonab fl 1780 1805 band leader among the northern OjibweOjibwe treaties EditChippewa Ottawa Resource Authority 1836CT fisheries Grand Council of Treaty 3 Treaty 3 Grand Council of Treaty 8 Treaty 8 Great Lakes Indian Fish amp Wildlife Commission 1837CT 1836CT 1842CT and 1854CT Nishnawbe Aski Nation Treaty 5 and Treaty 9 Red Lake Band of Chippewa 1886CT and 1889CT Union of Ontario Indians RS RH1 RH2 misc pre confederation treatiesTreaties with FranceLa Grande Paix de Montreal 1701 Treaties with Great Britain and the United KingdomTreaty of Fort Niagara 1764 Treaty of Fort Niagara 1781 Indian Officers Land Treaty 1783 The Crawford Purchases 1783 Between the Lakes Purchase 1784 Treaty of Peace with Sioux Chippewa and Winnebago 1787 Toronto Purchase 1787 Indenture to the Toronto Purchase 1805 The McKee Purchase 1790 Between the Lakes Purchase 1792 Chenail Ecarte Sombra Township Purchase 1796 London Township Purchase 1796 Land for Joseph Brant 1797 Penetanguishene Bay Purchase 1798 St Joseph Island 1798 Head of the Lake Purchase 1806 Lake Simcoe Lake Huron Purchase 1815 Lake Simcoe Nottawasaga Purchase 1818 Ajetance Purchase 1818 Rice Lake Purchase 1818 The Rideau Purchase 1819 Long Woods Purchase 1822 Huron Tract Purchase 1827 Saugeen Tract Agreement 1836 Manitoulin Agreement 1836 The Robinson Treaties Ojibewa Indians of Lake Superior 1850 Ojibewa Indians of Lake Huron 1850 Manitoulin Island Treaty 1862 Treaties with CanadaTreaty No 1 1871 Stone Fort Treaty Treaty No 2 1871 Treaty No 3 1873 Northwest Angle Treaty Treaty No 4 1874 Qu Appelle Treaty Treaty No 5 1875 Treaty No 6 1876 Treaty No 8 1899 Treaty No 9 1905 1906 James Bay Treaty Treaty No 5 Adhesions 1908 1910 The Williams Treaties 1923 The Chippewa Indians The Mississauga Indians Treaty No 9 Adhesions 1929 1930 Treaties with the United StatesTreaty of Fort McIntosh 1785 Treaty of Fort Harmar 1789 Treaty of Greenville 1795 Fort Industry 1805 Treaty of Detroit 1807 Treaty of Brownstown 1808 Treaty of Springwells 1815 Treaty of St Louis 1816 Ottawa Ojibwe and Potawatomi Treaty of Miami Rapids 1817 Treaty of St Mary s 1818 Treaty of Saginaw 1819 Treaty of Sault Ste Marie 1820 Treaty of L Arbre Croche and Michilimackinac 1820 Treaty of Chicago 1821 First Treaty of Prairie du Chien 1825 Treaty of Fond du Lac 1826 Treaty of Butte des Morts 1827 Treaty of Green Bay 1828 Second Treaty of Prairie du Chien 1829 Treaty of Chicago 1833 Treaty of Washington 1836 Ottawa amp Chippewa Treaty of Washington 1836 Swan Creek amp Black River Bands Treaty of Detroit 1837 Treaty of St Peters 1837 White Pine Treaty Treaty of Flint River 1837 Saganaw Treaties Treaty of Saganaw 1838 Supplemental Treaty 1839 Treaty of La Pointe 1842 Copper Treaty Isle Royale Agreement 1844 Treaty of Potawatomi Creek 1846 Treaty of Fond du Lac 1847 Treaty of Leech Lake 1847 Treaty of La Pointe 1854 Treaty of Washington 1855 Treaty of Detroit 1855 Ottawa amp Chippewa Treaty of Detroit 1855 Sault Ste Marie Band Treaty of Detroit 1855 Swan Creek amp Black River Bands Treaty of Sac and Fox Agency 1859 Treaty of Washington 1863 Treaty of Old Crossing 1863 Treaty of Old Crossing 1864 Treaty of Washington 1864 Treaty of Isabella Reservation 1864 Treaty of Washington 1866 Treaty of Washington 1867 Gallery Edit A na cam e gish ca Aanakamigishkaang Traces of Foot Prints upon the Ground Ojibwe chief from History of the Indian Tribes of North America Bust of Aysh ke bah ke ko zhay Eshkibagikoonzhe or Flat Mouth a Leech Lake Ojibwe chief Chief Beautifying Bird Nenaa angebi by Benjamin Armstrong 1891 Bust of Beshekee war chief modeled 1855 carved 1856 Caa tou see an Ojibwe from History of the Indian Tribes of North America Hanging Cloud a female Ojibwe warrior Jack O Pa Zhaagobe Six a St Croix Ojibwe chief from History of the Indian Tribes of North America Kay be sen day way We Win by Eastman Johnson 1857 Kei a gis gis a Plains Ojibwe woman painted by George Catlin Leech Lake Ojibwe delegation to Washington 1899 Chippewa baby teething on Indians at Work magazine while strapped to a cradleboard at a rice lake in 1940 Ne bah quah om Ojibwe chief One Called From A Distance Midwewinind of the White Earth Band 1894 Pee Che Kir Ojibwe chief painted by Thomas Loraine McKenney 1843 Ojibwe chief Rocky Boy Ojibwe woman and child from History of the Indian Tribes of North America Tshusick an Ojibwe woman from History of the Indian Tribes of North America Chief medicine man Axel Pasey and family at Grand Portage Minnesota Historic 1849 petition of Ojibwe chiefs Wells American Indian picture writing Wildfire English name Edmonia Lewis Details of Ojibwe Wigwam at Grand Portage by Eastman Johnson c 1906 Vintage stereoscopic photo entitled Chippewa lodges Beaver Bay by Childs B F Pictographs on Mazinaw Rock Bon Echo Provincial Park OntarioSee also EditAmikwa people First Nations Timeline of First Nations history History of Native Americans in the United States Native Americans in the United StatesReferences EditNotes Edit a b CDC American Indian Alaska Native Populations Racial Ethnic Minorities Minority Health 2 December 2012 Archived from the original on 2 December 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Ojibwe The Canadian Encyclopedia Spencer Kelly August 31 2020 The rock carvings of Kinoomaagewaabkong Norfolk amp Tillsonburg News Retrieved January 31 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link BEACH HOUSE MYTH YouTube Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Science Buzz Anishinabe eMuseum Minnesota State University Minnesota State University Mankato Archived from the original on 2010 04 09 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Ojibwe The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved 2021 01 31 Batchewana History batchewana ca Retrieved 2021 01 31 Microsoft Word dictionary best for printing 2004 ever finalpdf doc PDF Retrieved 2011 01 02 Warren William W 1984 1885 History of the Ojibway People p 36 ISBN 0 87351 162 X Louise Erdrich Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country 2003 Archived September 26 2007 at the Wayback Machine Johnston Basil 2007 Anishinaubae Thesaurus ISBN 0 87013 753 0 Three Fires Unity The Anishnaabeg of the Lake Huron Borderlands Phil Bellfy 2011 University of Nebraska First Nations Culture Areas Index the Canadian Museum of Civilization Anishinaabemowin Ojibwe Language The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved 2021 01 31 Roy Loriene Ojibwa Countries and Their Cultures Retrieved 9 August 2016 Anthony David The Horse the Wheel and Language Princeton University Press 2007 p 102 Conversations on Reconciliation Tiotia ke and Mooniyaang Land Acknowledgement Onishka Montreal 6 June 2017 via Indigenous Contemporary Scene Schmalz Peter May 1992 The Ojibwa of southern Ontario Histoire Sociale Social History Retrieved 1 September 2018 The Atlas of Canada Historical Indian Treaties Retrieved March 1 2018 Gevinson Alan Which Native American Tribes Allied Themselves with the French www teachinghistory org Retrieved 23 September 2011 James A Clifton Wisconsin Death March Explaining the Extremes in Old Northwest Indian Removal in Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences Arts and Letters 1987 5 1 40 accessed 2 March 2010 Treaty Between the Ottawa Chippewa Wyandot and Potawatomi Indians World Digital Library 1807 11 17 Retrieved 2013 08 03 In tribes across Minnesota indigenous food movement takes root Star Tribune Eating indigenously changes diets and lives of Native Americans Anishinabe Child Brenda J 16 February 2012 Holding Our World Together Ojibwe Women and the Survival of Community ISBN 9781101560259 Ojibwe Culture Archived 2015 06 23 at the Wayback Machine Milwaukee Public Museum accessed 10 December 2011 Billard Jules B 1989 N Scott Momaday I am Alive The World of the American Indian A volume in the Story of Man Library Washington D C p 13 ISBN 0 87044 799 8 Team Forvo Aanii pronunciation How to pronounce Aanii in Ojibwa Forvo com Retrieved 2021 03 07 Jim Great Elk Waters 2002 View from the Medicine Lodge Seven Locks Press p 111 a b Densmore 1970 p 113 a b Allis Ellary The Spirit of The Dead According To Ojibwe Beliefs SevenPonds Seven Ponds 8 Dec 2016 blog sevenponds com cultural perspectives the spirit of the dead according to ojibwe beliefs Hilger M Inez 1944 Chippewa Burial and Mourning Customs American Anthropologist 46 564 568 doi 10 1525 aa 1944 46 4 02a00240 James A Clifton Wisconsin Death March Explaining the Extremes in Old Northwest Indian Removal in Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences Arts and Letters 1987 5 1 40 Daniel E Moerman 2009 Native American Medicinal Plants An Ethnobotanical Dictionary Timber Press pp 52 53 ISBN 978 0 88192 987 4 Densmore Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians SI BAE Annual Report 44 273 379 p 376 Smith 1932 p 104 Densmore Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians SI BAE Annual Report 44 273 379 p 346 Smith 1932 p 361 Hoffman W J 1891 The Midewiwin or Grand Medicine Society of the Ojibwa SI BAE Annual Report 7 page 201 Smith Huron H 1932 Ethnobotany of the Ojibwe Indians Bulletin of the Public Museum of Milwaukee 4 327 525 page 374 Densmore Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians SI BAE Annual Report 44 273 379 p 356 Smith 1932 p 396 Smith 1932 p 363 Densmore Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians SI BAE Annual Report 44 273 379 page 364 Note This source comes from the Native American ethnobotany database lt http naeb brit org gt which lists the plant as Oligoneuron rigidum var rigidum Accessed 19 January 2018 Densmore Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians SI BAE Annual Report 44 273 379 page 348 Note This source comes from the Native American ethnobotany database lt http naeb brit org gt which lists the plant as Oligoneuron rigidum var rigidum Accessed 19 January 2018 a b Densmore Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians SI BAE Annual Report 44 273 379 page 338 Densmore Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians SI BAE Annual Report 44 273 379 page 350 a b Smith Huron H 1932 Ethnobotany of the Ojibwe Indians Bulletin of the Public Museum of Milwaukee 4 327 525 page 378 Reagan Albert B 1928 Plants Used by the Bois Fort Chippewa Ojibwa Indians of Minnesota Wisconsin Archeologist 7 4 230 248 page 244 Smith 1932 p 420 Hoffman W J 1891 The Midewiwin or Grand Medicine Society of the Ojibwa SI BAE Annual Report 7 page 198 Smith 1932 p 382 Portrait of Stephen Bonga Wisconsin Historical Images accessed 23 January 2014 Q amp A Trixie Mattel 8 September 2015 Bibliography Edit Densmore Frances 1970 1929 Chippewa Customs Minnesota Historical Society Press H Hickerson The Chippewa and Their Neighbors 1970 R Landes Ojibwa Sociology 1937 repr 1969 R Landes Ojibwa Woman 1938 repr 1971 Smith Huron H 1932 Ethnobotany of the Ojibwe Indians Bulletin of the Public Museum of Milwaukee 4 327 525 F Symington The Canadian Indian 1969 Further reading EditAaniin Ekidong Ojibwe Vocabulary Project St Paul Minnesota Humanities Center 2009 Baker Jocelyn 1936 Ojibwa of the Lake of the Woods Canadian Geographic Journal 12 1 47 54 Bento Banai Edward 2004 Creation From the Ojibwa The Mishomis Book Child Brenda J 2014 My Grandfather s Knocking Sticks Ojibwe Family Life and Labor on the Reservation St Paul MN Minnesota Historical Society Press Danziger E J Jr 1978 The Chippewa of Lake Superior Norman University of Oklahoma Press Denial Catherine J 2013 Making Marriage Husbands Wives and the American State in Dakota and Ojibwe Country St Paul MN Minnesota Historical Society Press Densmore F 1979 Chippewa customs St Paul Minnesota Historical Society Press Published originally 1929 Grim J A 1983 The shaman Patterns of religious healing among the Ojibway Indians Norman University of Oklahoma Press Gross L W 2002 The comic vision of Anishinaabe culture and religion American Indian Quarterly 26 436 459 Howse Joseph A Grammar of the Cree Language With which is combined an analysis of the Chippeway dialect London J G F amp J Rivington 1844 Johnston B 1976 Ojibway heritage Toronto McClelland and Stewart Long J Voyages and Travels of an Indian Interpreter and Trader Describing the Manners and Customs of the North American Indians with an Account of the Posts Situated on the River Saint Laurence Lake Ontario amp C to Which Is Added a Vocabulary of the Chippeway Language a List of Words in the Iroquois Mehegan Shawanee and Esquimeaux Tongues and a Table Shewing the Analogy between the Algonkin and the Chippeway Languages London Robson 1791 Nichols J D amp Nyholm E 1995 A concise dictionary of Minnesota Ojibwe Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press Treuer Anton Everything You Wanted to Know About Indians But Were Afraid to Ask St Paul Minnesota Historical Society Press 2012 Treuer Anton The Assassination of Hole in the Day St Paul Minnesota Historical Society Press 2011 Treuer Anton Ojibwe in Minnesota St Paul Minnesota Historical Society 2010 Ojibwe in Minnesota St Paul Minnesota Historical Society Press 2010 Treuer Anton Living Our Language Ojibwe Tales amp Oral Histories St Paul Minnesota Historical Society Press 2001 Vizenor G 1972 The everlasting sky New voices from the people named the Chippewa New York Crowell Collier Press Vizenor G 1981 Summer in the spring Ojibwe lyric poems and tribal stories Minneapolis The Nodin Press Vizenor G 1984 The people named the Chippewa Narrative histories Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press Warren William W 1851 History of the Ojibway People White Richard 1991 The Middle Ground Indians Empires and Republics in the Great Lakes Region 1650 1815 Studies in North American Indian History Cambridge University Press Cambridge England White Richard July 31 2000 Chippewas of the Sault The Sault Tribe News Wub e ke niew 1995 We have the right to exist A translation of aboriginal indigenous thought New York Black Thistle Press External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ojibwe Wikiquote has quotations related to Ojibwe Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Ojibway Ojibwe Song Pictures recorded by Frances Desmore Ojibwe People s Dictionary Ojibwe Waasa Inaabidaa PBS documentary featuring the history and culture of the Anishinaabe Ojibwe people of the Great Lakes United States focused Ojibwe migratory map from Ojibwe Waasa Inaabidaa Batchewana First Nation of Ojibways Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Mississaugi First Nation Southeast Tribal Council Wabun Tribal Council Ojibwe Stories Gaganoonididaa from the Public Radio Exchange 1 Ojibwe Astronomy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ojibwe amp oldid 1147270328, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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