does native America indian culture is still preserve do a good number of natives are there for future to remember you and why you where not able to dominant your motherland you are in very less no
HI Lakota person here. A better term for Sioux is actually Ocheti Sakowin which means 7 council fires to denote the 7 tribes that united in an alliance. There were 4 Dakota tribes (Mdewankton, Sisseton, Wahpekute, Wahpeton), 2 Nakota tribes (Yankton and Yanktonai), and 1 Lakota tribe (Teton). I don't know about the groupings below tribes of Dakota and Nakota tribes but yes below the Lakota tribe we had band like Oglala and then smaller sub-bands below that.
Yes, there was no pre-Columbian universal terminology for groupings of Indigenous Americans. There were however common historical examples of different groups. These levels were usually (from largest to smallest) Confederation ie: The Iroquois Confederation Nation ie: The Cherokee Nation Tribe: The Lenape Band: The Mississippi Choctaw Also these groups weren’t static. People groups could divide or grow at any time based on several factors like; a common enemy, a regional pandemic, a famine, or a surge in natural resources (like Great Plains Bison).
@@nathanbeard3561 Yeah like one thing he didn't mention was that the Cheyenne were originally 2 separate tribes who joined together to become the Cheyenne and then split into the Northern and Southern Cheyenne
I am friends with a guy I was in the Marines with. He is a proud tribal member of the Two Kettles/Oohenunpa. He would tell me stories about his 5th Great grandfather Joesph Four Bears who was part of a group known as the fool soldiers. The story is amazing and I remember him telling me so clearly. I owe that man alot he was a real mentor to me. After the Marines he moved back to the Res and became a fireman because "he could help..". He immensely proud of his family, Tribe, country and Corps. Unfortunately he's developed health issues but he is still positive and he is always quick with a joke.He taught me about things I never knew about "Lokata", the 7 tribes, how involved in US politics, how importance of eagle feathers and gave me my first guitar.
My people call themselves Tsm'syn, but through English transliteration we're commonly known as Tsimshian. It means "the people inside the Skeena River", the Skeena River being a part of our traditional territories.
Just want to say, working in a store in downtown Seattle I've met and chatted with several Tsimshian people-mostly fishing boat workers. Those I've met have been very friendly, outgoing, and a real pleasure to talk with.
The names of tribes being derived from a term for "the people" is by no means unique to indigenous Americans, btw. For example, the endonym of German people, Deutsch, is descended from the Old High German term diutisc meaning "of the people"
@@КастетГлебов Actually we have the English to thank for the term "Dutch". The English people revered to the people of nowadays Germany and the Netherlands both as Dutch, it was only later on when Germany and the Netherlands became seperate countries that "Dutch" was exclusively used for the people of the Netherlands and the term "German" became mandatory for Germany.
When discussing "red talkers" and "white talkers" you should check the medicine wheel. Every color has a meaning beyond just aesthetics. The medicine wheel has 4 colors, white, red, black and yellow, and also denotes wind, air, fire and earth at the same time labeling directions.
interesting. traditional Chinese Cardinal directional association would be. Black for North, Blue for East, Red for South, White for West, and Yellow for Center. That's why Chinese Emperor is Yellow Dragon. actually, that's little odd. East is Dragon, West is Tiger, South is some mythical bird, North is turtle and snake thing.
@sciphynuts what? It's very similar to the western humours, which only went out of medical fashion in the late 1700s, in some places not until the 1800s and went all the way back to at least the first millenium bc in Greece, if it isn't Infact older. Each humour had a colour and element associated, which is about as common as astrology across the entire planet for most of history. But sure, mention lies and totally real giants and other 'hidden' *cough fake cough* things
The Welsh word for Wales is Cymru, which literally means 'region of our forefathers' and now technically means 'Us' or something similar along those lines.
Hilbert, I have only recently started watching your videos and have found find them interesting. I am a retired medical secretary and definitely neither an academic nor a linguist, but I have been interested in languages since I was a teenager. I am an American but not a Native American. Thank you for making this informative video. I have never before seen a video on the subject of names of tribes of the indigenous peoples here in the U.S. The video does focus on some tribes and some geographical areas of the lower 48 states. Besides your planned video about the Blackfoot name, I wish that you will continue this series to include the names of other indigenous people of Alaska and Canada because there are other language groups and tribes that are and have been on both sides of the U.S./Canadian border for centuries.
As fellow geordie, hilbert please do more of these like this lady has put so politely. Thank you and appreciate all your hard work you put in to these videos there brilliant mate .
The “red talkers” and “white talkers” use the color to designation based on the color associated with the direction. The color red is associated with the east, which as your map shows is where most Algonquin language speakers were from when looking at where the Sioux/Lakota people live. The color white is associated with north, yellow with the south, and black to the west. Blackfoot, of which my great grandmother was fully, are so called because they lived west of the Sioux/Lakota (black = west). The colors have other meanings, but that was the explanation given to me by my paternal great grandmother and grandmother (both could speak Blackfoot, Lakota, Kiowa, Cheyenne, and even Choctaw as my great grandmother had moved to Oklahoma with my great grandfather prior to the land runs and lived in different areas; interestingly my maternal great grandfather would make the land run of 1893 so I have a family that experienced Oklahoma’s territorial history very differently depending).
interesting. traditional Chinese association would be. Black for North, Blue for East, Red for South, White for West, and Yellow for Center. That's why Chinese Emperor is Yellow Dragon. actually, that's little odd. East is Dragon, West is Tiger, South is some mythical bird, North is turtle and snake thing.
Native Americans have standing in many ex-european families. I appreciate your work, because of a native American woman, Grandma Lone Bear, who nursed my sick pioneer Great Grandmother back to health. Her good works earned her a life time of tribute from my family.
I never thought of them like that. I know several of different tribes but mostly Navajo. Yes, their stories are something to listen to but in reality they are sadly jealous and suspicious..... Of mostly each other. In their very own families.. 😢
One possible reason why the Sioux called Algonquian speakers "red" is that many Native American Tribes have associated colours with the cardinal directions. From what I can gather the Sioux associated the colour red with north, and white with south (east and west were yellow and black, respectively). Calling Algonquian speakers "red" meaning northerners would make sense as the tribes north of the Siouan peoples were mostly Algonquian speakers (ie. the Cree and Ojibwe). No idea if this is actually the reason, but it makes sense.
That's interesting. There was a similar system in Irish at one point, and I think in various slavic languages, which gives us things like "black sea" and "white russia."
@@peterhoulihan9766 It's quite common across northern Eurasia, the Mongols, Turks, Chinese, Slavs etc. all had variations, often with a different colour for the centre.
Welsh had a similar system where glas now generally translated as blue. Was originally anything from shades of blue green and grey. But modern Welsh has gwyrdd(green) borrowed from Latin vertus and llwyd grey.
@@singharpan9859 They didn't change their names to a European name. They're still who they are. But since the overwhelming majority of people in North America are "European"; that's what you'll hear tribes called. I'm sure if you spoke to a native American, he would tell you his tribe's name in their own language. In fact, there are several doing just that in the comments.
I found your sponsor message very interesting because I know I need to increase my productivity but spend all my time procrastinating and researching productivity tips 😆
Yeah, French spelling forms difficult vowel chains sometimes. Based on the sounds and words from many other native nations, Irokwa or Irokwe would be closer. But I don't remember what they use themselves. Many nations of that language group end their names in -onk, think the Hurons' own name was like that too, but there were some smaller nations westwards of the Iroquois whose names ended in that -onk. It stuck to my eye, because no other language group around them did the same. This was in some map of the native nations of North America.
You're so lucky to be able to meet some of them, how much time did you spend with them , and which tribes ? You should do a video about that . Keep it up pal : )
This is very interesting considering that my grandmother was born in 1889 in Sioux City, Iowa. She passed on the stories that she heard as a child about the Sioux in the area. Along with that, I came across all these names during my time with the Boy Scouts. The American west during the expansion period is my favorite historical period.
Thank you so much for putting this together. Notwithstanding the Western movies I grew up with in the 60's and 70's, I have grown to deeply respect the Native North American Indians, particularly in the way they worked with and respect nature and also how they have managed to survive the white onslaught.
The muskugee tribe that originally loved in the southeast United States are say known as the Creeks. Creek nation specifically refers to the muscogee people.
Am very happy that you’re giving the First Nations of the States a spotlight on this channel along with so much history of Europe! And am happy you mentioned my state first New Mexico, the Comanches were a very big tribe here.
Jesse Caldwell Oh yeah thanks for reminding of that actually. Yeah the Comanche were in like the far Eastern parts of my state Donny think they had much interaction with the Pueblo and Navajo people but I’d imagine it’s not impossible. Today they’re descendants do at least.
Enjoyed this one. Any chance of looking at Australian Aboriginals? No shortage of language groups & origin stories. We didn't get taught anything in school so I'd be interested in learning a bit more
@@jlopez2482 That's exactly why we need to learn as much as possible now. Without concerted effort, the languages & cultures of Aboriginal Australians will be lost. The govt has spent 200 yrs trying to wipe out Indigenous people & their history, culture & languages. Luckily they failed. Elders have held the knowledge safe in many area's. They share it now with Libraries & Universities who work with them to document it as well as passing their oral history, culture & languages down to the next generation. The effects of the Stolen Generation has been profound so the work needs to be facilitated as much as possible, as soon as possible
Good video, I work for an Indian organization in the US predominantly for California tribes - Pomo, Paiute and many others, as explained to me by an elder - all Indians usually were named or called by where they lived geographically speaking and or what they what their primary sources of food eaten... the language group "Paiute" was the name applied to the Indians that Europeans heard when they first encountered these tribes in the desert areas - it's their word for water - as in directing the new arrivals to where they could find a water source.This elder explained to me that her local tribe, who call themselves "Yerrington Paiute" (Nevada) were known as "the fish eaters by the river" in their native language. Most people are unaware that the greatest populations and number of tribes exist in California and the West coast of the United States. More tribes, more languages exist in this state then the rest of the country combined. Different language groups were named after their location. Stockton Pomo, some of my family are members of, are a different tribe from the Manchester Point Area Pomo - even though they are recognized by their language group of Pomo, same with Paiute, Miwok, Kiwok, Cohilla, Maidu, Pomo, Pauite, - these are just a few listed. All have incredible cultures and fascinating histories. Thanks for sharing this.
People never think that the state with the most natives peoples is California. It also tends to have the largest group of other nationals outside of their respective nations, Chinese, Koreans, Armenians, Salvadorans to name but a few.
Very good! However, I believe you skipped right over the Shoshone and the Crow on your way west to the Nez Perce. My first woman role model (other than relatives) was Sacagawea who was Shoshone. Chief Washakie was a great Shoshone leader. There is a wonderful statue of him at the University of Wyoming in my hometown of Laramie. If you every get back to the US, check out the Buffalo Bill Cody Center of the West in Cody, Wyoming. It is 5 museums, one of which is a wonderful Plains Indians museum. BTW, I currently live in Arapahoe County Colorado and the town of Kiowa Colorado is about 40 miles away. There are Native American names everywhere. The Denver area has a good sized mixed tribal community. One of my good friends is part Comanche and her brother conducts sweat lodges. I interviewed him for my Native American Religions class when I went back to college at age 43 (20 years ago).
I really liked this video! Going on with the history of the Native Americans, could you do a video on the Algonquian Indians or the different Native Americans of Mexico?
Thank you for this video Hilbert! I love Native American History, and I don't know very much about the North American tribes and cultures, but thank you to clarify it! As always great and very interesting video! :)
That was fun. A minor quibble, French soldiers on the plains wore white coats, not blue and would not have had beards. Also they would have shaved because they had both razors and sergeants.
@@douglasphillips5870 It was a Roman Latin pejorative used for the indigenous Gaels of Northern Ireland, the Scoti, the future settlers of Dal Riata, hence the original "Scots" came from Ireland over 1500 years ago.
I think the Ute word tika means 'eater', or maybe it's just 'people; folk; nation'. They named many of their neighbours with that ending - tika. Some related Uto-Aztecan nations have it in the form tiga or tega. Even the word form Texas, could come from such a word: the Spanish name is Teja(s) - Texas was the older Spanish spelling with X for that kh sound now with J - like there name Javier can also be spelled Xavier. So teja aka tekha can easily come from teca, tika. Mexico has Uto-Aztecan nations like Zapotec(a). Even the Aztec could come from the same root: tec-teca-tica-tika-tega.
When I lived in New Mexico I learned that the Navajo tribe got their name from the Pueblo word meaning "head basher." The Navajo called themselves Dene. The Pueblo's ancestor people called the Anasazi were named by the Navajo as "ancient enemy."
@@jacobscrackers98 - Don't know much about eskimos and/or Inuit, but if you go far enough north, there's nothing much to burn - no trees or shrubbery. I suppose whale and seal fat burns, but I don't know how you'd get it alight without a starter flame.
The Navaho People travelled from the near Arctic of eastern Alaska/Yukon about 1200 AD when a volcano erupted. They apparently travelled down the east of the Canadian Rockies on their way to the southern desert. Dene
I have been learning my native language. úcwalmicw is our word for human being. From what i can guess, the direct translation would be along the lines of “other being that is smart enough to interact with.” Showing the difference between us and animals. I am from the St̓át̓imc territory. (Sƛ̓áƛ̓imc if you want the fancy letters.) and the nearest translation i can guess is along the lines of “the place that is being used.” The Salish language family is certainly interesting. Each individual letter sound has an english word definition. t̓éna7-ear skwt̓us-face nkwt̓ústen-eyes ít̓em- to sing t̓ has to do with sensations. So we described our territory as such.
It's so great that you're learning your identity language. Do you know if Salish is talked natively by your tribe ? If not is there at least some form of introduction of the language in schools?
I took a very interesting class in college called Native American Perspectives, taught by a Lakota man. It was really eye opening. A lot of the names the European Americans call the tribes are the names given by their enemies. We learned about nedeouasioux (sp, sorry). He said it meant dirty little snakes. He also talked about the Eskimo [e-ski’-mo], who call themselves the Inuit. He said Eskimo meant “those who eat raw fish”, which was an insult. One book we were required o read was “I Heard the Owl Call My Name” by Margaret Craven. Another was “The Education of Little Tree” by Asa Earl Carter. They were both pretty good reads and an interesting glimpse into another culture.
It would be very interesting to learn about the different languages and how they are related. The natives of the west coast from Washington, British Columbia and Alaska.
the Native Americans indigenous to my hometown are the Nipmuc, and have a small reservation (not federally recognized though) less than a mile from my house
Dhruva Narayan to much interaction, they really don’t live there, they just own the land. All of them are intermarried with non Native Americans, and are all assimilated into mainstream culture, there are occasional events there
Nipmuc's nearly wiped out New England in the King Phillip War. (MY Ancestors were there) Hollywood makes a big deal out of Western tribes Indian Wars being dangerous and deadly but that war was by percentage the deadliest war fought in America. No one knows the Nipmuc were right up there with Apache for gorilla attacks on troops. Starvation and disease is what really defeated them.
@Klaidi Rubiku I think all the sub-Saharan people are getting all the attention on the news right now that they deserve. Give some to the indigenous Native Americans they always get the shaft Oh butz iz fergetz ,dey uz tu be KAINGS N SHEEIT.
I've said for a LONG time, that when the Spanish brought the horse back to North America, it was like giving gang-bangers cars. So that they could more effeciently and effectively express their power on others. One example, the Blackfeet, terrorized other tribes unfortunate to come across their path.
the Comanche were not much different. They started as part of the Shoshone around Wyoming, when they got horses the Comanche split off, and moved southward into Colorado and were allies with their cousins the Ute. But they had a falling out before the Europeans came and then the Comanche moves more south and became allies with the Kiowa and the Kiowa Apache. These later Comanche are the ones Hilbert writes of.
Funny how there doesn't seem to be any indigenous people at all north of the 49th parallel. I live in Edmonton, and there are Sioux, or Nakoda, communities all around Alberta and Saskatchewan. Also Blackfoot or Siksika, Kainai and Piikani. We can learn to call people by their correct names if we make the effort.
I have been told that my Great-Great grandmother used to be Buffalo Bill Cody's 16 year old house maid and traveling caretaker. She was both French and Commanche. She had the jet black hair to prove it, too. I am told that we are distant cousins to Napolean Bonaparte. This little community called Tekamah, Nebraska. Has some very interesting connections to the old Wild West. I even went to school with a distant relative to Doc Holiday. We even had an 11 year old that ran away and joined the traveling circus. Only to become a silent movie celebrity. His name was "Hoot Gibson". There's a rodeo in town named after him.
I lived in Northern Minnesota as a child. The Native Americans around were Chippewa, although we knew they were also called Ojibwe. We had heard that the local Ojibwe called the Lakota people to the west by the term Sioux which was not a nice name in their minds. There had been fights between the two groups. Chippewa was, I think, a mispronounced Ojibwe. Some had said that the Lakota people saw the term Chippewa as a derogatory reference to the Ojibwe.
I believe red talker / white talker refers to the cardinal directions. I can’t remember which is which, but I know red, yellow, black, and white were associated with north, east, west, south.
The Blackfoot in Montana would be Ahmskapii Pikuni or in Southern or Far Off Spotted Robes. Thank you for deciding to a separate video on us. I'd hate to have been lumped in with all these dog-eaters.
ua-cam.com/video/S4gU2Tsv6hY/v-deo.html and ua-cam.com/video/P7u-0Dmpi4M/v-deo.html and www.sutori.com/item/this-map-shows-the-placement-of-the-iroquois-confederacy-in-red-during-the-17t
Strange as it may seem, the Names Mohawk and Seneca were given to them by Mohegan Guides bringing the English into their area. Magua (Bears) is the name of the Mohawks as MO-Hawks means Maneater (Cannibal) and you may recognize the word in Tommohawk as man-killer. It was not meant to be flattering. The Word Seneca meant roughly SNAKE HEADS another word for crazy in Mohegan. Of course James Fenimore Cooper mixed up the tribes (Mohican is not Mohegan) and made Uncas a Mohican with a Delaware Father Chingachgook (Big snake) and the Delawares call themselves Lene-Lenape meaning roughly Regular Joes (People) All Algonquin speakers along the Atlantic coast. The Mohawks (Magua) called them Mingo's which roughly means Stray Dogs.
Ka'igwu, is very much where Ki(-)owa would come. Such gw can be said so that the g is barely audible, for example in Spanish, or Guillaume in French - William in English. It's also possible that gw can alternate with simple w in different word forms, like in Welsh. Spanish has put gw to many native American names, where they would use w based on English. So Ka'i(g)wu is almost the same already as Kiowa (Ka'i- as Ki in English) - closer anyway than the Arapahoe name. Koh'owu' would likely produce more like 'Cowa'. Besides, those names can be even linked: the Arapahoe nation may easily haven given a name for the Kiowas that in their language means something, and sounds closest to the word Kiowas use for themselves. Nations have been known to do that too.
Algonquian (Alg.) languages might look like sprinkled around the USA, - if we just look at it from the current US perspective. But if you take Canada along, the language area is a pretty united area (thinking before the arrival of Europeans), bar a few language drifting a bit off the main groups. In Canada the Cree groups and some other Alg. talkers have spread to cover the whole area between the Great Lakes and the Rocky Mountains, and also the Eastern USA is linked to the Alg. nations in Canada, with no real pre-European gaps towards the lakes. So from this area some Alg. nations likely spread southwards to the Plains along the Rockies. In USA there are/were the strong Iroquois and Lakota (Sioux) nations stopping the Alg:s from covering the whole northern US.
Just a tip on pronunciation, try not to trill your "r"s. The most common "r" sound in native american consonant inventories is an alveolar approximate, so use the back of your throat like you might in German (using a familiar example)
Hello Hilbert, some of the information presented is off, although I do appreciate your effort. Please check out my Tribal maps at www.tribalnationsmaps.com, and feel free to reach out!
I found out my great grandmother on my father's side was a full blooded Cherokee And I've always been fascinated and curious about my ancestry I don't have much contact with my father or father's side of the family I wish there was a way that I could try to learn more about it
Very interesting....I would like to see more on both the tribes that had straight up European names gives (Blackfoot , Warm Springs both spring to mind) as well as more using names they either called themselves or have names originating from other tries. Some out where I live on the west coast might include the Lummi, Klamath, Modoc , Yakima tribes. In the south west you might cover Navajo and Apache.
When thinking about the Algonquin migration, we have to look at Canada too: there the Algonquin nations are an unbroken chain (if we don't think of the European effects), just look at how far west the Crees reach from the Great Lakes area. I can prove it, but for me it seems the Alginquin moved along the Canadian plains, by and north of the Great Lakes, and some of them moved southwards. We would have to watch the population densities, and linguists should check the sound change patterns in the Algonquin languages, to estimate where was the original birth place of the language group. For me it looks like there's more of those nations in the east, many small and some large groups. So it would seem they started from somewhere in the Eastern North America, and some of them moved west on the Canadian prairie. It seems it happened relatively recently, later than 1000 years ago, because the Crees occupy a vast area, not many splits in the group. Then the Cheynne, and was it Arapaho (or Shoshoni), who are closely related to them, would have migrated south along the plains. In grasslands people can move quite far in one generation, even without horses. Or can the linguists show some other linguistic relations - are the Cheyenne closer related to some other Algonquian nation in the north, or east, than to the Crees or some other Algonquian nation on the Canadian side, or along the border area?
When Spain ruled the Netherlands, they forced people to take last names. To express Dutch displeasure, persons made up names of great humor, such as Bornaked. 😁
I don't how much leverage you have on that but the sponsors' announcement/ad would be better if placed at the beginning. It's really annoying when it's right in the middle.
Hello. I’m a plains American Indian and I very much appreciate this new series about native history🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽
My family come from the cherokee- Choctaw. Tribe's and the Irish.
Thanks for your support man! Might I ask from which tribe? I'll have to see if I can give a special mention and looking into their history 🔥
does native America indian culture is still preserve do a good number of natives are there for future to remember you
and why you where not able to dominant your motherland you are in very less no
@@samyoung8470 what
@@cyberpanda3 means on their on mother land they are like a museums piece they need preservation
HI Lakota person here. A better term for Sioux is actually Ocheti Sakowin which means 7 council fires to denote the 7 tribes that united in an alliance. There were 4 Dakota tribes (Mdewankton, Sisseton, Wahpekute, Wahpeton), 2 Nakota tribes (Yankton and Yanktonai), and 1 Lakota tribe (Teton). I don't know about the groupings below tribes of Dakota and Nakota tribes but yes below the Lakota tribe we had band like Oglala and then smaller sub-bands below that.
Yes, there was no pre-Columbian universal terminology for groupings of Indigenous Americans. There were however common historical examples of different groups. These levels were usually (from largest to smallest)
Confederation ie: The Iroquois Confederation
Nation ie: The Cherokee Nation
Tribe: The Lenape
Band: The Mississippi Choctaw
Also these groups weren’t static. People groups could divide or grow at any time based on several factors like; a common enemy, a regional pandemic, a famine, or a surge in natural resources (like Great Plains Bison).
@@nathanbeard3561 Yeah like one thing he didn't mention was that the Cheyenne were originally 2 separate tribes who joined together to become the Cheyenne and then split into the Northern and Southern Cheyenne
I am friends with a guy I was in the Marines with. He is a proud tribal member of the Two Kettles/Oohenunpa. He would tell me stories about his 5th Great grandfather Joesph Four Bears who was part of a group known as the fool soldiers. The story is amazing and I remember him telling me so clearly. I owe that man alot he was a real mentor to me. After the Marines he moved back to the Res and became a fireman because "he could help..".
He immensely proud of his family, Tribe, country and Corps. Unfortunately he's developed health issues but he is still positive and he is always quick with a joke.He taught me about things I never knew about "Lokata", the 7 tribes, how involved in US politics, how importance of eagle feathers and gave me my first guitar.
Thanks Jacob Rousseau
@@densealloy Very Interesting
My people call themselves Tsm'syn, but through English transliteration we're commonly known as Tsimshian.
It means "the people inside the Skeena River", the Skeena River being a part of our traditional territories.
Just want to say, working in a store in downtown Seattle I've met and chatted with several Tsimshian people-mostly fishing boat workers. Those I've met have been very friendly, outgoing, and a real pleasure to talk with.
@@lallyoisin
Forgot Theod....Old English, as in Theoden.
Ok Tshitposter
@@CeaddaOfMercia 👌
Dude it's awesome to see a Tsimshian person in the comments. I'm part Lingit or also "Tlingit". Also I love your formline design pfp
The names of tribes being derived from a term for "the people" is by no means unique to indigenous Americans, btw. For example, the endonym of German people, Deutsch, is descended from the Old High German term diutisc meaning "of the people"
Is there any correlation between the words "Dutch" and "Deutsch"?
@@КастетГлебов Absolutely
@@КастетГлебов I think both descend from the same Old High German term, but I'm not sure
@@КастетГлебов Actually we have the English to thank for the term "Dutch". The English people revered to the people of nowadays Germany and the Netherlands both as Dutch, it was only later on when Germany and the Netherlands became seperate countries that "Dutch" was exclusively used for the people of the Netherlands and the term "German" became mandatory for Germany.
nl.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diets
When discussing "red talkers" and "white talkers" you should check the medicine wheel. Every color has a meaning beyond just aesthetics. The medicine wheel has 4 colors, white, red, black and yellow, and also denotes wind, air, fire and earth at the same time labeling directions.
That's really interesting. Any context is great. Thanks.
interesting. traditional Chinese Cardinal directional association would be.
Black for North, Blue for East, Red for South, White for West, and Yellow for Center.
That's why Chinese Emperor is Yellow Dragon. actually, that's little odd.
East is Dragon, West is Tiger, South is some mythical bird, North is turtle and snake thing.
@sciphynuts what? It's very similar to the western humours, which only went out of medical fashion in the late 1700s, in some places not until the 1800s and went all the way back to at least the first millenium bc in Greece, if it isn't Infact older. Each humour had a colour and element associated, which is about as common as astrology across the entire planet for most of history. But sure, mention lies and totally real giants and other 'hidden' *cough fake cough* things
Everyone is “the people” and everyone else “enemy.”
Or trader or dog eater
The Welsh word for Wales is Cymru, which literally means 'region of our forefathers' and now technically means 'Us' or something similar along those lines.
Or if they like you, "the river people"
Like "oh yeah those are thr dudes that live down at thr river a bit down, yeah we traded some squash with them last week"
Thanks a lot for your video.I hope you will do one soon on the very interesting west coast peoples.
Hilbert, I have only recently started watching your videos and have found find them interesting. I am a retired medical secretary and definitely neither an academic nor a linguist, but I have been interested in languages since I was a teenager. I am an American but not a Native American.
Thank you for making this informative video. I have never before seen a video on the subject of names of tribes of the indigenous peoples here in the U.S. The video does focus on some tribes and some geographical areas of the lower 48 states. Besides your planned video about the Blackfoot name, I wish that you will continue this series to include the names of other indigenous people of Alaska and Canada because there are other language groups and tribes that are and have been on both sides of the U.S./Canadian border for centuries.
As fellow geordie, hilbert please do more of these like this lady has put so politely. Thank you and appreciate all your hard work you put in to these videos there brilliant mate .
Your voice is so calm and clear.
The “red talkers” and “white talkers” use the color to designation based on the color associated with the direction. The color red is associated with the east, which as your map shows is where most Algonquin language speakers were from when looking at where the Sioux/Lakota people live. The color white is associated with north, yellow with the south, and black to the west. Blackfoot, of which my great grandmother was fully, are so called because they lived west of the Sioux/Lakota (black = west). The colors have other meanings, but that was the explanation given to me by my paternal great grandmother and grandmother (both could speak Blackfoot, Lakota, Kiowa, Cheyenne, and even Choctaw as my great grandmother had moved to Oklahoma with my great grandfather prior to the land runs and lived in different areas; interestingly my maternal great grandfather would make the land run of 1893 so I have a family that experienced Oklahoma’s territorial history very differently depending).
Fascinating how many civilisations around the world used colors for cardinal directions.
interesting. traditional Chinese association would be.
Black for North, Blue for East, Red for South, White for West, and Yellow for Center.
That's why Chinese Emperor is Yellow Dragon. actually, that's little odd.
East is Dragon, West is Tiger, South is some mythical bird, North is turtle and snake thing.
Dude, I've recently discovered this channel. Thanks for making such entertaining and informative videos!
Native Americans have standing in many ex-european families.
I appreciate your work, because of a native American woman, Grandma Lone Bear, who nursed my sick pioneer Great Grandmother back to health. Her good works earned her a life time of tribute from my family.
Thank you, I love learning about Native Americans :-)
Love this series of native Americans a think the fascinating people
Are you don't the English?
@@slappy8941 z
Slappy wow that’s some small D energy right there 😂
Totally agree Liam it’s fascinating isn’t it ✌️
I never thought of them like that. I know several of different tribes but mostly Navajo. Yes, their stories are something to listen to but in reality they are sadly jealous and suspicious.....
Of mostly each other. In their very own families.. 😢
I like the fact that 5 of the 7 letters in Arapaho consists of sounds that don’t exist in the Arapaho language
There are really only five letters in Arapaho, since "a" appears three times.
Slappy
There are only 5 distinct letters. There are 7 letters in the word.
Well, if you get rid of those letters you get Ho, so I'm guessing that's not the solution, lol.
One possible reason why the Sioux called Algonquian speakers "red" is that many Native American Tribes have associated colours with the cardinal directions. From what I can gather the Sioux associated the colour red with north, and white with south (east and west were yellow and black, respectively). Calling Algonquian speakers "red" meaning northerners would make sense as the tribes north of the Siouan peoples were mostly Algonquian speakers (ie. the Cree and Ojibwe). No idea if this is actually the reason, but it makes sense.
That's interesting. There was a similar system in Irish at one point, and I think in various slavic languages, which gives us things like "black sea" and "white russia."
@@peterhoulihan9766 It's quite common across northern Eurasia, the Mongols, Turks, Chinese, Slavs etc. all had variations, often with a different colour for the centre.
Welsh had a similar system where glas now generally translated as blue. Was originally anything from shades of blue green and grey. But modern Welsh has gwyrdd(green) borrowed from Latin vertus and llwyd grey.
@@geoffreyvincent3290 Interesting, thanks.
What most of the world calls my tribe Pawnee which is the Cheyenne word for wolf, but we call ourselves chadis si chadis or man among men.
Genuine question:- have all Native Americans changed their names to European names or there still people who have authentic native name?
@@singharpan9859 They didn't change their names to a European name. They're still who they are. But since the overwhelming majority of people in North America are "European"; that's what you'll hear tribes called. I'm sure if you spoke to a native American, he would tell you his tribe's name in their own language. In fact, there are several doing just that in the comments.
Us Cheyenne did call Pawnee wolf people, Ho'néhetaneo'o, the word Pawnee didn’t come from the Cheyenne.
@Jesse Caldwell it is a band of Pawnee, and I am from that band.
I found your sponsor message very interesting because I know I need to increase my productivity but spend all my time procrastinating and researching productivity tips 😆
I’m sure it was just a typo, but this is the proper spelling for “Iroquois”
Yeah, French spelling forms difficult vowel chains sometimes. Based on the sounds and words from many other native nations, Irokwa or Irokwe would be closer. But I don't remember what they use themselves. Many nations of that language group end their names in -onk, think the Hurons' own name was like that too, but there were some smaller nations westwards of the Iroquois whose names ended in that -onk. It stuck to my eye, because no other language group around them did the same. This was in some map of the native nations of North America.
You're so lucky to be able to meet some of them, how much time did you spend with them , and which tribes ?
You should do a video about that . Keep it up pal : )
I've always wondered this and glad I found your vid!
So fascinating and remarkable!
This is very interesting considering that my grandmother was born in 1889 in Sioux City, Iowa. She passed on the stories that she heard as a child about the Sioux in the area. Along with that, I came across all these names during my time with the Boy Scouts. The American west during the expansion period is my favorite historical period.
The Comanche name for themselves is spelled Nʉmʉnʉʉ and is pronounced "Nuh-muh-nuhh".
Thank you so much for putting this together. Notwithstanding the Western movies I grew up with in the 60's and 70's, I have grown to deeply respect the Native North American Indians, particularly in the way they worked with and respect nature and also how they have managed to survive the white onslaught.
You slaughtered the pronunciation tho😝 And yes the Nez Perce bred the Appaloosa horse...
I haven't started watching this yet, but my guess would be that what a tribe calls itself translates into "the people" in their language.
The muskugee tribe that originally loved in the southeast United States are say known as the Creeks. Creek nation specifically refers to the muscogee people.
Am very happy that you’re giving the First Nations of the States a spotlight on this channel along with so much history of Europe! And am happy you mentioned my state first New Mexico, the Comanches were a very big tribe here.
@ Jesse Caldwell They we’re also in New Mexico and parts of Colorado not just restricted to Texas.
Jesse Caldwell Oh yeah thanks for reminding of that actually. Yeah the Comanche were in like the far Eastern parts of my state Donny think they had much interaction with the Pueblo and Navajo people but I’d imagine it’s not impossible. Today they’re descendants do at least.
Enjoyed this one.
Any chance of looking at Australian Aboriginals?
No shortage of language groups & origin stories. We didn't get taught anything in school so I'd be interested in learning a bit more
A highly colonized people
@@jlopez2482 That's exactly why we need to learn as much as possible now. Without concerted effort, the languages & cultures of Aboriginal Australians will be lost. The govt has spent 200 yrs trying to wipe out Indigenous people & their history, culture & languages. Luckily they failed. Elders have held the knowledge safe in many area's. They share it now with Libraries & Universities who work with them to document it as well as passing their oral history, culture & languages down to the next generation.
The effects of the Stolen Generation has been profound so the work needs to be facilitated as much as possible, as soon as possible
12:18 "Je sais comment on va les appeler". your french pronunciation is spot-on, though
Lakota, Dakota and Nakota are all Sioux tribes.
Good video, I work for an Indian organization in the US predominantly for California tribes - Pomo, Paiute and many others, as explained to me by an elder - all Indians usually were named or called by where they lived geographically speaking and or what they what their primary sources of food eaten... the language group "Paiute" was the name applied to the Indians that Europeans heard when they first encountered these tribes in the desert areas - it's their word for water - as in directing the new arrivals to where they could find a water source.This elder explained to me that her local tribe, who call themselves "Yerrington Paiute" (Nevada) were known as "the fish eaters by the river" in their native language. Most people are unaware that the greatest populations and number of tribes exist in California and the West coast of the United States. More tribes, more languages exist in this state then the rest of the country combined. Different language groups were named after their location. Stockton Pomo, some of my family are members of, are a different tribe from the Manchester Point Area Pomo - even though they are recognized by their language group of Pomo, same with Paiute, Miwok, Kiwok, Cohilla, Maidu, Pomo, Pauite, - these are just a few listed. All have incredible cultures and fascinating histories. Thanks for sharing this.
People never think that the state with the most natives peoples is California. It also tends to have the largest group of other nationals outside of their respective nations, Chinese, Koreans, Armenians, Salvadorans to name but a few.
Very good! However, I believe you skipped right over the Shoshone and the Crow on your way west to the Nez Perce. My first woman role model (other than relatives) was Sacagawea who was Shoshone. Chief Washakie was a great Shoshone leader. There is a wonderful statue of him at the University of Wyoming in my hometown of Laramie. If you every get back to the US, check out the Buffalo Bill Cody Center of the West in Cody, Wyoming. It is 5 museums, one of which is a wonderful Plains Indians museum. BTW, I currently live in Arapahoe County Colorado and the town of Kiowa Colorado is about 40 miles away. There are Native American names everywhere. The Denver area has a good sized mixed tribal community. One of my good friends is part Comanche and her brother conducts sweat lodges. I interviewed him for my Native American Religions class when I went back to college at age 43 (20 years ago).
Awesome video Hilbert good work
I really liked this video! Going on with the history of the Native Americans, could you do a video on the Algonquian Indians or the different Native Americans of Mexico?
Thank you for this video Hilbert! I love Native American History, and I don't know very much about the North American tribes and cultures, but thank you to clarify it! As always great and very interesting video! :)
Could you do a video about the Norse contact with the Indians in New Foundland?
Vinland saga!
Is there a lot of information on that?
I read a fair bit about the Norse in America, super interesting definitely worth checking out .
That was fun. A minor quibble, French soldiers on the plains wore white coats, not blue and would not have had beards. Also they would have shaved because they had both razors and sergeants.
I read the etymology of Comanche was from the Ute “Komantika” or “always want to fight”. Obviously very similar to your etymology
I read that Scott as in the Scottish came from a word meaning "always wants to fight"
@@douglasphillips5870 It was a Roman Latin pejorative used for the indigenous Gaels of Northern Ireland, the Scoti, the future settlers of Dal Riata, hence the original "Scots" came from Ireland over 1500 years ago.
I think the Ute word tika means 'eater', or maybe it's just 'people; folk; nation'. They named many of their neighbours with that ending - tika. Some related Uto-Aztecan nations have it in the form tiga or tega. Even the word form Texas, could come from such a word: the Spanish name is Teja(s) - Texas was the older Spanish spelling with X for that kh sound now with J - like there name Javier can also be spelled Xavier. So teja aka tekha can easily come from teca, tika. Mexico has Uto-Aztecan nations like Zapotec(a). Even the Aztec could come from the same root: tec-teca-tica-tika-tega.
The Arapaho are known as Sahdee Dekka or SariTika depending on tribe. It means Dog Eater, they are Dogs as much as they are other meats.
When I lived in New Mexico I learned that the Navajo tribe got their name from the Pueblo word meaning "head basher." The Navajo called themselves Dene. The Pueblo's ancestor people called the Anasazi were named by the Navajo as "ancient enemy."
My favorite insult is eskimo which translates to "eater of raw flesh" which means the people were to stupid to figure out fire and cooking.
@@orlock20 Or maybe it was just too cold for that. I don't really know, I'm just guessing.
@@jacobscrackers98 - Don't know much about eskimos and/or Inuit, but if you go far enough north, there's nothing much to burn - no trees or shrubbery. I suppose whale and seal fat burns, but I don't know how you'd get it alight without a starter flame.
The Navaho People travelled from the near Arctic of eastern Alaska/Yukon about 1200 AD when a volcano erupted. They apparently travelled down the east of the Canadian Rockies on their way to the southern desert. Dene
Thanks for this video... very interesting!
Just awesome! Well done as always!
Thanks for sharing! Nice video
Very informative.
I have been learning my native language.
úcwalmicw is our word for human being. From what i can guess, the direct translation would be along the lines of “other being that is smart enough to interact with.”
Showing the difference between us and animals.
I am from the St̓át̓imc territory.
(Sƛ̓áƛ̓imc if you want the fancy letters.) and the nearest translation i can guess is along the lines of “the place that is being used.”
The Salish language family is certainly interesting. Each individual letter sound has an english word definition.
t̓éna7-ear
skwt̓us-face
nkwt̓ústen-eyes
ít̓em- to sing
t̓ has to do with sensations.
So we described our territory as such.
It's so great that you're learning your identity language. Do you know if Salish is talked natively by your tribe ? If not is there at least some form of introduction of the language in schools?
I took a very interesting class in college called Native American Perspectives, taught by a Lakota man. It was really eye opening. A lot of the names the European Americans call the tribes are the names given by their enemies. We learned about nedeouasioux (sp, sorry). He said it meant dirty little snakes. He also talked about the Eskimo [e-ski’-mo], who call themselves the Inuit. He said Eskimo meant “those who eat raw fish”, which was an insult. One book we were required o read was “I Heard the Owl Call My Name” by Margaret Craven. Another was “The Education of Little Tree” by Asa Earl Carter. They were both pretty good reads and an interesting glimpse into another culture.
It would be very interesting to learn about the different languages and how they are related. The natives of the west coast from Washington, British Columbia and Alaska.
You’re talking about one of the most diverse areas in NA. It pretty much looks like european countries scattered in this area.
(I’m Interior Salish.)
Brillismt! Thanks Hilbert
the Native Americans indigenous to my hometown are the Nipmuc, and have a small reservation (not federally recognized though) less than a mile from my house
Do you visit them from time to time? How much interaction do they have with non native Americans? Do they observe any traditional customs?
@@heathenfire nobody actually lives there anymore, the tribe just owns the land. They do have events from time to time, I usually don't go
Dhruva Narayan to much interaction, they really don’t live there, they just own the land. All of them are intermarried with non Native Americans, and are all assimilated into mainstream culture, there are occasional events there
Nipmuc's nearly wiped out New England in the King Phillip War. (MY Ancestors were there) Hollywood makes a big deal out of Western tribes Indian Wars being dangerous and deadly but that war was by percentage the deadliest war fought in America. No one knows the Nipmuc were right up there with Apache for gorilla attacks on troops. Starvation and disease is what really defeated them.
Judging by this video, I’m guessing you’re going to start talking about Native Americans more?
Hope so
Why not they are lucky the fcuk head government did not wipe them out!
@Klaidi Rubiku
I think all the sub-Saharan people are getting all the attention on the news right now that they deserve. Give some to the indigenous Native Americans they always get the shaft
Oh butz iz fergetz ,dey uz tu be KAINGS N SHEEIT.
@Klaidi Rubiku God damn that's pretty rude!
@@KevinSmith-yh6tl You my friend, are an idiot!
In my native language "menuh" means people
are you from northern india?
From north east india
"Mensen" means people in dutch, so maybe this is an indo european word🤔
@@michable100 Probably, it's Menschen in German.
There's a great Historia Civilis video about the Iriquois and their name and culture. The people of the longhouse.
I've said for a LONG time, that when the Spanish brought the horse back to North America, it was like giving gang-bangers cars. So that they could more effeciently and effectively express their power on others. One example, the Blackfeet, terrorized other tribes unfortunate to come across their path.
the Comanche were not much different. They started as part of the Shoshone around Wyoming, when they got horses the Comanche split off, and moved southward into Colorado and were allies with their cousins the Ute. But they had a falling out before the Europeans came and then the Comanche moves more south and became allies with the Kiowa and the Kiowa Apache. These later Comanche are the ones Hilbert writes of.
Native American guy: Ninono'eino
Early European settlers: Hmm yes no doubt that's Hindi.
Hi bro
SIR , KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK , THIS IS OUTSTANDING . GO WITH GOD ONE DAY AT A TIME IN JEASUS NAME AMEN. 🙏😊😆😉🙏🙏🙏
Hey! You never got to "Apache". I was looking forward to that one.
Cool vid though. 👍
Guess I don't need to finish this.
I was also looking forward to the Apache.
I'm going to anyway.
It’s means Enemy
Nice foray into Native American exonyms and endonyms. It does enlighten the history and cultural views of that time.
Just imagine if North America hadn't been trashed by us Europeans what an amazing place it would be to visit. Enjoyed the video.
They would still be at war with each other.
hi hilbert, do you think you could do a video on the Kielce Pogrom i think that would be pretty interesting
Funny how there doesn't seem to be any indigenous people at all north of the 49th parallel. I live in Edmonton, and there are Sioux, or Nakoda, communities all around Alberta and Saskatchewan. Also Blackfoot or Siksika, Kainai and Piikani. We can learn to call people by their correct names if we make the effort.
And Ojibway in Northern Ontario.
Am I the only one who can see the bottom third of the screen lagging behind when the slide changes?
Greetings from the land of the Shawnee, Ohio.
Love the opening thing you do on every video. GO DUTCH 👍
Nez Perce is pronounced
"nay persay" in the USA too
Tecumseh Cristero I think you’ll find that varies by region. In the South, I’ve always heard it pronounced “Nes Pierce.”
Oof! I just found out it's mispronounced in the USA too - by me.
I've always heard it pronounced "nez purse"
The Iroquois and the Souix had a long relationship during the 1500-1600 in the great lakes region.
13:00 So, Did you ever make that separate video?
I have been told that my Great-Great grandmother used to be Buffalo Bill Cody's 16 year old house maid and traveling caretaker. She was both French and Commanche. She had the jet black hair to prove it, too. I am told that we are distant cousins to Napolean Bonaparte. This little community called Tekamah, Nebraska. Has some very interesting connections to the old Wild West. I even went to school with a distant relative to Doc Holiday. We even had an 11 year old that ran away and joined the traveling circus. Only to become a silent movie celebrity. His name was "Hoot Gibson". There's a rodeo in town named after him.
I lived in Northern Minnesota as a child. The Native Americans around were Chippewa, although we knew they were also called Ojibwe. We had heard that the local Ojibwe called the Lakota people to the west by the term Sioux which was not a nice name in their minds. There had been fights between the two groups. Chippewa was, I think, a mispronounced Ojibwe. Some had said that the Lakota people saw the term Chippewa as a derogatory reference to the Ojibwe.
I believe red talker / white talker refers to the cardinal directions. I can’t remember which is which, but I know red, yellow, black, and white were associated with north, east, west, south.
Really interesting subject matter. They're an amazing people aren't they .
The Blackfoot in Montana would be Ahmskapii Pikuni or in Southern or Far Off Spotted Robes. Thank you for deciding to a separate video on us. I'd hate to have been lumped in with all these dog-eaters.
Any information on the Seneca or Mohawk tribes? They're local to me
ua-cam.com/video/S4gU2Tsv6hY/v-deo.html
and
ua-cam.com/video/P7u-0Dmpi4M/v-deo.html
and
www.sutori.com/item/this-map-shows-the-placement-of-the-iroquois-confederacy-in-red-during-the-17t
Strange as it may seem, the Names Mohawk and Seneca were given to them by Mohegan Guides bringing the English into their area. Magua (Bears) is the name of the Mohawks as MO-Hawks means Maneater (Cannibal) and you may recognize the word in Tommohawk as man-killer. It was not meant to be flattering. The Word Seneca meant roughly SNAKE HEADS another word for crazy in Mohegan. Of course James Fenimore Cooper mixed up the tribes (Mohican is not Mohegan) and made Uncas a Mohican with a Delaware Father Chingachgook (Big snake) and the Delawares call themselves Lene-Lenape meaning roughly Regular Joes (People) All Algonquin speakers along the Atlantic coast. The Mohawks (Magua) called them Mingo's which roughly means Stray Dogs.
@@MrAtsyhere very informative, thank you
Thank you .
Excellent!
basically most N8V names mean "the human beings"
I am Chahta (changed to Choctaw by the English)
This naming convention occurs around the world pretty much
enjoyed.
Ah, I believe you forgot about the third ‘snake’ tribe... _Tunnel Snakes rule!_
Ka'igwu, is very much where Ki(-)owa would come. Such gw can be said so that the g is barely audible, for example in Spanish, or Guillaume in French - William in English. It's also possible that gw can alternate with simple w in different word forms, like in Welsh. Spanish has put gw to many native American names, where they would use w based on English. So Ka'i(g)wu is almost the same already as Kiowa (Ka'i- as Ki in English) - closer anyway than the Arapahoe name. Koh'owu' would likely produce more like 'Cowa'. Besides, those names can be even linked: the Arapahoe nation may easily haven given a name for the Kiowas that in their language means something, and sounds closest to the word Kiowas use for themselves. Nations have been known to do that too.
my partners father was hunkpapa lakota sioux .
So he is half
@@robertayoder2063 his father was ww2 pilot his mother was English . he was a war baby
Algonquian (Alg.) languages might look like sprinkled around the USA, - if we just look at it from the current US perspective. But if you take Canada along, the language area is a pretty united area (thinking before the arrival of Europeans), bar a few language drifting a bit off the main groups. In Canada the Cree groups and some other Alg. talkers have spread to cover the whole area between the Great Lakes and the Rocky Mountains, and also the Eastern USA is linked to the Alg. nations in Canada, with no real pre-European gaps towards the lakes. So from this area some Alg. nations likely spread southwards to the Plains along the Rockies. In USA there are/were the strong Iroquois and Lakota (Sioux) nations stopping the Alg:s from covering the whole northern US.
Will you be doing a video on The Hekowi tribe.
best ad reads in the game
Just a tip on pronunciation, try not to trill your "r"s. The most common "r" sound in native american consonant inventories is an alveolar approximate, so use the back of your throat like you might in German (using a familiar example)
At 9:51 you misspelled "Iroquois." Just happened to notice.
i lost it at *french accent* "ahhh arapahoe"
Did you discuss the Apache?
Since I have no real idea I'll just make a Wild Assed Guess.
Hello Hilbert, some of the information presented is off, although I do appreciate your effort. Please check out my Tribal maps at www.tribalnationsmaps.com, and feel free to reach out!
Gambini: "The two utes..."
Judge Haller: "What is a ute"
I found out my great grandmother on my father's side was a full blooded Cherokee
And I've always been fascinated and curious about my ancestry
I don't have much contact with my father or father's side of the family
I wish there was a way that I could try to learn more about it
Ayyy I’m Plains Cree of the northern plains in Canada lol
Very interesting....I would like to see more on both the tribes that had straight up European names gives (Blackfoot , Warm Springs both spring to mind) as well as more using names they either called themselves or have names originating from other tries. Some out where I live on the west coast might include the Lummi, Klamath, Modoc , Yakima tribes.
In the south west you might cover Navajo and Apache.
When thinking about the Algonquin migration, we have to look at Canada too: there the Algonquin nations are an unbroken chain (if we don't think of the European effects), just look at how far west the Crees reach from the Great Lakes area. I can prove it, but for me it seems the Alginquin moved along the Canadian plains, by and north of the Great Lakes, and some of them moved southwards.
We would have to watch the population densities, and linguists should check the sound change patterns in the Algonquin languages, to estimate where was the original birth place of the language group. For me it looks like there's more of those nations in the east, many small and some large groups. So it would seem they started from somewhere in the Eastern North America, and some of them moved west on the Canadian prairie. It seems it happened relatively recently, later than 1000 years ago, because the Crees occupy a vast area, not many splits in the group.
Then the Cheynne, and was it Arapaho (or Shoshoni), who are closely related to them, would have migrated south along the plains. In grasslands people can move quite far in one generation, even without horses. Or can the linguists show some other linguistic relations - are the Cheyenne closer related to some other Algonquian nation in the north, or east, than to the Crees or some other Algonquian nation on the Canadian side, or along the border area?
You should work on your transition to the commercial segment.
Very similar to the tribes in North East England, such as the Geordie, the Makkum, The Monkey Hanger, the Smoggie, the Sanddancer and the Sweaty Sock.
The cod heads
When Spain ruled the Netherlands, they forced people to take last names. To express Dutch displeasure, persons made up names of great humor, such as Bornaked. 😁
wtf I let my computer on for a hour and all of sudden I open my web browser and see a video of Hilbert playing
Names of Eastern tribe, such as the Shawnee, would be interesting.
I don't how much leverage you have on that but the sponsors' announcement/ad would be better if placed at the beginning. It's really annoying when it's right in the middle.
Hey thanks for uploading over lockdown
Who the F is still on house arrest?
Wow 👍👌