Online Encyclopedia

OJIBWAY (OJIBWA)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 54 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OJIBWAY (OJIBWA)  , Or CHIPPEWAY (CHIPPEWA), the name given by the
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English to a large tribe of North
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American Indians of Algonquian stock . They must not be confused with the
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Chipewyan tribe of Athabascan stock settled around Lake Athabasca,
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Canada . They formerly occupied a vast tract of country around Lakes Huron and
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Superior, and now are settled on reservations in the neighbourhood . The name is from a word meaning " to roast till puckered " or "
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drawn up," in reference, it is suggested, to a
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peculiar seam in their mocassins,. though other explanations have been proposed . They call themselves Anishinabeg (" spontaneous men "), and the French called them Saulteurs ("
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People of the Falls"), from the first
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group of them being met at Sault Ste
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Marie . Tribal traditions declare they migrated from the St Lawrence region together with the
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Ottawa and Potawat'omi, with which tribes they formed a confederacy known as " The Three Fires." When first en-countered about 164o the Ojibway were inhabiting the coast of Lake Superior, surrounded by the
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Sioux and Foxes on the west and south . During the 18th century they conquered these latter and occupied much of their territory . Throughout the Colonial
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wars they were loyal to the French, but fought for the English in the War of Independence and the War of 1812, and thereafter permanently maintained peace with the Whites . The tribe was divided into ten divisions . They lived chiefly by hunting and fishing . They had many tribal myths, which were collected by Henry R . Sehoolcraft in his Algic Researches (1839), upon which Longfellow founded his " Hiawatha." See INDIANS, NORTH AMERICAN; also W .

J .

Hoffmann, "Midewiwin of the Ojibwa," in 7th Report of Bureau of American
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Ethnology (1891) ; W . W . Warren, "
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History of the Ojibways," vol. v.,
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Minnesota
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Historical Society's Collections; G . Copway, History of the O'ibway Indians (Boston, . 183o); P . Jones, History of the Ojebway Indians (1861) ; A . E . Jenks, " Wild Rice Gatherers," 19th Report of Bureau of American Ethnology (1900) .

End of Article: OJIBWAY (OJIBWA)
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