Blackfoot

"Lords of the Great
Plains"
The Blackfoot Confederacy
consists of four different tribes, the Pikuni/Peigan, North Peigan Pikuni,
Blood/Kainai, and Blackfoot/Siksika. Members of the Blackfoot Confederation
presently live in Montana, the United States and Alberta, Canada. When the
Canadian government/British Crown sought to enter into a treaty with the
Niitsitapi (the Real People), they made initial contact with the Siksika who
lived on the north and northeastern frontiers of Niitsitapiskaku. They made the
wrong assumption that all Niitsitapi were Blackfoot. The Niitsitapi are
Ahpikuni (Peigan), Southern Ahpikuni (Montana Blackfeet), Ahkainah (Bloods) and
Siksika (Blackfoot). Location: Their territory once covered an areas
from Edmonton and Calgary, Alberta to the Yellowstone River, and from the Rocky
Mountains to the present day North Dakota border.Language: The language of the Niitsitapi is
Niitsipussin (the Real Language). Some differences in phraseology occurs among
the Niitsitapi but essentially, the language is the same.Best Known Feature: Head-Smashed-In is a hill site in southwestern Alberta. The Blackfoot used it for hundreds of
years. It is known as a very spiritual place to the tribe. It has been around
for approximately 7,000 years.History:The word "tribe" connotates a lack of cohesive political, cultural and
social structure which definitely does not apply to the Niitsitapi. In fact,
the cohesive structure was the very reason that the Niitsitapi achieved
cultural, political and military predominance making them "the Lords of the
Great Plains." They were a Nation of people united by a common language,
culture and religion living in a country with borders recognized by other First
Nations. When the Canadian federal government entered into negotiations with
Crowfoot, the Siksika political leader, he had to consult the other Niitsitapi
leaders as he was being asked by the government to negotiate matters affecting
all Niistitapi. As leader of the Siksika and not the entire Niitsitapi, he
couldn't do so without the consent of the other leaders.
The Blackfoot were a nomadic
people who followed the buffalo. The Blackfoot migrated to their
present territory from the northern Great Lakes Region. The Blackfoot were first introduced to horses in 1730 when the Shoshoni attacked them on horseback. After this, they obtained their own horses
through trade with the Flathead, Kutenai and Nez Perce. They also traded
buffalo hides, horses, and guns with settlers as far away as the east coast.
However, by the winter of 1884, the buffalo were nearly extinct and many
Blackfoot starved. They were forced to depend upon the Indian Agency for
food.
In 1870, one of the worse slaughters of Indians by American troops
occured, known as the Marias Massacre. On the morning of Jan. 23, 200 Peigans
were killed, most of them women, children, and elderly. The Peigans were a
friendly tribe, not the hostile camp that the troops were supposed to attack.
However, the commander had permission to use his judgment and attack the
Peigans and punish them for things they may be guilty of in the past or future.
After the massacre, the troops left to find their real target, but it was too
late as the hostile tribe had moved.
The most important event of the year was the Sundance Festival, or the
Medicine Lodge Ceremony, which was celebrated with other Plains Indians tribes.
An important religious area for the Blackfoot is the Badger-two Medicine area.
This area was lost in 1895 to the U.S. government in a treaty which was poorly
translated to the Blackfoot. The Blackfoot Confederacy Today:

Though this page has been carefully researched, the author does not
claim expertise on the Blackfoot.
Please send questions, comments, and corrections to emuseum@mnsu.edu and include the web address of this page.
If you are Blackfoot, your feedback is much appreciated.
Resources:
- Our thanks to Paul Melting Tallow, Managing Editor of aboriginal/times for his contribution to the accuracy of the above
description. His e-mail address is: editor@aboriginaltimes.com
- Samek, Hana, The Blackfoot Confederacy, University of New
Mexico Press; Albuquerque, 1987.
- Hungry Wolf, Adolf, The Blood People, Harper & Row; New
York, 1977.
- http://www.dickshovel.com/parts.html
- http://www.blackfeetnation.com/
- http://conbio.rice.edu/NAE/DOCS/KNUDSEN2.HTML
- Head
Smashed In
Written by Beth Epley and Sara Wenner
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