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General Movements
On reviewing the records of explorers and
pioneers and the few traditions which have been preserved,
the course of Siouan migration and development becomes
clear. In general the movements were westward and
northwestward. The Dakota tribes have not been traced far,
though several of them, like the Yanktonnai, migrated
hundreds of miles from the period of first observation to
the end of the eighteenth century; then came the Mandan,
according to their tradition, and as they ascended the
Missouri left traces of their occupancy scattered over 1,000
miles of migration; next the ˘egiha descended the Ohio and
passed from the cis-Mississippi forests over the
trans-Mississippi plains—the stronger branch following the
Mandan, while the lesser at first descended the great river
and then worked up the Arkansas into the buffalo country
until checked and diverted by antagonistic tribes. So also
the ŧΩiwe're, first
recorded near the Mississippi, pushed 300 miles westward;
while the Winnebago gradually emigrated from the region of
the Great Lakes into the trans-Mississippi country even
before their movements were affected by contact with white
men. In like manner the Hidatsa are known to have flowed
northwestward many scores of miles; and the Asiniboin swept
more rapidly across the plains from the place of their
rebellion against the Yanktonnai, on the Mississippi, before
they found final resting place on the Saskatchewan plains
500 or 800 miles away. All of the movements were consistent
and, despite intertribal friction and strife, measurably
harmonious. The lines of movement, so far as they can be
restored, are in full accord with the lines of linguistic
evolution traced by Hale and Dorsey and Gatschet, and
indicate that some five hundred or possibly one thousand
years ago the tribesmen pushed over the Appalachians to the
Ohio and followed that stream and its tributaries to the
Mississippi (though there are faint indications that some of
the early emigrants ascended the northern tributaries to the
region of the Great Lakes); and that the human flood gained
volume as it advanced and expanded to cover the entire
region of the plains. The records concerning the movement of
this great human stream find support in the manifest reason
for the movement; the reason was the food quest by which all
primitive men are led, and its end was the abundant fauna of
the prairieland, with the buffalo at its head.
While the early population of the Siouan stock, when first
the huntsmen crossed the Appalachians, may not be known, the
lines of migration indicate that the people increased and
multiplied amain during their long journey, and that their
numbers culminated, despite external conflict and internal
strife, about the beginning of written history, when the
Siouan population may have been 100,000 or more. Then came
war against the whites and the still more deadly smallpox,
whereby the vigorous stock was checked and crippled and the
population gradually reduced; but since the first shock,
which occurred at different dates in different parts of the
great region, the Siouan people have fairly held their own,
and some branches are perhaps gaining in strength.
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The Siouan Indians, Fifteenth Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 1893 - 1894
Siouan IndiansFree
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