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Mandan
The Mandan had a vague tradition of
emigration from the eastern part of the country, and Lewis
and Clark, Prince Maximilian, and others found traces of
Mandan house-structures at various points along the
Missouri; thus they appear to have ascended that stream
before the advent of the ˘egiha. During the historical
period their movements were limited; they were first visited
in the upper Missouri country by Sieur de la Verendrye in
1738. About 1750 they established two villages on the
eastern side and seven on the western side of the Missouri,
near the mouth of Heart river. Here they were assailed by
the Asiniboin and Dakota and attacked by smallpox, and were
greatly reduced; the two eastern villages consolidated, and
the people migrated up the Missouri to a point 1,430 miles
above its mouth (as subsequently determined by Lewis and
Clark); the seven villages were soon reduced to five, and
these people also ascended the river and formed two villages
in the Arikara country, near the Mandan of the eastern side,
where they remained until about 1766, when they also
consolidated. Thus the once powerful and populous tribe was
reduced to two villages which, in 1804, were found by Lewis
and Clark on opposite banks of the Missouri, about 4 miles
below Knife river. Here for a time the tribe waxed and
promised to regain the early prestige, reaching a population
of 1,600 in 1837; but in that year they were again attacked
by smallpox and almost annihilated, the survivors numbering
only 31 according to one account, or 125 to 145 according to
others. After this visitation they united in one village.
When the Hidatsa removed from Knife river in 1845, some of
the Mandan accompanied them, and others followed at
intervals as late as 1858, when only a few still remained at
their old home. In 1872 a reservation was set apart for the
Hidatsa and Arikara and the survivors of the Mandan on
Missouri and Yellowstone rivers in Dakota and Montana, but
in 1886 the reservation was reduced. According to the census
returns, the Mandan numbered 252 in 1890.
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The Siouan Indians, Fifteenth Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 1893 - 1894
Siouan IndiansFree
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