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Tribal Nomenclature
In the Siouan stock, as among the American
Indians generally, the accepted appellations for tribes and
other groups are variously derived. Many of the Siouan
tribal names were, like the name of the stock, given by
alien peoples, including white men, though most are founded
on the descriptive or other designations used in the groups
to which they pertain. At first glance, the names seem to be
loosely applied and perhaps vaguely defined, and this laxity
in application and definition does not disappear, but rather
increases, with closer examination.
There are special reasons for the indefiniteness of Indian
nomenclature: The aborigines were at the time of discovery,
and indeed most of them remain today, in the prescriptorial
stage of culture, i.e., the stage in which ideas are
crystallized, not by means of arbitrary symbols, but by
means of arbitrary associations,1
and in this stage names are connotive or descriptive, rather
than denotive as in the scriptorial stage. Moreover, among
the Indians, as among all other prescriptorial peoples, the
ego is paramount, and all things are described, much more
largely than among cultured peoples, with reference to the
describer and the position which he occupies—Self and Here,
and, if need be, Now and Thus, are the fundamental elements
of primitive conception and description, and these elements
are implied and exemplified, rather than expressed, in
thought and utterance. Accordingly there is a notable
paucity in names, especially for themselves, among the
Indian tribes, while the descriptive designations applied to
a given group by neighboring tribes are often diverse.
The principles controlling nomenclature in its inchoate
stages are illustrated among the Siouan peoples. So far as
their own tongues were concerned, the stock was nameless,
and could not be designated save through integral parts.
Even the great Dakota confederacy, one of the most extensive
and powerful aboriginal organizations, bore no better
designation than a term probably applied originally to
associated tribes in a descriptive way and perhaps used as a
greeting or countersign, although there was an alternative
proper descriptive term.—"Seven Council-fires"—apparently of
considerable antiquity, since it seems to have been
originally applied before the separation of the Asiniboin.2
In like manner the ¢egiha, ??iwe're, and Hotcañgara groups,
and perhaps the Niya, were without denotive designations for
themselves, merely styling themselves "Local People," "Men,"
"Inhabitants," or, still more ambitiously, "People of the
Parent Speech," in terms which are variously rendered by
different interpreters; they were lords in their own domain,
and felt no need for special title. Different Dakota tribes
went so far as to claim that their respective habitats
marked the middle of the world, so that each insisted on
precedence as the leading tribe,3
and it was the boast of the Mandan that they were the
original people of the earth.4
In the more carefully studied confederacies the constituent
groups generally bore designations apparently used for
convenient distinction in the confederation; sometimes they
were purely descriptive, as in the case of the Sisseton,
Wahpeton, Sans Arcs, Blackfeet, Oto, and several others;
again they referred to the federate organization (probably,
possibly to relative position of habitat), as in the
Yankton, Yanktonai, and Huñkpapa; more frequently they
referred to geographic or topographic position, e.g., Teton,
Omaha, Pahe'tsi, Kwapa, etc; while some appear to have had a
figurative or symbolic connotation, as Brulé, Ogalala, and
Ponka. Usually the designations employed by alien peoples
were more definite than those used in the group designated,
as illustrated by the stock name, Asiniboin, and Iowa.
Commonly the alien appellations were terms of reproach; thus
Sioux, Biloxi, and Hohe (the Dakota designation for the
Asiniboin) are clearly opprobrious, while Paskagula might
easily be opprobrious among hunters and warriors, and Iowa
and Oto appear to be derogatory or contemptuous expressions.
The names applied by the whites were sometimes taken from
geographic positions, as in the case of Upper Yanktonai and
Cape Fear—the geographic names themselves being frequently
of Indian origin. Some of the current names represent
translations of the aboriginal terms either into English ("Blackfeet,"
"Two Kettles," "Crow,") or into French ("Sans Arcs," "Brulé","
"Gros Ventres"); yet most of the names, at least of the
prairie tribes, are simply corruptions of the aboriginal
terms, though frequently the modification is so complete as
to render identification and interpretation difficult—it is
not easy to find Waca'ce in "Osage" (so spelled by the
French, whose orthography was adopted and mispronounced by
English-speaking pioneers), or Pa'qotce in "Iowa."
The meanings of most of the eastern names are lost; yet so
far as they are preserved they are of a kind with those of
the interior. So, too, are the subtribal names enumerated by
Dorsey.
1 The
leading culture stages are defined in the
Thirteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of
Ethnology, for 1891-92 (1896), p. xxiii et
seq. 2 Cf.
Schoolcraft, "Information," etc, op. cit.,
pt. II, 1852, p. 169. Dorsey was inclined to
consider the number as made up without the
Asiniboin. 3
Riggs-Dorsey: "Dakota Grammar,Texts, and
Ethnography," Cont. N.A. Eth., vol. IX,
1893, p. 164.
4 Catlin: "Letters and
Notes," op. cit., p. 80.
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The Siouan Indians, Fifteenth Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 1893 - 1894
Siouan IndiansFree
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