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Tatsanottine
Indian Tribe History
Tatsanottine ('people of the scum of water,' scum being a
figurative expression for copper). An Athapascan tribe, belonging to
the Chipewyan group, inhabiting the northern shares and eastern hays
of Great Slave lake, Mackenzie Dist., Canada. They were said bt
Mackinziei n 1789 to live with other tribes on Mackenzie and Peace
rivers. Franklin in l8244 (Journ, Polar Sea, 16,
1824) said that they, had previously lived on the south side
of Great Slave lake. Gallatin in 1836 (Trans..Am.
Antiq. Soc., ii, 19, 1856) gave their location as north of
Great Slave lake on Yellow Knife river, while Back placed them on
the west shore of Great Slave lake. Drake (Bk. Inds.
vii, 1848) located them on Coppermine river; Riehardson
(Arct. Exped, ii, 4, 1851) gave their habitat
as north of Great Slave lake and from Great Fish river to Coppermine
river. Hind in 1863 (Labrador Penin., ii, 261, 1863)
placed them north and north east of Great Slave lake, saying than
they resorted to Ft Rae and also to Ft Simpson on Mackenzie river.
Petitot in 1865 (MS., B. A. E.) said they
frequent the steppes east and north east of Great Slave lake: but 10
years later (Diet. Dènè-Dindjiè,
xx, 1876) he located then, about the east part of the lake.
They were more nomadic than their neighbors, which doubtless
accounts for the wide area ascribed to them by some of the earlier
travelers who met theist during their hunting trips in territory
belonging to the Etchareottine. Prior try 1850 they were in the
habit of visiting the north end of Great Bear lake to hunt muskoxen
and reindeer: but many of their influential men were killed by
treachery in a feud with the Thlingchadinne; since then they have
kept more to the east end of Great Slave lake. In their hunting
trip, northward they came in contact with the Eskimo residing near
the mouth of Rick river, with whom they were continually at war, but
in recent years they seldom traveled farther coastward than the
headwaters of Yellow Knife river, leaving a strip of neutral ground
between them and their former enemies. According to Father Morice,
"they now hunt on the dreary steppes lying to the north east of
Great Slave lake," and that formerly they were "a bold, unscrupulous
and rather licentious tribe, whose members too often took advantage
of the gentleness of their neighbors to commit acts of high
handedness-which finally brought down on them what we cannot help
calling just retribution" (Anthropos, i, 266, 1906).
Back, in 1836, stated that the Tatsanottine were once powerful and
numerous, but at that time they had been reduced by wars to 70
families. Ross in 1859 made the census for the Hudson's Bay Company
as follows, but his figures evidently included only one band: At Ft
Resolution, 207; at Ft Rae, 12; total, 219, of whom 46 males and 54
females were married, 8 unmarried adult males, 14 widows and
unmarried females, 44 boys, and 53 girls, giving 98 males and 121
females of all ages. According to Father Morice they now number
about 500, of whom 205 are at Ft Resolution. The Tatsanottine were
the Montagnais of the Hudson's Bay Company, for whom a special
alphabet was designed and books printed in it by the English
missionaries (see Pilling, Bibliog. Athapascan Lang.,
1892). Petitot found them serious and religiously inclined
like the Chipewyan, from whom they differed so lightly in physique
and in language that no novice could tell them apart. They formerly
manufactured, and sold at fabulous prices, copper knives, axes, and
other cutting tools, according to Father Morice. The metal was found
on a low mountain in the vicinity of the river called Coppermine
river by the traders on Hudson bay. The diffusion of iron and steel
implements at length so depreciated the value of the aboriginal
wares that, finding the main source of their revenue cut off through
the new order of things, they finally moved to the south.
The Tatsanottine have a myth that one of their women
was kidnapped and carried blindfolded off to the country of the
Eskimo in Asia and married to one of these, and that she made her
escape with her infant in an umiak, reached the shore of America by
paddling from isle to isle of the Aleutian archipelago, being
protected on the voyage by a white wolf. Reaching the shore of
Alaska she abandoned her Eskimo child because it robbed her of
pemmican she had made. Seeing a blazing mountain she ascended it,
thinking to find a party camping on the summit. She found that the
flames were emitted by a molten metal, and when eventually she
reached the camp of her own people they accompanied her back by the
path she had marked with stones to get some of the metal, which they
called bear's dung or beaver's dung, because it was red. They
thought she was a woman descended from the skies, but when they had
made the journey for the third time some of them laid violent hands
on her, whereupon she sat down beside her precious copper, refusing
to go home with them. When they came back some time later to seek
the volcano of molten copper, she was still there, but sunk to her
waist into the earth. She gave them copper, but again refused to go
back with them, putting no faith in their promises. She said she
would give good metal to those who brought her good meat, iron if
the gift were lung, liver, or heart of the caribou, copper for
whomsoever gave red flesh, but if anyone brought bad meat they would
get brittle metal in return. Those who came back later for more
metal found her buried to the neck in the ground. The last time they
came she had disappeared in the bowels of the earth, and from that
time no more copper could be found on the bank of Copper river,
though there may still be seen the huge stones which the metal woman
placed to mark the way. Her tribe have since been called the Copper
People, for water scum and beaver dung are both figurative names for
this metal.
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opinions of the Webmasters of the site.
Handbook
of American Indians, 1906
Canadian Indian
Tribes
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