While we know our northern friends may not feel it, in the South, Spring is
here. So we thought we'd share a few of our gardening sites appropriate
for this time of the year. Along with gardening, there's grilling, and getting
ready to diet so that you can fit back into that bathing suit this summer!
The French authors commonly divided the
Miami into six bands:
Piankashaw,
Wea,
Atchatchakangouen,
Kilatika,
Mengakonkia
Pepicokia.
Of these the first two have come to be recognized, as
distinct tribes; the other names are no longer known. The Pepicokia,
mentioned in 1796 with the Wea and Piankashaw, may have been absorbed by
the a band known as Eel Rivers, formerly living near Thorntown, Boone
county, Ind., but they afterward joined the main body on the Wabash.
According to Morgan (Anc. Soc., 168, 1877) the Miami
have 10 gentes:
(1) Mowhawa(wolf),
(2) Mongwa (loon),
(3) Kendawa (eagle),
(4) Alipakosea (buzzard),
(5) hanozawa (Kanwasowau, panther),
(6) I'ilawa (turkey),
(7) Ahseponna (raccoon),
(8) Monnato (snow),
(9) Kulswa (sun),
(10) Water.
Chauvignerie, in 1737, said that the Miami had two
principal totems-the elk and crane-while some of them had the bear.
The French writers call the Atchatchakangouen (Crane)
the leading division. At a great conference on the Maumee in Ohio in 1793
the Miami signed with the turtle totem. None of these totems occurs in
Morgan's list.