KIOWA

kīˈəwə, Native North Americans whose language is thought to form a branch of the Aztec-Tanoan linguistic stock (see Native American languages). The Kiowa, a nomadic people of the Plains area, had several distinctive traits, including a pictographic calendar and the worship of a stone image, the taimay. In the 17th cent. they occupied W Montana, but by about 1700 they had moved to an area SE of the Yellowstone River. Here they came into contact with the Crow, who gave the Kiowa permission to settle in the Black Hills. While living there, they acquired (c.1710) the horse, probably from the Crow. Their trade was mainly with the Arikara, the Mandan, and the Hidatsa. After the invading Cheyenne and the Sioux drove the Kiowa from the Black Hills, they were forced to move south to Comanche territory; in 1790, after a bloody war, the Kiowa reached a permanent peace with the Comanche. According to Lewis and Clark, the Kiowa were on the North Platte River in 1805, but not much later they occupied the Arkansas River region. Later the Kiowa, who allied themselves with the Comanche, raided as far south as Durango, Mexico, attacking Mexicans, Texans, and Native Americans, principally the Navajo and the Osage.

In 1837 the Kiowa were forced to sign their first treaty, providing for the passage of Americans through Kiowa-Comanche land; the presence of settlers in increased numbers accelerated hostilities. After 1840, when the Kiowa made peace with the Cheyenne, four groups—the Kiowa, the Cheyenne, the Comanche, and the Apache—combined to fight the eastern tribes, who had migrated to Indian Territory. This caused more hostility between Native Americans and the U.S. government, and U.S. forces finally defeated the confederacy and imposed the Treaty of Medicine Lodge (1867). This confederated the Kiowa, the Comanche, and the Apache and provided that they should settle in Oklahoma. However, parts of the Kiowa remained hostile until the mid-1870s. Oncoming American settlers, unaware of treaty rights, caused friction with the Kiowa, resulting in a series of minor outbreaks. In 1874 the Kiowa were involved in a serious conflict, which was suppressed by the U.S. army. American soldiers killed the horses of the Kiowa, and the government deported the Kiowa leaders to Florida. By 1879 most of them were settled on their present lands in Oklahoma. The Kiowa Apache, a small group of North American Native Americans traditionally associated with the Kiowa from the earliest times, now live with them. The Kiowa Apache retain their own language. There were close to 9,500 Kiowa in the United States in 1990.

See R. H. Lowie, Societies of the Kiowa (1916); A. L. Marriott, Kiowa Years (1968); M. P. Mayhall, The Kiowas (rev. ed. 1972).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Kiowa  - 905 results

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part of Kiowa history that continues to be told and retold...shape the contours of twentieth-century Kiowa life. "Church, dining hall, Tabernacle...these stories are not about the collapse of Kiowa culture, they are about its ability to...
...making an examination of the language of the Kiowa. PHONETICS 1. GENERAL REMARKS Six vowel qualities and twenty-two consonants are found in Kiowa see the mouth-map, fig. 1 . The Kiowa system is very normal in that its sounds are...
III. THE OUTLINE OF KIOWA SOCIETY Tradition speaks for Kiowa origin in the north. There is good evidence to suppose...of Montana 1 and the Plateau Salish considered both the Kiowa and Comanche members of their western alliance in the struggle...
...afterwards passed Hent, called by the Kiowa M limhakia (Hook-nose-man, Roman...Both were in charge of a derk known to the Kiowa as Kodal-aka-i Wrinkled-neck. The...1845. Mooney, Calendar History of the Kiowa Indians, in Seventeengb Annnal Report...
...east by Anadarko. Nineteenth-century Kiowa cosmology was based on the concept of daudau...1875. The Sun Dance, the most important Kiowa ceremony, was performed to regenerate...between 1894 and 1916. Missionaries came to Kiowa country in 1887, and by 1918, when the...
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journal articles on: Kiowa  - 229 results

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The Parker P. Mckenzie Kiowa Orthography: How Written Kiowa Came into Being by Parker P. McKenzie , William C. Meadows INTRODUCTION In November 1897, members of the Kiowa tribe had encamped just north of Sepyalda (Rainy Hill...
Kiowa Humanity and the Invasion of the State. by Todd Leahy Kiowa Humanity and the Invasion of the State. By Jacki Thompson...experiment in humanity are at best mixed. Jacki Thompson Rands Kiowa Humanity and the Invasion of the State argues that members...
THE KIOWA HOMELAND IN OKLAHOMA. by STEVEN M. SCHNELL ABSTRACT. Kiowa Indians derive their common identity from deep roots...distinctive marks, both visible and invisible: The Kiowa have blanketed it with their significant stories. The...
The Kiowa Drawings of Gotebo (1847-1927): a Self...known as T"on t emj e (Broken Leg), a Kiowa translation of his Comanche name. He died...the Kogui (Qogui or Elk) division of the Kiowa.3 Gotebo was an accomplished and outstanding...
...dedicated to my recently deceased adopted Kiowa father, Clifton Tongkeamah, his family...Cliff and Betty for introducing me to the Kiowa world. Very active in tribal and intertribal...dances, Mr. Tongkeamah was a member of the Kiowa Gourd Clan, the Kiowa Black Leggings Warrior...
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magazine articles on: Kiowa  - 230 results

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Aviation Update: Oh-58d Kiowa Warrior by Scott R. Gourley The Aviation...Annual Meeting highlighted the OH-58D Kiowa Warrior as the Armys "highest OPTEMPO...projections calling for the Army to sustain Kiowa Warrior (KW) until 2025. "The venerable...
...Medicine - the Sacred Bird Shield of the Kiowa. by Ron McCoy Until the 1870s, when they...Indian Territory in what is now Oklahoma, Kiowa warriors roamed the southern Great Plains...the spirits "took pity on him," as the Kiowa said, they would manifest before him...
School Spotlight: Caddo Kiowa Technology Center CADDO KIOWA TECHNOLOGY CENTER (CKTC) IN FORT COBB, OKLAHOMA, provides...need to enter kindergarten ready for success." The Caddo Kiowa Technology Center is helping build the education foundation...
...beginning of the nineteenth century, the Kiowa, lured by the horses that could be acquired...Cheyenne and Arapaho. For some years, the Kiowa and their Comanche allies battled the southern...Little Bluff, principal chief of the Kiowa, negotiated the peace with High Backed...
...miles, which were designated National Grasslands in 1960. Kiowa National Grassland--actually two blocks of land separated...other parklands. For visitor information write: Supervisor Kiowa National Grassland Clayton, New Mexico 88415 (505) 374...
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newspaper articles on: Kiowa  - 140 results

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...hesitate to bring home another CCI puppy. Kiowa III joined the family in March. "He is...beauty." Within an hour of arriving home, Kiowa ran off with Colleens slipper, got stuck...the Brehenys have worked on teaching Kiowa such commands, as "sit," "down" and...
...foot and damaged the transmission of her Kiowa Warrior, a reconnaissance combat helicopter...happened last March. Hill, White and another Kiowa Warrior were flying convoy security for...them, Hill said. The machine guns on a Kiowa Warrior dont swivel. They face forward...
...lanes unsafely: case dropped. Demarcus P. Lymas, 18, 526 Kiowa Circle, Naperville. Possession of 10-30 grams of marijuana...court costs/fines, $175. Alicia A. Quintana, 39, 530 Kiowa Drive, Naperville. Retail theft: guilty; court costs/fines...
...To Floor in pre-production. FANG-CIBLE FACTOR: 7/10 Kiowa Gordon BORN: March 25, 1990, Peach Springs, Arizona AGE...Embry Call, Jacobs best friend. TRIVIA: Native American Kiowa is a descendent of the Hualapai tribe. He is also a Mormon...
...Pauley (special mention should also be made to the black Labrador dog Kiowa, formerly with Canine Companions for Independence and now owned by Nick Breheny of Schaumburg. Kiowa behaved well onstage and even had a comic bit in "Pyramus and Thisbe...
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encyclopedia articles on: Kiowa  - 13 results

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KIOWA ki w , Native North Americans whose language...stock (see Native American languages ). The Kiowa, a nomadic people of the Plains area, had...into contact with the Crow, who gave the Kiowa permission to settle in the Black Hills...
...Apache, including the Chiricahua, the Coyotero, and the White Mountain Apache. The Kiowa Apache in the early southward migration attached themselves to the Kiowa, whose history they have since shared. Subsistence in historic times consisted of...
...Army Artillery and Missile Center. Fort Sill was named in memory of Joshua W. Sill, a Civil War general. The Wichita, Kiowa, Comanche, and other Native American groups were given homes on the reservation and trained in agriculture; Geronimo (who...
...whose beliefs blend fundamentalist Christian elements with pan Native American moral principles. The movement began among the Kiowa about 1890 and, led by John Wilson (Big Moon), soon spread to other tribes. The sacramental food of the group was peyote...
LONE WOLF d. 1879, Kiowa Chief. He led some Kiowas on raids in 1874 after his son had been killed by whites, but he was defeated and with a number of...
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