OJIBWA

ōjĭbˈwāˌ, –wə or Chippewachĭpˈəwäˌ, –wə, group of Native North Americans whose language belongs to the Algonquian branch of the Algonquian-Wakashan linguistic stock (see Native American languages). Their name also occurs as Ojibway and Chippeway, but they are not to be confused with the Chipewyan. In the mid-17th cent., when visited by Father Claude Jean Allouez, they occupied the shores of Lake Superior. They were constantly at war with the Sioux and the Fox over possession of the rich fields of wild rice in this region. When the Ojibwa received (c.1690) firearms from the French, they drove the Fox from N Wisconsin. They then turned against the Sioux, compelling them to cross the Mississippi River. The Ojibwa continued their expansion W across Minnesota and North Dakota until they reached the Turtle Mts. in N central North Dakota. This group became the Plains Ojibwa.

In 1736 the Ojibwa obtained their first foothold E of Lake Superior, and after a series of engagements with the Iroquois, they obtained the peninsula between Lake Huron and Lake Erie. Thus by the mid-18th cent. they controlled a large area from the eastern shore of Lake Huron in the east to the Turtle Mts. in the west. The Ojibwa, one of the largest tribes N of Mexico, then numbered some 25,000. They were allied with the French in the French and Indian Wars and with the British in the War of 1812. After the War of 1812 they made a treaty with the United States, and since that time they have lived on reservations in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Montana.

Traditionally the Ojibwa, except for the Plains Ojibwa, were a fairly sedentary people who depended for food on fishing, hunting (deer), farming (corn and squash), and the gathering of wild rice. They obtained and used maple sugar and smoked kinnikinnick, a tobacco made from dried leaves and bark. The characteristic dwelling was the wigwam. The Ojibwa had a unique form of picture writing that was intimately connected with the religious and magico-medical rites of the Midewiwin society.

Today the Ojibwa, or Chippewa, constitute the third largest Native American group in the United States, numbering over 100,000 in 1990. Their numerous bands include the Turtle Mountain, Sault Ste. Marie, Red Lake, Minnesota, Lac Courte Oreilles, White Earth, Leech Lake, Bad River, and others. More than 76,000 live in Canada, in 125 bands. While some Ojibwa are engaged in the traditional occupations of hunting, fishing, and harvesting wild rice, others run manufacturing and casino businesses. Some bands are still seeking redress for the loss of hunting and fishing rights stemming back to treaties made in the 1850s..

See F. Densmore, Chippewa Customs (1929, repr. 1970); R. Landes, Ojibwa Sociology (1937, repr. 1969) and Ojibwa Woman (1938, repr. 1971); H. Hickerson, The Chippewa and Their Neighbors (1970).

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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: Ojibwa  - 735 results

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...pictographs on scrolls made from birch bark. Ojibwa and Chippewa are two names for the same...lodges, the midewiwin have helped the Ojibwa/Chippewa people to remember traditions...Songs are also an important part of Ojibwa/Chippewa oral tradition. just as there...
...Atlas of Canada , 1915, may 17 . The Ojibwa territory just touches into this zone...Honigmann, 1953 . 4 On the south, Ojibwa occupy the northern parts of Minnesota...Figure 1 shows the location of many of the Ojibwa bands in this region, and the key names...
...reflected his personal knowledge of the Ojibwa. Like a number of other poems in the...Longfellow used were necessarily those of the Ojibwa because no other comparable collection...that I have listed in my Concordance of Ojibwa Narratives in the Published Works of Henry...
...Quotations from Vecsey, Traditional Ojibwa Religion, 62, 72, 75. See also Nichols...History of the Ojibway; Ruth Landes, The Ojibwa Woman (New York: Columbia University...Press, 1976); A. Irving Hallowell, Ojibwa World View, in Roger Cowen, ed., The...
...Quotations from Vecsey, Traditional Ojibwa Religion , 62, 72, 75. See also Nichols...History of the Ojibway ; Ruth Landes, The Ojibwa Woman New York: Columbia University Press...Press, 1976 ; A. Irving Hallowell, "Ojibwa World View," in Roger Cowen, ed...
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journal articles on: Ojibwa  - 253 results

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...Elaine Gray. "I Will Fear No Evil": Ojibwa-Missionary Encounters along the Berens...Elaine Gray. "I Will Fear No Evil": Ojibwa-Missionary Encounters along the Berens...removed from the shores of Michigan, the Ojibwa living along Lake Winnipeg emigrated from...
...Jesuites Chez Les Amerindiens Ojibwas. Histoire et Ethnologie Dune...jesuites chez les Amerindiens ojibwas. Histoire et ethnologie dune...jesuites et les Amerindiens ojibwas du XVIIe siecle au XXe siecle...figure ambivalente du trickster ojibwa prend le dessus et le lecteur...
...Landes and the Creation of the "atomistic Ojibwa" by Joan A. Lovisek , Tim E. Holzkamm...Landes depiction of the Boundary Waters Ojibwa. Based on field work in the 1930s, the "Emo" Ojibwa were characterized ahistorically by Landes...
...and Boasian Texts: the Ojibwa Ethnography of Ruth Landes...the second edition of The Ojibwa Woman published in 1971: she was highly skilled in Ojibwa womens crafts, and was...talk reflectively in the Ojibwas rather whining, nasal...
...James C. Young.) The other site is an Ojibwa community in Manitoba, Canada. This...which led to an appreciation that the Ojibwa might be an illuminating contrast with Pichataro. (Rather than "Ojibwa," the terms Anishinaabe, or its plural...
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magazine articles on: Ojibwa  - 60 results

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Ojibwa Warrior: Dennis Banks and the Rise of the...Indian Movement. by Gerald F. Kreyche OJIBWA WARRIOR Dennis Banks and the Rise of the...others will sing his praises. Born on the Ojibwa (Chippewa) reservation of Leech Lake in...
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newspaper articles on: Ojibwa  - 29 results

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...people in North America, not just the Ojibwa tribe to which Kiraly has allied herself...down. Kiraly found her connection to the Ojibwa people after attending several Native American ceremonies. At one of these an Ojibwa grandmother from Canada told her that...
...West Co. in 1815. Then we encounter Ojibwa working among wigwams in their encampment...wigwams - permanent structures." The Ojibwa used two spruce trees and birch bark to...and keep mosquitoes away. In winter, Ojibwa stuffed moss in wigwam walls for insulation...
...4 feet and was of black and Chippewa (Ojibwa) ancestry. Orphaned by age 5, Lewis...Hiawatha" was obviously inspired by the Ojibwa background of the heroine of Henry Wadsworth...Longfellows epic poem . Lewis mother was Ojibwa. Lewis also made a bust of Longfellow...
...of Toronto. Then mum Sharon met and married Jerry Twain, an Ojibwa Indian forester - who became the girls adoptive dad, and two...cradle of country music, Nashville. Her name, Shania, is an Ojibwa word which means `Im on my way... and never a truer word...
...Participants in snowshoe weaving will choose one of three kinds: the Ojibwa, an elongated trail shoe coming to a point on each end; the...functional snowshoes. Available designs are Alaskan, Bear Paw and Ojibwa. Shoes will be complete with the exception of varnishing...
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encyclopedia articles on: Ojibwa  - 29 results

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OJIBWA ojib wa , w or Chippewa chip wa , w , group...fields of wild rice in this region. When the Ojibwa received (c.1690) firearms from the...them to cross the Mississippi River. The Ojibwa continued their expansion W across Minnesota...
...Marie and began his ethnological researches. Having married the half-Ojibwa daughter of a fur trader, Schoolcraft learned the Ojibwa language and a great deal of Ojibwa lore. His area of administration as Indian agent was later considerably...
...language of the Woodland Cree greatly resembles that of the Ojibwa . A warlike tribe, the Cree were nevertheless friendly toward...States, some of them sharing a reservation in Montana with the Ojibwa. See L. Mason, The Swampy Cree (1967); E. T. Denig...
...French arrived, the dominant groups of Native Americans were the Ojibwa in the east and the Sioux in the west. Both were friendly to...Minneapolis. Treaties (1837, 1845, 1851, and 1855) with the Ojibwa and the Sioux, by which the U.S. government took over Native...
...In 1678 he set out on an expedition to Lake Superior to pacify the indigenous people and end the Ojibwa-Sioux War. Going as far as the Ojibwa village at Mille Lacs Lake in Minnesota, he claimed the upper Mississippi region for France. He...
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