Blackfeet
- This article is about the Piegan Blackfoot, the band of the tribe located on the Blackfoot Nation in Montana. For the other Blackfoot bands, see Blackfoot.
From the relations of the Blackfoot language to others in the Algonquian language family indicate that they lived in an area west of the Great Lakes. Though they practiced some agriculture they were partly nomadic. They moved westward partially because of the introduction of horses and guns and became a part of the Great Plains Indians culture in early 1900. At the time there were an estimated 20,000 Blackfoot, while today there are approximately 25,000, and the population was at times dramitically lower as the Blackfeet suffered disease, starvation, and war. They held large portions of Alberta and Montana, though today the Blackfeet Reservation is the size of Delaware and the three reservations in Alberta have a smaller area. (Nettl, 1989)
The Blackfoot language is also agglutinative. The Blackfoot do not have well documented male Two-Spirits, but they do have "manly-hearted women" (Lewis, 1941) who act in much of the social roles of men, including willingness to sing alone, usually considered "immodest", and using a men's singing style. (Nettl, 1989, p.84, 125).
| Table of contents |
|
2 Source 3 External link |
See also
Source
External link