Swampy Cree Explained

Swampy Cree (Nèhinaw)
Alternative Names:
  • Maskiki Wi Iniwak
  • Mushkegowuk
  • Maškēkowak
Descended:Cree
Branches:Western Swampy Cree, Eastern Swampy Cree
Language:N dialect
Western Swampy Cree
Alternative Names:
  • Maskiki Wi Iniwak
  • Mushkegowuk (Maškēkowak)
  • Muskegon (Western Swampy Cree)
  • Muskegoes (Western Swampy Cree)
  • West Main Cree
  • Lowland Cree
  • Lowland (Half-Homeguard) Cree
Language:N-dialect
Eastern Swampy Cree
Alternative Names:
  • Western James Bay Cree
  • Omushkego
  • Omushkegowak
Local Name:Omaškêkowak
Language:eastern dialect of the Swampy Cree language, which kept the s/š distinction

The Swampy Cree people, also known by their autonyms Néhinaw, Maskiki Wi Iniwak, Mushkekowuk, Maškékowak, Maskegon or Maskekon[1] (and therefore also Muskegon and Muskegoes) or by exonyms including West Main Cree, Lowland Cree, and Homeguard Cree,[2] are a division of the Cree Nation occupying lands located in northern Manitoba, along the Saskatchewan River in northeastern Saskatchewan, along the shores of Hudson Bay and adjoining interior lands south and west as well as territories along the shores of Hudson and James Bay in Ontario. They are geographically and to some extent culturally split into two main groupings, and therefore speak two dialects of the Swampy Cree language, which is an "n-dialect":

European contact

In Manitoba, The Swampy Cree's first recorded contact with Europeans was in 1682 at the mouth of the Nelson and Hayes rivers in northern Manitoba by a Hudson's Bay Company party travelling about 100miles inland.[3] In Ontario, contact with the Swampy Cree (Omuskegowuk) is in the early 1600s with Henry Hudson's arrival into James Bay.[4]

First Nations

Historically, the Cree nations in the central part of the Cree continuum were classified by their relationship to Hudson Bay and James Bay: Lowland (Homeguard) Cree who were found along the coast, Lowland (Half-Homeguard) Cree who seasonally transitioned between the coast and the interior, and the Upland Cree in the deep interior who often were intermixed with the Ojibwe.[5] West of these Lowland and Upland Cree were the Woodland and Plains Cree. Linguistically, the Cree are divided by their general language features, where the Cree nations in the central part of the Cree continuum are classified as "th-Cree", "n-Cree" and "l-Cree", from west to east; Cree traditionally associated with the Woodland Cree make no distinction between "s" and "š", while the Lowland and Upland Cree do. Today, together with the "n-Cree" dialect-speaking Woodland Cree, those who live in the Lowlands and Uplands who speak the "n-Cree" dialect are called "Swampy Cree", but culturally Moose Cree (the Cree speaking the "l-dialect")[6] and other peoples of the Upland including the Oji-Cree occasionally self-identify as being "Swampy Cree".[7]

West Swampy Cree

East Swampy Cree

Moose Cree

Ethnonyms

Reflecting either Swampy Cree (O)maškêko(wak) "Swampy(-ies)", or Odawa (O)mashkiigo(wag) "Swampy(-ies)"

Reflecting Swampy Cree (O)maškêko-ininiw(ak) "Swamp People"

Reflecting Ojibwe (O)mashkiigoo(g) "Swampy(-ies)"

Reflecting a translation

Other

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.pathoftheelders.com/history/chapter1 Path of the Elders
  2. Book: Victor, Lytwyn . Muskekowuck Athinuwick: Original People of the Great Swampy Land . 2002 . University of Manitoba . xi. 9780887553462 .
  3. Web site: Indian Migrations in Manitoba and the West. Hlady M.. Walter. Manitoba Historical Society.
  4. Web site: Narratives of Early Encounters between Europeans and the Cree of Western James Bay. Long S.. John. Ontario History, 80 (3), 227-245.
  5. Lytwyn, pp. 42, 52–53
  6. Honigmann, p. 218
  7. Lytwyn, p.42
  8. Rhodes, Richard and Evelyn Todd, 1981, p. 53, p. Fig. 1
  9. http://www.swampycree.com/ Swampy Cree Tribal Council Incorporated
  10. Lovisek, 1999, "Moose Cree" pp. 41–42.
  11. Ellis, C. D., 1995, p. xiv
  12. http://www.mushkegowuk.ca/ Mushkegowuk Council
  13. Lovisek, 1999, "Western Woodland Cree" pp. 43–44.