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Cree

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Cree
Nēhilawē
Nēhiyaw camp near Vermilion, Alberta
Total population

over 200,000

Regions with significant populations
Canada, United States
Languages
Cree, English, French
Related ethnic groups
Métis, Oji-Cree, Ojibwe

Cree is one of the largest group of indigenous peoples in North America, located mainly across Canada and historically in the United States from Minnesota westward but are found today in Montana.

The Cree are generally divided into major groups: Naskapi, Montagnais, Attikamekw, James Bay Cree, Moose Cree, Swampy Cree, Woods Cree and Plains Cree. However, among the Cree, they usually referred to themselves collectively as Nēhilawē[1] (those who speak our language); they called themselves "Cree" only when speaking English or French.[2]

Skilled buffalo hunters and horsemen, the Plains Cree were allied to the Assiniboine and the Sioux before encountering English, Scottish (especially Orcadian) and French settlers in the 16th century.

Contents

[edit] Name

The name "Cree" is an exonym derived from the French "Christenaux" (also as "Knistenaux", "Cristeneaux" and many other variations) that is commonly shortened to "Cri,"[3] after their village of Kenisteniwak.[4] However, among the Cree, depending on the community, they may call themselves as the Nehiyaw, Nehithaw, Nehilaw, Nehinaw, Ininiw, Ililiw, Iynu or Iyyu. These peoples can be divided into two major groups, those that identify themselves using a derivative of their historical appellation Nēhilawē (meaning "[those who] speak our Nation's language") and those identifying themselves using a derivative of their historical appellation Iliniw (meaning "person" or "man").[5] Both groups share a common ancestry but are now divided mainly along linguistic lines. Those residing west of the Ontario border (except for the Rocky Cree sub-group of the Swampy Cree, and one group residing in Quebec mistakenly called Attikamek but who self-identify as Nehiraw) all the way to the Rocky Mountains tend to refer to themselves using the first name, "Nehilaw". The second group includes the Rocky Cree and all the groups east of James Bay, who tend to use the term for man "Iliniw".[citation needed]

[edit] Language

Main article: Cree language

The Cree language (also known as Cree-Montagnais, Cree-Montagnais-Naskapi) is the name for a group of closely-related Algonquian languages spoken by approximately 117,000 people across Canada, from the Northwest Territories to Labrador, making it by far the most spoken aboriginal language in Canada.[6] Despite numerous speakers within this wide-ranging area, the only region where Cree has any official status is in the Northwest Territories alongside 8 other aboriginal languages.[7][8]

Fore-mentioned two major groups speak mutually-intelligible Cree dialect continuum can be divided by many criteria. In a dialect continuum, "It is not so much a language, as a chain of dialects, where speakers from one community can very easily understand their neighbours, but a Plains Cree speaker from Alberta would find a Québec Cree speaker difficult to speak to without practice."[9]

One such major division between both groups, however, is that the Eastern group palatalizes the sound /k/ to either /ts/ (c) or to /tʃ/ (č) when it precedes front vowels. There is also a major difference in grammatical vocabulary (particles) between the groups. Within both groups there is another set of variation around the pronunciation of the Proto-Algonquian phoneme *l, which can be realized as /l/, /r/, /y/, /n/ or /ð/ (th) by different groups. Yet in other dialects, the distinction between /e:/ (ē) and /i:/ (ī) have been lost, merging to the latter. In more western dialects, the distinction between /s/ and /ʃ/ (š) have been lost, both merging to the former.

If you compare the consonants /p/ /t/ /c/ and /k/*[10] to their English counterparts, it is noticeable that there is little distinction of voicing. In English voicing marks the difference of meaning in words such as bin : pin. Since there is not distinction of voicing in Cree, it is common for variants of /t/ to sound more like /d/ without any difference in meaning. [11]

[edit] In Canada

Nehiyaw Girl (1928).

The Cree are the largest group of First Nations in Canada, with over 200,000 members and 135 registered bands.[12] This large number may be due to the Cree's traditional openness to inter-tribal marriage. Together, their reserve lands are the largest of any First Nations group in the country.[12] The largest Cree band and the second largest First Nations Band in Canada after the Six Nations Iroquois is the Lac La Ronge Band in northern Saskatchewan.

The Métis (from French Métis - any person of mixed ancestry) are people of mixed ancestry such as Nehiyaw (or Anishinaabe) and French, English, or Scottish heritage. According to the Canadian Government's Indian and Northern Affairs, the Metis were historically the children of French fur traders and Nehiyaw women or, from unions of English or Scottish traders and Northern Dene women (Anglo-Métis). It is now generally accepted though in academic circles that the term Métis can be used to refer to any combination of persons of mixed Native American and European heritage. Although, historical definitions for Metis remain. Canada's Indian and Northern Affairs specifically but broadly define Metis to be those persons of mixed First Nation and European ancestry.

[edit] In the United States

Though at one time located in northern Minnesota, North Dakota and Montana, today the Cree population in the United States can be found as part of the Chippewa Cree tribe, located on Rocky Boy Indian Reservation, which is shared with a Pembina Band of Chippewa Indians forming the "Chippewa" half of the Chippewa Cree tribe. Traditionally, the southern limits of the Cree Territory in the United States was the Missouri and the Milk Rivers in Montana.

[edit] Cree First Nations

A Nehiyaw woman (right)
Northern James Bay Cree (Wiinibeyk Iiyuu)
Southern James Bay Cree (Nuuchcimiihc Iiyuu)
Moose Cree
Swampy Cree (Maškēkowak / nēhinawak)
Woods Cree (Sakawiyiniwak / nīhithawak)
Rocky Cree
Plains Cree (nēhiyawak)

[edit] Notable Cree

Mähsette Kuiuab, chief of the Cree indians

See: Cree people

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "[T]heir native name", see David Thompson: Travels in Western North America 1784-1812.
  2. ^ David Pentland, "Synonymy" in Handbook of North American Indians, vol. 6, June Helm, ed., Smithsonian Institution, Washington (1981), 227.
  3. ^ David Thompson recorded "The French Canadians...call them 'Krees', a name which none of the Indians can pronounce...", "Life with the Nahathaways" in David Thompson: Travels in Western North America 1784-1812, Victor G. Hopwood, ed., Macmillan of Canada, Toronto (1971), p. 109.
  4. ^ Edward S. Curtis's The North American Indian - Uncorrected OCR Text for volume 18
  5. ^ David H. Pentland, "Synonymy" in "West Main Cree", in Handbook of North American Indians, June Helm, ed., Smithsonian Institution 1981, Washington, D.C., v. 6, p. 227.
  6. ^ Statistics Canada: 2006 Census
  7. ^ Northwest Territories Official Languages Act, 1988 (as amended 1988, 1991-1992, 2003)
  8. ^ The western group of languages includes Swampy Cree, Woods Cree and Plains Cree, and the eastern language is called Moose Cree; see "Languages of Canada", Ethnologue Languages of the World, http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=canada, accessed 21 September 2008.
  9. ^ "Cree", http://www.languagegeek.com/algon/cree/nehiyawewin.html, accessed 21 September 2008.
  10. ^ * Most dialects have these consonants.
  11. ^ Wolfart, H. C., and Janet F. Carroll. Meet Cree: A Guide to the Language : Second Edition. New York: University of Alberta P, 1981
  12. ^ a b Source: Canadian Geographic
  13. ^ Moose Cree First Nation community profile

Sacred Legends of the Sandy Lake Cree. James R. Stevens, McClelland and Stewart Ltd, 1971

[edit] External links


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