Bodéwadmi

E92413

Bodéwadmi are an Algonquian-speaking Indigenous people of the Great Lakes region in North America, known in English as the Potawatomi.


Statements (70)
Predicate Object
instanceOf Algonquian language
Algonquian-speaking people
First Nations
Indigenous language of North America
Indigenous people
Native American tribe
Potawatomi leader
forced march
tribal confederation
alsoKnownAs Bodewadmi
Potawatomi
Pottawatomie
country Canada
United States
culturalArea Northeastern Woodlands
endonymMeaning keepers of the fire
ethnicity Bodéwadmi
ethnographicRegion Great Lakes tribes
experienced forced removal
hasFederallyRecognizedTribe Citizen Potawatomi Nation
Forest County Potawatomi Community
Hannahville Indian Community
Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi
Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians
Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation
hasFederallyRecognizedTribeIn United States
hasFirstNation Walpole Island First Nation
Wasauksing First Nation
hasFirstNationIn Canada
hasMember Bodéwadmi
Odawa
Ojibwe
hasNotableLeader Simon Pokagon
kinshipWith Odawa
Ojibwe
languageFamily Algonquian languages
memberOf Council of Three Fires
nativeName Bodéwadmi
notableEvent Potawatomi Trail of Death
participant Bodéwadmi
partOf Algonquian peoples
primaryLanguage Potawatomi language
religion Midewiwin
Protestant Christianity
Roman Catholicism
traditional Potawatomi spirituality
traditionalCrop beans
corn
squash
traditionalHousing wigwam
traditionalRegion Great Lakes region
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Michigan
Nebraska NERFINISHED
Oklahoma
Ontario
Wisconsin
traditionalSubsistence agriculture
fishing
gathering wild rice
hunting
treatyPartyTo Treaty of Chicago
Treaty of Fort Wayne (1809)
Treaty of Greenville
Treaty of Tippecanoe
UNESCOStatusOfLanguage endangered
writingSystem Latin script


Please wait…