Wikibooks: Canadian History/The People of the Lands/Chipewyan

= Overview = Chipewyan comes from a Cree term meaning ‘pointed skins ’ but they called themselves ‘Dene’ which means people. They speak a language which belongs to a branch the northeastern Athapaskan language family. Their ancestors were the Taltheilei. = Fur trade = Before the Europeans’ arrival t...

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Language:English
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Online Access:https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Canadian_History/The_People_of_the_Lands/Chipewyan
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spelling ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:39263:224710 2024-06-23T07:52:06+00:00 Wikibooks: Canadian History/The People of the Lands/Chipewyan https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Canadian_History/The_People_of_the_Lands/Chipewyan eng eng Book ftwikibooks 2024-06-09T12:11:50Z = Overview = Chipewyan comes from a Cree term meaning ‘pointed skins ’ but they called themselves ‘Dene’ which means people. They speak a language which belongs to a branch the northeastern Athapaskan language family. Their ancestors were the Taltheilei. = Fur trade = Before the Europeans’ arrival they inhabited the Northwest an area dominated by the Canadian shield along with three other nations the Ojibwa the Assiniboin and the Cree. Historically the Chipewyan lived on the tundra for parts of the year and hunted the migratory herds of Barren Ground caribou. Families would gather to form hunting groups that would coalesce and disperse with the herds. Leaders were chosen for ability wisdom and generosity and had limited authority. Later lured by the fur trade they left the tundra to take up year round residence in the boreal forests to the south. This opened up a gap in the tundra for the Caribou Inuit who had traded their traditional marine lifestyle to follow the caribou. Because of the location of their land the Chipewyan played a large part in establishing the fur trade. In the 1770s guides from the Chipewyan nation helped guide Samuel Hearne’s exploration of Rupert’s Land. As posts were built around Lake Athabasca they became the main suppliers. According to Chipewyan tradition it was a young woman named Thanadelthur who introduced her people to the Europeans. This successful meeting led to the establishing of Prince of Wales Fort or Churchill in 1760 by the Hudson Bay Company for the Chipewyan fur trade. Competition in the fur trade created hostility between many first native groups including the Chipewyan with their southern neighbours the Cree and the Inuits who were to the north. = Expansion = By the early 19th century the fur trade has expanded west from Hudson Bay to Great Slave Lake. Likewise the Chipewyan extended their territories south to the full boreal forest where fur bearing animals were more abundant. Some even ventured into the northern edge of the parkland to hunt bison. Not ... Book Chipewyan Great Slave Lake Hudson Bay inuit inuits Lake Athabasca Tundra WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks Hudson Bay Hudson Great Slave Lake ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500) Parkland ENVELOPE(-120.570,-120.570,55.917,55.917)
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description = Overview = Chipewyan comes from a Cree term meaning ‘pointed skins ’ but they called themselves ‘Dene’ which means people. They speak a language which belongs to a branch the northeastern Athapaskan language family. Their ancestors were the Taltheilei. = Fur trade = Before the Europeans’ arrival they inhabited the Northwest an area dominated by the Canadian shield along with three other nations the Ojibwa the Assiniboin and the Cree. Historically the Chipewyan lived on the tundra for parts of the year and hunted the migratory herds of Barren Ground caribou. Families would gather to form hunting groups that would coalesce and disperse with the herds. Leaders were chosen for ability wisdom and generosity and had limited authority. Later lured by the fur trade they left the tundra to take up year round residence in the boreal forests to the south. This opened up a gap in the tundra for the Caribou Inuit who had traded their traditional marine lifestyle to follow the caribou. Because of the location of their land the Chipewyan played a large part in establishing the fur trade. In the 1770s guides from the Chipewyan nation helped guide Samuel Hearne’s exploration of Rupert’s Land. As posts were built around Lake Athabasca they became the main suppliers. According to Chipewyan tradition it was a young woman named Thanadelthur who introduced her people to the Europeans. This successful meeting led to the establishing of Prince of Wales Fort or Churchill in 1760 by the Hudson Bay Company for the Chipewyan fur trade. Competition in the fur trade created hostility between many first native groups including the Chipewyan with their southern neighbours the Cree and the Inuits who were to the north. = Expansion = By the early 19th century the fur trade has expanded west from Hudson Bay to Great Slave Lake. Likewise the Chipewyan extended their territories south to the full boreal forest where fur bearing animals were more abundant. Some even ventured into the northern edge of the parkland to hunt bison. Not ...
format Book
title Wikibooks: Canadian History/The People of the Lands/Chipewyan
spellingShingle Wikibooks: Canadian History/The People of the Lands/Chipewyan
title_short Wikibooks: Canadian History/The People of the Lands/Chipewyan
title_full Wikibooks: Canadian History/The People of the Lands/Chipewyan
title_fullStr Wikibooks: Canadian History/The People of the Lands/Chipewyan
title_full_unstemmed Wikibooks: Canadian History/The People of the Lands/Chipewyan
title_sort wikibooks: canadian history/the people of the lands/chipewyan
url https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Canadian_History/The_People_of_the_Lands/Chipewyan
long_lat ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500)
ENVELOPE(-120.570,-120.570,55.917,55.917)
geographic Hudson Bay
Hudson
Great Slave Lake
Parkland
geographic_facet Hudson Bay
Hudson
Great Slave Lake
Parkland
genre Chipewyan
Great Slave Lake
Hudson Bay
inuit
inuits
Lake Athabasca
Tundra
genre_facet Chipewyan
Great Slave Lake
Hudson Bay
inuit
inuits
Lake Athabasca
Tundra
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