
Assiniboine Family, Montana, 1890-1891.
The 'Assiniboine', also known by the
Ojibwe name ''Asiniibwaan'' "Stone Sioux", and the
Cree as ''Asinîpwât'' are a
Native American/
First Nations people originally from the Northern
Great Plains area of
North America, specifically in present-day
Montana and parts of
Saskatchewan,
Alberta and southwestern
Manitoba around the
US/Canadian border. They were well known throughout much of the late
1700s and early
1800s. Images of Assiniboine people were painted by such 19th century artists as
Karl Bodmer and
George Catlin. The Assiniboine have many similarities to the
Lakota people in lifestyle, linguistics, and cultural habits, and are considered to be a band of the
Nakoda or middle division of the
Sioux. It is believed that the Assiniboine broke away from Yanktonai Nakota in the
16th century.
They are closely linked to the
Stoney First Nations people of
Alberta - who are also Siouan people who use a Nakodan variant of the
Sioux language - but they are not the same.

Assiniboine man, Montana, 1890-1891.
The Assiniboine were close allies and trading partners of the
Cree, engaging in wars against the
Atsina alongside them, and later fighting the
Blackfoot. A Plains people, they generally went no further north than the
North Saskatchewan River and purchased a great deal of European trade goods through Cree middlemen from the
Hudson's Bay Company.
The life style of this group was semi-
nomadic, and they would follow the herds of
bison during the warmer months. They did a considerable amount of
trading with European traders, and worked with the
Mandan,
Hidatsa, and
Arikara tribes, and that factor is strongly attached to their life style.
Though their description of the group was not all together favorable, the tribe's existence was noted in the journals of
Lewis and Clark on their return journey from
Fort Clatsop down the
Missouri River. They had heard rumors that this was a ferocious group, and hoped to avoid contact with them. They did not see any of these people, and were not able to prove those rumors.
The names by which the Assiniboine are usually known are not derived from the way they refer to themselves. As a Siouan people, they traditionally thought of themselves to themselves as the ''Hohe Nakota''. With the widespread adoption of English, however, many simply use the
English name consistently. ''Assiniboine'', however, is a word that English borrowed from
French, which in turn took it from the
Ojibwe word ''asinii-bwaan'' , meaning ''stone Sioux'' as well as the
Cree term ''asinîpwât.'' In the same way, ''Assnipwan'' comes from the word ''asinīpwāt'' in the western
Cree dialects, from ''asiniy'' - "stone" - and ''pwāta'' - "Sioux". Early French traders in the west were often familiar with
Algonquian languages, and many Cree or Ojibwe words for other western Canadian peoples were adopted into French in the early colonial era, and thence into English.
note: They were referred with the name "stone" because they cooked with primarily stones. They would drop hot stones into water, causing the water to boil, which would cook the meat.
Canada Steamship Lines paid tribute to them by naming one of their new ships CSL Assiniboine.
[1]
Gallery
References
1.
External links
★
Lewis & Clark Corps of Discovery encounters with Assiniboine
★
Assiniboine description at
Minnesota State University, Mankato emuseum
★
Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux History