EditorialPa tah lom boo, Tartar Brigadier-General, Second Class Mandarin, or Blue Button, with Some Members of His Family., Pierre Joseph Rossier (Swiss, 1829 - about 1883), Negretti & Zambra (British, active 1850 - 1899), 1858?1859, Albumen silver print.
EditorialHa-w?n-je-tah, One Horn, Head Chief of the Miniconjou Tribe. Date/Period: 1832. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 736.60 mm (29 in); Width: 609.60 mm (24 in).
EditorialThe Black Hawk, Muck-a-tah-mish-o-kah-kaik, chief of the Sauk or Sac nation. "He was dressed in a plain suit of buckskin, with a string of wampum in his ears and on his neck, and held in his hand his medicine-bag, which was the skin of a black hawk, an...
EditorialMuk-a-tah-rnish-o-kali-kaik, the Black Hawk. A chief. The Natural History of Man; comprising inquiries into the modifying influence of physical and moral agencies of the different tribes of the human family. London, 1845. Source: 10007.d.23 plate XXXI.
EditorialHa-w?n-je-tah, One Horn, Head Chief of the Miniconjou Tribe. Date/Period: 1832. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 736.60 mm (29 in); Width: 609.60 mm (24 in).
EditorialPeoria men Pah-me-cow-e-tah, Man Who Tracks 193, and Kee-mo-ra-ni-a, No English 194. Warriors Ni-a-co-mo, To Fix with the Foot 195, and Men-son-se-ah, Left Hand 196 with stone hatchet, of the extinct Piankeshaw nation. Handcoloured lithograph from Geor...
EditorialMeskwaki warriors Muk-a-tah-mish-o-kah-kaik, Black Hawk 283, his son Nah-se-us-kuk, Whirling Thunder 284, Wah-pe-kee-suck, White Cloud or the Prophet 285, and Wee-sheet, Sturgeon's Head 286. Handcoloured lithograph from George Catlin's Manners, Customs...
EditorialSioux chiefs: warrior Tehan-dee, Tobacco 92, chief of the Yanc-ton band Toh-ki-ee-to, Stone with Horns, with neck and arms tattooed in gunpowder and vermilion 93. Sioux daughter of Black Rock, Wi-looh-tah-eeh-tchah-ta-mah-nee, Red Thing that Touches in...
EditorialHa-na-tah-nu-mauh, Wolf Chief, head chief of the Mandan people, in dress of skins and headdress of raven quills. Handcoloured lithograph from George Catlin's Manners, Customs and Condition of the North American Indians, London, 1841.
EditorialSioux chief Ha-won-je-tah, One Horn, of the Mee-ne-cow-e-gee band, named for a single shell hanging from his neck. In a robe of elk skins fringed with porcupine quills and scalp-locks. Handcoloured lithograph from George Catlin's Manners, Customs and C...
EditorialDog Feast with dog meat given by Sioux chiefs He-wan-je-tah and Tehan-dee for visitors including George Catlin, and the body-suspension ritual of Looking at the Sun performed by a Sioux brave with splints skewered into his chest tied to a pole while me...
EditorialThe Black Hawk, Muck-a-tah-mish-o-kah-kaik, chief of the Sauk or Sac nation. "He was dressed in a plain suit of buckskin, with a string of wampum in his ears and on his neck, and held in his hand his medicine-bag, which was the skin of a black hawk, an...