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[[File:Sioux flag.svg|thumb|Flag of Lakota and Dakota peoples]] | |||
The '''Lakota''' (''Lakȟóta'') are a nation in the Great Plains of [[North America]]. They include seven tribes or bands and are part of the Sioux along with the Dakota. | The '''Lakota''' (''Lakȟóta'') are a nation in the Great Plains of [[North America]]. They include seven tribes or bands and are part of the Sioux along with the Dakota. | ||
Revision as of 21:11, 2 January 2023
The Lakota (Lakȟóta) are a nation in the Great Plains of North America. They include seven tribes or bands and are part of the Sioux along with the Dakota.
History
Early history
The first relationship between the Lakota and the United States was established in 1805 by a treaty of non-aggression. The USA made similar treaties in 1815 and 1825, which did not violate Lakota sovereignty. In the early 19th century, the Lakota became dependent on horses, guns, tools, and other items from settlers. They abandoned farming and relied completely on bison hunting, increasing their dependence on weapons and ammunition from settlers.[1]
Colonization
In the 1830s, the Rocky Mountain Fur Company caused the Lakota to move south from the Upper Missouri to Upper Platte region near Fort Laramie. The 1851 Treaty of Fort Laramie reduced Lakota sovereignty and ceded a large amount of territory to the United States. After being weakened by starvation, disease, and attacks on their villages, the Lakota signed another treaty at Fort Laramie in 1868, making them dependent on the U.S. government for food and rations. The U.S. government ensured their dependence by exterminating the buffalo between 1870 and 1876.
In 1876, after Custer's Seventh Cavalry discovered gold, the United States seized the Black Hills, which was reserved to the Sioux by the 1868 treaty. After the Lakota surrendered in 1877, they also lost the area around the Powder River, and the U.S. army drove them out of Nebraska in the same year.
In 1888, a government commission arrived in Sioux territory with a proposal to reduce their land to six small reservations and open nine million acres to settlers. The commission failed to receive signatures from three-quarters of Sioux men, so they returned and forced the Sioux to sell their land for $1.50 per acre. By the 1920s, settler ranchers had occupied almost all of the best grazing lands.[1]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz (2014). An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States: 'Ghost Dance Prophecy' (pp. 186–189). [PDF] Boston, Massachusetts: Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807000403