Alaskan Athabaskans
The Alaskan Athabascans, Alaskan Athapascans or Dena are Alaska Native peoples of the Athabaskan-speaking ethnolinguistic group. They are considered the descendants of the original inhabitants of the interior of Alaska.
Formerly they identified as a people by the word Tinneh. Taken from their own language, it means simply "men" or "people".
Subgroups
In Alaska, where they are the oldest, there are eleven groups identified by the languages they speak. These are:- Dena’ina or Tanaina
- Ahtna or Copper River Athabascan
- Deg Hit’an or Ingalik
- Holikachuk
- Koyukon
- Upper Kuskokwim or Kolchan
- Tanana or Lower Tanana
- Tanacross or Tanana Crossing
- Upper Tanana
- Gwich'in or Kutchin
- Hän.
Life and culture
The Athabascan people hold potlatches which have religious, social and economic significance.
Dogs were their only domesticated animal, but were and are an integral element in their culture for the Athabascan population in North America.
History
Athabascans are descended from Asian hunter-gatherers, likely originally native to Mongolia, who crossed the Bering Strait and settled in North America.Notable Alaskan Athabascans
- George Attla was a champion sprint dog musher.
- Poldine Carlo was an American author and Athabascan elder.
- Kathleen Carlo-Kendall is a professional sculptor.
- Quinn Christopherson is an American singer-songwriter. He won the 2019 Tiny Desk Contest with his entry "Erase Me," a song describing his experience with male privilege and erasure as a transgender man.
- Peter Kalifornsky is an author and oral storyteller.
- Emil Notti is an American engineer, indigenous activist and democratic politician who was key in the development of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.
- John Sackett served in the Alaska [House of Representatives] from 1967 to 1971 and in the Alaska Senate from 1973 to 1987.
- Michael Stickman is the First Chief of the Nulato Tribal Council.
- Mary TallMountain was a poet and storyteller of mixed Scotch-Irish and Koyukon ancestry.
- F. Kay Wallis is traditional healer and member of Alaska House of Representatives.
- Siobhan Wescott, physician and public health advocate; she has served as director of the American Indian Health Program and is a professor of American Indian health at the University of Nebraska.