Nakota
Nakota is the endonym used by those Native peoples of North America who usually go by the name of Assiniboine, in the United States, and of Stoney, in Canada.
The Assiniboine branched off from the Great Sioux Nation around 1640 and moved further west from the original territory in the woodlands of what is now Minnesota into the northern and northwestern regions of Montana and North Dakota in the United States, and Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta in Canada.
Linguistic history
Historically, the tribes belonging to the Sioux nation known as the Oceti Sakowin have generally been classified into three large regional groups:- Lakota, who form the westernmost group;
- Eastern Dakota, consisting of the four eastern bands: Mdewakanton, Sisseton, Wahpeton, Wahpekute;
- Western Dakota, previously designated the Nakota, consisting of the two central bands: Yankton and Yanktonai.
For a long time, very few scholars criticized this classification. Among the first was the Yankton/Lakota scholar Ella Deloria.
In 1978, Douglas R. Parks, A. Wesley Jones, David S. Rood, and Raymond J. DeMallie engaged in systematic linguistic research at the Sioux and Assiniboine reservations to establish the precise dialectology of the Sioux language. They ascertained that both the Santee and the Yankton/Yanktonai referred to themselves by the autonym Dakota. The name of Nakota was exclusive usage of the Assiniboine and of their Canadian relatives, the Stoney. The subsequent academic literature, however, especially if it is not produced by linguistic specialists, has seldom reflected Parks and DeMallie's work. The change cannot be regarded as a subsequent terminological regression caused by the fact that Yankton-Yanktonai people lived together with the Santee in the same reserves.
Currently, the groups refer to themselves as follows in their mother tongues:
- Dakota people – Dakota, Santee, Yankton and Yanktonai
- Lakota people – Lakota or Teton Sioux
- Nakota – the Assiniboine and the Stoney
Present trends
"As descendants of the great Sioux nations, the Stoney tribal members of today prefer to conduct their conversation and tribal business in the Siouan mother tongue". Saskatchewan's Assiniboine and Stoney tribes also claim identification with the Sioux tradition.
The Assiniboine-Stoney tribes have supported recent "pan-Sioux" attempts to revive the native languages. Their representatives attend the annual "Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Language Summits." Since 2008, these have been sponsored by Tusweca Tiospaye, the Lakota non-profit organization for the promotion and strengthening of the language. They promote a mission of "Uniting the Seven Council Fires to Save the Language".