Pillager Band of Chippewa Indians
Pillager Band of Chippewa Indians are a historical band of Chippewa who settled at the headwaters of the Mississippi River in present-day Minnesota. Their name "Pillagers" is a translation of Makandwewininiwag, which literally means "Pillaging Men". The French called them Pilleurs, also a translation of their name. The French and Americans adopted their autonym for their military activities as the advance guard of the Ojibwe in the invasion of the Dakota country.
History
Names
Their name has been variously recorded as:- Chippeways of Leech Lake, English transliteration of French name adopted from other Algonquian-speaking people
- Pilleurs, the French name, meaning 'plunderers'
- Rogues
- Pilliers, variation of the French
- Robbers
- Pillagers
- Muk-im-dua-win-in-e-wug
- Muk-me-dua-win-in-e-wug
- Muk-un-dua-win-in-e-wing
- Mukundua
- Muk-un-dua-win-in-e-wug
- Mukundwa
- Mukkundwas
- Cypowais plunderers
- Makandwewininiwag
- ''Ma'kandwäwininiwag''
Sub-bands
- Northern Bands
- * Red Cedar Lake Band of Chippewa Indians 1
- * Turtle Portage Band of Chippewa Indians, located about Turtle River and Turtle Lake, between Leech Lake and Red Lake.2
- * Lake Winnibigoshish Band of Chippewa Indians
- Eastern Bands
- * Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe
- ** Bear Island
- ** Boy Lake
- ** Pine Point
- * Pillager
- ** Upper Crow Wing River
- ** Wing River
- Western Bands
- * Otter Tail Lake Band of Chippewa Indians
- * Otter Tail River
Unification
- Cass Lake Reservation
- Lake Winnibigoshish Reservation
- Leech Lake Reservation
When the White Earth Reservation was created in 1867, the western Pillagers living about Otter Tail Lake agreed to relocate to that reservation so they would no longer be landless.
In 1934, the Cass Lake, Lake Winnibigoshish and Leech Lake Pillagers, together with the White Oak Point Reservation of the Mississippi Chippewa and the Removable Lake Superior Chippewa Bands of the Chippewa Reservation, agreed to a merger and re-organization. Together, these central Minnesota peoples formed today's Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe, consolidated chiefly on the Leech Lake Indian Reservation.
The successors apparent of the Pillagers are:
- Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe
- White Earth Band of Chippewa