Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Musqueam Indian Band

 
Wikipedia: Musqueam Indian Band
Territory claimed by the Musqueam Indian Band
Musqueam

The Musqueam Indian Band is a First Nations government in the Canadian province of British Columbia, and is the only Indian band whose reserve community lies within the boundaries of the City of Vancouver.

The Musqueam are the oldest-known residents of Vancouver.[citation needed] Located near their main residential area is the Musqueam midden, also known as the Great Fraser Midden,, a thousands-year old deposit of shells and other household debris. Formerly there was a second residential area near the current one, Mahlie. The area of the Musqueam Reserve is the closest Hudson's Bay Company explorer Simon Fraser made it to the Strait of Georgia; he was driven back by hostile Musqueam who had had bad experiences with white men on ships just previously. The chief Whattlekainum of the Kwantlen warned Fraser of an impending attack which is said saved his life.

Though today limited to the Fraser River banks of the city, their territory also once included Burrard Inlet until they were displaced[1] there by the expanding Squamish people and their kin, the Tsleil-Waututh. Musqueam and Squamish/Tsleil-Waututh land claims still overlap. A brief political unity was obtained in the late 19th Century and early 20th Century by Chief August Jack, aka Qahtsahlano[2], who inherited the chieftaincy of both peoples[3] and established his residence at Snauq at the mouth of False Creek, now Vanier Park just west of the Burrard Bridge, rather than choose between residence at the Capilano Reserve or at Musqueam, as either of those would have had political implications for the one not chosen.[4]

Contents

Language

Their traditional language, now nearly extinct, is Hǝn'q'ǝmin'ǝm' (usually anglicized as Hunquminum), the Downriver Dialect of the Salishan language Halkomelem, and they are closely related to neighbouring peoples of the lower Fraser River. The nearby Kwantlen and Katzie peoples just upriver share the same Hun'qumi'num' dialect, while the upriver Sto:lo people speak another dialect, Halq’əméyləm (known as the Upriver Dialect). The Straits Salish peoples of Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands of the southern Gulf of Georgia speak another dialect, Hul'qumi'num' (usually anglicized as Hulquminum).

Notes

  1. ^ Early Vancouver, Vol. I, Chapters 1-3, Maj. J.S. "Skit" Matthews
  2. ^ Early Vancouver, Vol. I, Chapters 1-3, Maj. J.S. "Skit" Matthews
  3. ^ Early Vancouver, Vol I, Maj. J.S. "Skitt" Mathews, Vancouver City Archivist, 1930
  4. ^ Early Vancouver, Vol. I, Chapters 1-3, Maj. J.S. "Skit" Matthews

External links

Further reading

  • Dunkley, Katharine. Indian Rights and Federal Responsibilities: Supreme Court Musqueam Decision. [Ottawa]: Library of Parliament, Research Branch, 1985.
  • Guerin, Arnold, and J. V. Powell. Hunq̓umỉn̉um ̉= Musqueam Language. Book 1. [Vancouver, B.C.?]: Musqueam Band, 1975.
  • Johnson, Elizabeth Lominska, and Kathryn N. Bernick. Hands of Our Ancestors: The Revival of Salish Weaving at Musqueam. [Vancouver?]: University of British Columbia, Museum of Anthropology, 1986. ISBN 0888651082
  • Suttles, Wayne P. Musqueam Reference Grammar. First Nations languages. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2004. ISBN 0774810025
  • Weightman, Barbara Ann. The Musqueam Reserve: A Case Study of the Indian Social Milieu in an Urban Environment. Seattle, Wash: University of Washington, 1978.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Musqueam Indian Band" Read more