Everything about Kiowa totally explained
The
Kiowa are a nation of
Native Americans who lived mostly in north
Texas,
Oklahoma and eastern
New Mexico at the time of the arrival of
Europeans. Today the Kiowa Tribe is
federally recognized, with about 12,000 members living in southwestern Oklahoma. Kiowa means "principal people" in the tribal language.
History
According to historic accounts the Kiowa resided in the northern basin of the
Missouri River where the migrating
Crow Nation first met them in the
Pryor Mountains,
then the Kiowa migrated easterly to the
Black Hills around 1650. Pushed southward by the invading
Cheyennes and
Sioux who were being pushed out of their lands in the
Great Lakes region by the
Ojibwa tribes, the Kiowa moved down the
Platte River basin to the
Arkansas River area. There they fought with the
Comanches, who already occupied the land.
In the early spring of 1790, at the place that would become
Las Vegas, New Mexico, a Kiowa party lead by war leader Guikate made an offer of peace to a Comanche party while both were visiting the home of a friend of both tribes. This led to a later meeting between Guikate and the head chief of the Nokoni Comanches. The two groups made an alliance to share the same hunting grounds and entered into a mutual defense pact. From that time on, the Comanches and Kiowa hunted, traveled, and made war together. An additional group, the
Plains Apache (also called Kiowa-Apache), affiliated with the Kiowa at this time.
The Kiowa lived a typical
Plains Indian lifestyle. Mostly
nomadic, they survived on
buffalo meat and gathered vegetables, lived in
lodges, and depended on their
horses for hunting and military uses. From their hunting grounds south of the Arkansas River the Kiowa were notorious for long-distance raids as far west as the
Grand Canyon region, south into
Mexico and
Central America, and north into
Canada.
Famous Kiowa leaders were
Dohäsan (Tauhawsin), Over-Hanging Butte, alias Little Mountain, alias Little Bluff; Guipahgah (Old Chief Lonewolf), alias Guibayhawgu (Rescued From Wolves); sub-leaders
Satanta and
Satank. In 1871 Satanta and Big Tree were accused, arrested, transported and confined at
Fort Richardson, Texas, after being convicted by a "cowboy jury" in the
Trial of Satanta and Big Tree in
Jacksboro, Texas, for participating in the
Warren Wagon Train Raid. During the transport to Fort Richardson, Satank was shot in an escape attempt by accompanying cavalry troops near
Fort Sill,
Indian Territory.
Indian Wars
After 1840 the Kiowas, with their former enemies the Cheyennes, as well as their allies the Comanches and the
Apaches, fought and raided the Eastern natives moving into the Indian Territory. The United States military intervened, and in the
Treaty of Medicine Lodge of 1867 the Kiowa agreed to settle on a reservation in southwestern Oklahoma. Some bands of Kiowas
remained at large until 1875.
On
August 6,
1901 Kiowa land in Oklahoma was opened for white settlement, effectively dissolving the contiguous reservation. While each Kiowa head of household was allotted 160 acres (320,000 m²), the only land remaining in Kiowa tribal ownership today is what was the scattered parcels of 'grass land' which had been leased to the white settlers for grazing before the reservation was opened for settlement.
Art
Kiowa artists are well known for a pictographic art form that's now referred to as "Plains Indian ledger art", and its contribution to the development of contemporary
Native American art. The earliest of these Kiowa artists were those held in captivity by the
U.S. Army at
Fort Marion in
St. Augustine, Florida, at the conclusion of the
Southern Plains Indian war
. Traditionally the artist's media for their pictographic images were natural objects and animal skins, but for the Kiowa in captivity the lined pages of the white man's record keeping books became a popular substitute, thus the name "ledger art".
Twentieth century Kiowa artists include the Kiowa Five, a group of artists who studied at the
University of Oklahoma. The "Five" referred to are the male members of the group. The pictographic art form known as "ledger art" was an Indian art form which had historically been dominated by the male members of the plains culture. However, the "Five" actually had a sixth member, a woman named
Lois Smokey
. Another prolific and significant pre-Kiowa Five artisan during the early twentieth century was Silverhorn. Well known Kiowa artists of the later twentieth century include Bobby Hill (White Buffalo),
Robert Redbird, Roland N. Whitehorse, and T. C. Cannon. The pictographic art of contemporary and traditional artist Sherman Chaddlesone has revived the ledger art form that was absent in most of the art of the Second Generation Modernists that had developed since Silverhorn and the Kiowa Five. Chaddlesone studied under Native American masters Allan Houser and Fritz Scholder and is considered a versatile and
widely respected artist
.
The influence of Kiowa art and the revival of the plains ledger art is also illustrated in the early work of
Cherokee-
Creek female artist Virginia Stroud and
Spokane artist
George Flett
. While Stroud is of Cherokee-Creek descent, she was raised by a Kiowa family and the traditions of that
culture
, and the influence of the Kiowa tradition is evident in her early pictographic images.
Kiowa author
N. Scott Momaday won the 1969
Pulitzer Prize for his novel
House Made of Dawn. Other Kiowa authors include playwright Hanay Geiogamah, poet and film maker Gus Palmer, Jr., Alyce Sadongei, and Tocakut.
Kiowa music is often noted for its
hymns that were traditionally accompanied by dance or played on the flute. Traditional performers include
Cornel Pewewardy
and Phillip "Yogi" Bread. Contemporary Kiowa musicians include Kiowa-Comanche flutist Tom Mauchahty-Ware.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Kiowa'.
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