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词条 Syilx
释义

  1. HISTORY

  2. LANGUAGE

  3. GOVERMENTS

  4. SEE ALSO

  5. REFERENCES

  6. FURTHER READING

  7. EXTERNAL LINKS

{{ethnic group|
|group=Okanagan
|image=
|caption=Okanagan family, c. 1918
|poptime=
|popplace=Canada (British Columbia),
United States (Washington)
|rels=
|langs=English, Okanagan (n̓səl̓xcin)
|related=Colville, Sanpoil, Nespelem, Sinixt, Wenatchi, Entiat, Methow, Palus, Sinkiuse-Columbia, and the Nez Perce of Chief Joseph's band
}}

The Okanagan people, also spelled Okanogan, are a First Nations and Native American people whose traditional territory spans the Canada–US boundary in Washington state and British Columbia in the Okanagan Country region. They call themselves the Syilx ({{IPA-sal|sjilx}}), a term now widely used. They are part of the Interior Salish ethnological and linguistic grouping. The Okanagan are closely related to the Spokan, Sinixt, Nez Perce, Pend Oreille, Secwepemc and Nlaka'pamux peoples of the same Northwest Plateau region.

HISTORY

At the height of Okanagan culture, about 3000 years ago, it is estimated that 12,000 people lived in this valley and surrounding areas. The Okanagan people employed an adaptive strategy, moving within traditional areas throughout the year to fish, hunt, or collect food, while in the winter months, they lived in semi-permanent villages of kekulis, a type of pithouse.[1]

Chief Tonasket as a separate group from the majority of the Okanagan, whose communities remain in Canada. The Okanagan Tribal Alliance, however, incorporates the American branch of the Okanagan. The latter are part of theConfederated Tribes of the Colville, a multi-tribal government in Washington state.

The bounds of Okanagan territory are roughly the basin of Okanagan Lake and the Okanagan River, plus the basin of the Similkameen River to the west of the Okanagan valley, and some of the uppermost valley of the Nicola River. The various Okanagan communities in British Columbia and Washington form the Okanagan Nation Alliance, a border-spanning organization which includes American-side Okanogans resident in the Colville Indian Reservation, where the Okanagan people are sometimes known as Colvilles.

The today Upper Nicola Indian Band, an Okanagan group of the Nicola Valley, which was at the northwestern perimeter of Okanagan territory, are known in their dialect as the Spaxomin, and are joint members in a historic alliance with neighbouring communities of the Nlaka'pamux in the region known as the Nicola Country, which is named after the 19th-century chief who founded the alliance, Nicola. This alliance today is manifested in the Nicola Tribal Association.

LANGUAGE

{{main|Okanagan language}}

GOVERMENTS

  • Okanagan Nation Alliance
    • Westbank First Nation (Westbank)
    • Lower Similkameen Indian Band (Keremeos)
    • Upper Similkameen Indian Band (Keremeos)
    • Osoyoos Indian Band
    • Penticton Indian Band
    • Okanagan Indian Band (Vernon)
    • Upper Nicola Indian Band (Douglas Lake) - also part of the Nicola Tribal Association
    • Confederated Tribes of the Colville

SEE ALSO

  • Okanagan Trail
  • Nicola (Okanagan leader)
  • Mourning Dove (author)

REFERENCES

1. ^{{cite book| title = Okanagan Geology| editor-first = Murray A. Roed| editor-last = John D. Greenough| isbn = 0-9699795-2-5| publisher = Kelowna Geology Committee| date = 2004| pages = 71–83}}

FURTHER READING

  • Armstrong, Jeannette Dr., and Lee Maracle, Okanagan Rights Committee; Delphine Derickson, Okanagan Indian Education Resource Society, We Get Our Living Like Milk from the Land, Theytus Books, 1994
  • {{cite book|author=Boas, Franz|title=Folk-tales of Salishan and Sahaptin tribes|publisher=Published for the American Folk-Lore Society by G.E. Stechert & Co.|year=1917}}Available online through the Washington State Library's Classics in Washington History collection Includes: Okanagon tales by James A. Teit and Okanagon tales by Marian K. Gould.
  • Carstens, Peter. The Queen's People: A Study of Hegemony, Coercion, and Accommodation Among the Okanagan of Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1991. {{ISBN|0-8020-5893-0}}
  • Robinson, Harry, and Wendy C. Wickwire. Nature Power: In the Spirit of an Okanagan Storyteller. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1992. {{ISBN|1-55054-060-2}}

EXTERNAL LINKS

{{Commons category|Okanagan people}}{{NIE Poster|Okinagan}}
  • Map of Okanagan territory
  • Okanagan Tribal Alliance Homepage (Syilx.org)
    • [https://web.archive.org/web/20060924030247/http://www.syilx.org/history-origin.php "Original People", a Syilx account of their history]
    • Westbank First Nation homepage
    • Okanagan Indian Band homepage
    • Penticton Indian Band homepage
    • Osoyoos Indian Band homepage
    • Lower Similkameen Indian Band homepage
    • [https://web.archive.org/web/20011022184916/http://www.uppernicolaband.com/ Upper Nicola Indian Band homepage]
  • The bear woman: Okanagan legend about a woman kidnapped by a grizzly bear
  • Dirty boy: Okanagan legend about a woman who married the sun

5 : Syilx|Interior Salish|Native American history of Washington (state)|History of British Columbia|Native American tribes in Washington (state)

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