File:Drawings from four winter counts - three Sioux and one Kiowa - representing the year 1833.png

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Four illustrations from different winter counts for the year 1833, put together.

Summary[edit]

Description
Dansk: Fire forskellige illustrationer af en mængde stjerneskud en novembernat i 1833, brugt til at huske året 1833 på; f.eks. som "vinteren da stjernerne faldt"
English: Four illustrations from different winter counts for the year 1833, put together. Made to a text about winter counts.

Page 90: ”The copy made by Lieutenant Reed was traced over a duplicate of the original, which latter was drawn on a buffalo robe by Lone-Dog, an aged Indian, belonging to the Yanktonai tribe of the Dakotas, who in the autumn of 1876 was near Fort Peck, Montana, and was reported to be still in his possession.” Page 94: ”A Minneconjou chief, The-Swan, elsewhere called The-Little-Swan, kept this record on the dressed skin of an antelope or deer, claiming that it had been preserved in his family for seventy years.”

Both from Fourth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology. Smithsonian Institution. 1882-’83. Washington, 1886. Government Printing Office.

”A most important and interesting Winter Count is that made by Battiste Good, a Brule Dakota, which was kindly contributed by Dr. William H. Corbusier, surgeon U. S. Army.” From page 268 in Tenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology. Smithsonian Institution. 1888-’89. Washington, 1893. Government Printing Office.

Picture from the Kiowa winter count kept by chief Dohasan. The year 1833 is called ”Winter that the stars fell.” From page 261 in Mooney, James: ”Calender History of the Kiowa Indians.” Bureau of American Ethnology. Seventeenth Annual Report. Part 1. Washington, 1898. Government Printing Office.
Date
Source Fourth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology. Smithsonian Institution. 1882-’83. Washington, 1886. Government Printing Office. Page 116 and Plate XX.
Author Fire forskellige indianere

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