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Nez Perce
Nez
Perce, Native American group that formerly occupied
a large territory in southeastern Washington, northeastern
Oregon, and central Idaho.
The
Nez Perce are the most numerous group of related tribes
that speak Sahaptian languages (see Native
American languages).
The name Nez Perce (French for "pierced nose") was
mistakenly given to the tribe by French explorers.
The French encountered people in the region who wore
nose pendants, but these people actually belonged
to another tribe.
The
Nez Perce did not pierce their noses or wear ornaments.
The
Nez Perce followed an economy based on fishing, especially
salmon, and on vegetable staples such as the bulbs
of the camas plant, wild roots, and berries.
After
about 1700 they also kept horses and hunted buffalo.
In
winter they lived along riverbanks in villages of
long houses built of bark, mats, and skins; in summer
they camped in the mountains and in the great upland
camas meadows.
They
practiced some weaving and the decorating of buffalo
skins with paint and porcupine quills.
Their principal religious ceremony was a dance in
honor of the Guardian Spirit, their presiding deity.
War dances were also performed.
The
entire tribe was divided into more than 40 bands,
each led by a popularly selected chief. Marriage was
generally outside the band, or group.
In response to the tribe's request for instruction
in Christianity, a Protestant mission was established
at Lapwai, Idaho, in 1837.
In
1855 the Nez Perce made a treaty with the United States,
ceding the greater portion of their territory to the
U.S. government and receiving a reservation that included
the Wallowa Valley in Oregon.
When
gold was discovered in the region, the tribe was forced
to agree to surrender all its lands and to return
to a reservation at Lapwai. A band led by Chief
Joseph refused to accept the agreement, and in
1877 he was victorious in a battle with federal troops.
Joseph then led his band, which included women and
children, on a retreat of over 1,600 km (over 1,000
mi), and although pursued by federal troops that greatly
outnumbered them, the Native Americans won several
battles.
About
50 km (about 30 mi) from the safety of the Canadian
border, however, Joseph and his band were captured.
They were sent to the Indian Territory of Oklahoma
where many died. Some of the survivors were later
permitted to return to Idaho, where the majority of
the tribe now lives on the Nez Perce reservation.
Joseph
and the remainder were sent to Colville reservation
in northern Washington.
By 1990 only 4,113 people claimed to be descendants
of the tribe.
The
Nez Perce National Historical Park commemorates sites
in Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington associated
with the group's culture and history.
"Nez
Perce," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000
http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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