The Timpanogos (Timpanog, Utahs or Utah Indians) are a tribe of Native Americans who inhabited a large part of central Utah, in particular, the area from Utah Lake east to the Uinta Mountains and south into present-day Sanpete County.
During the mid-19th century, when Mormon pioneers entered Utah territory, the Timpanogos were one of the principal tribes in the region based on population, area occupied, and influence.
Linguists have had difficulty identifying (or classifying) their language. Historically, most communication was carried out in Spanish or English, and many of their leaders spoke several dialects of the Numic branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family.
While the Timpanogos are typically classified as Ute people, they are a Shoshone band.[1][2] Other Shoshone bands occupied parts of Utah, and historian Hubert Howe Bancroft wrote in 1882 that the Timpanogos were one of four sub-bands of the Shoshone.[3] The Shoshone and Ute share a common genetic, cultural, and linguistic heritage as part of the Numic branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family.
Name
In some accounts they were called the Timpiavat,[4] Timpanogot, Timpanogotzi, Timpannah, Tempenny, and other names.[5]
Precontact history
The Timpanogos probably entered Utah as part of the southern Numic expansion around 1000 CE (including the Ute) or in the subsequent central Numic Shoshonean expansion north and west from their Numic homelands in the Sierra Nevada.
They were hunter-gatherers, living mostly on fish and wild game caught by the men and cooked and processed by the women and on the seeds and roots of wild plants gathered and prepared by the women.
As part of their religion, in the mornings they gathered together and greeted the morning with song to express gratitude to the Creator. They were divided into clans, each with its headman, spiritual leader and warrior. The clans would band together for specific purposes, such as hunting. There was no division of the land, and people were free to travel to different villages. They developed an extensive trading network.[6]
The Timpanogos lived in the Wasatch Range around Mount Timpanogos (named after them), along the southern and eastern shores of Utah Lake of the Utah Valley and in Heber Valley, Uinta Basin and Sanpete Valley. The band around Utah Lake became dominant due to the area's food supply.[7]
During the spring spawning season at Utah Lake, the tribes hosted an annual fish festival. Timpanogos, Ute and Shoshone bands would come from 200 miles (320 km) away to gather fish.[8] At the festival there was dancing, singing, trading, horse races, gambling, and feasting. It was an opportunity for young people to find a mate from another clan, since exogamous marriage (outside their clan) was required.[6][better source needed] The shores of Utah Lake became a sacred meeting place for the Timpanogos, Ute, and Shoshone tribes.[9]
Round about it are these Indians, who live on the abundant fish of the lake, for which reason the Yutas Sabuaganas call them Come Pescados [FishEaters]. Besides this, they gather in the plain grass seeds from which they make atole, which they supplement by hunting hares, rabbits, and fowl of which there is great abundance here.[11]
The explorers named many geographic features in central Utah for the Timpanog tribe, who were then led by Turunianchi. The next recorded European visitor was Étienne Provost, a French-Canadian trapper who visited the Timpanog in October 1824;[12] the city of Provo and the Provo River are named after him. In 1826, American mountain manJedediah Smith visited a camp along the Spanish Fork (river) with 35 lodges and about 175 people.[13]
Conflicts with the Mormons
By the time Mormon pioneers arrived in the Salt Lake Valley in 1847, the Timpanogos were guided by Turunianchi's grandson, Walkara. Walkara led the tribe with a number of sub-chiefs, most of whom were his brothers: Chief Arapeen, Chief San-Pitch, Chief Kanosh, Chief Sowiette, Chief Tabby-To-Kwanah, Chief Grospean and Chief Amman. Brigham Young once called them a "royal line" of Indian chiefs, and they had hereditary leadership through their clan. Parley P. Pratt explored the Utah Valley and Utah Lake.[14]
Battle Creek massacre
The first battle between settlers and Indians, known by the Americans as the Battle Creek massacre, occurred in early March 1849 at present-day Pleasant Grove, Utah. A company of 40 Mormon men went to the Utah Valley to persuade the Timpanogos to stop stealing cattle from the Salt Lake Valley; both peoples were competing for resources. Brigham Young ordered the Mormons "to take such measures as would put a final end to their depredations in future".[15][16]
On March 10, 1849, Brigham Young ordered 30 families to colonize Utah Valley, with John S. Higbee president and Dimick B. Huntington and Isaac Higbee counselors.[8] The group of about 150 people headed for Timpanogos territory, and the Timpanogos viewed this as an invasion of their territory and sacred land.[17] As the colonizers entered the valley, they were blocked by a group of Timpanogos led by An-kar-tewets and warned that trespassers would be killed.[18] Huntington raised his hand and swore by the sun god that they would not try to drive the Timpanogos off their lands or take away their rights. The Timpanogos let them enter.[8][18]
The settlers built a stockade, Fort Utah, arming it with a twelve-pound cannon.[19] They built several log houses, surrounded by a 14-foot (4.3 m) palisade 20 by 40 rods long (330 by 660 feet [100 by 200 m]) with gates at the east and west ends and a middle deck for the cannon. The fort, built on the sacred grounds of the annual fish festival, was very close to the main Timpanogos village on the Provo River. The settlers fenced off pastures, and their cattle ate (or trampled) the seeds and berries which were an important part of the Timpanogos' diet. By fishing with gill nets they took more than they needed, leaving an insufficient amount for the Timpanogos. With their traditional food sources gone, the Timpanogos starved.[9][20][21] The settlers also brought measles, endemic to them but an unfamiliar infectious disease to the Timpanogos. Lacking acquired immunity, the natives experienced epidemics with high mortality rates which disrupted their society. They asked the settlers for medicine to fight the new disease.[9]
In August a Timpanogo, Old Bishop, was murdered by Rufus Stoddard, Richard Ivie, and Gerome Zabrisky for his shirt.[9][19][22]
By January 1850, the settlers at Fort Utah reported the increasing tension to officials in Salt Lake City and requested a military party to attack the Timpanogos. A militia from Salt Lake City engaged the Timpanogos in battle on February 8 and 11. Eleven Timpanogo warriors surrendered on February 14, but the militia executed them in front of their families and a government surgeon beheaded them after death for research. The militia lost one man and killed 102 Timpanogos.[23]
In 1861, President Abraham Lincoln signed an executive order establishing the original Uintah Valley Reservation in the eastern part of the Utah territory ... Congress ratified the order in 1864 ... A council of the Ute people was called at Spanish Fork Reservation on 6 June 1865. The aged leader Chief Sowiette (a brother of Chief Walkara, who had died 10 years before) explained that the Ute people did not want to sell their land and go away, asking why the groups couldn't live on the land together. Chief Sanpitch (another brother of Walkara) also spoke against the treaty. However, advised by Brigham Young that these were the best terms they could get, the leaders signed. The treaty provided that the Utes give up their lands in central Utah, including the Corn Creek, Spanish Fork, and San Pete Reservations. Only the Uintah Valley Reservation remained. They were to move into it within one year, and be paid $25,000 a year for ten years, $20,000 for the next twenty years, and $15,000 for the last thirty years. (This was payment of about 62.5 cents per acre for all land in Utah and Sanpete counties.) However, Congress did not ratify the treaty; therefore, the government did not pay the promised annuity. Nevertheless, in succeeding years most of the Utah Ute people were removed to the Uintah Reservation.[25]
In 1847, at the time of the Mormon pioneers' arrival, the Timpanogo population has been estimated at about 70,000; their numbers had been dwindling because of competing bands of Shoshone raiders since the early 19th century. Many died from smallpox and other infectious diseases introduced by American settlers, and an early-1850s measles epidemic was particularly devastating. Many Native American tribes had their numbers reduced by more than 90 percent as a result of disease introduced by Europeans.
The number of Timpanogos may have been less. "The exact number of all the Indians who lived in Utah Territory is unknown. An 1861 report from J. F. Collins, Utah superintendent of Indian affairs, said that no one had ever 'been able to obtain satisfactory information in regard to their numbers'. Collins estimated ... that there may have been fifteen to twenty thousand Indians (of all tribes) in Utah prior to the arrival of the first Mormon settlers" in 1847.[28]
Indian Superintendent Forney's 1859 annual report to the federal commissioner of Indian affairs provided estimates of tribal numbers:
Shoshones or Snakes – 4,500 (This did not include the Timpanogos; other Shoshone lived in northern and western Utah.)
Bannocks – 500
Uinta Utes – 1,000
Spanish Fork and San Pete Farms – 900 (farms and reservations; those on farms were Timpanogos.)
This gives a total of 18,500 Native Americans estimated to live in Utah in 1859, listing all tribes and bands by names commonly used at the time.[29]
Historical confusion
Three major groups of Ute Indian bands were placed by the federal government in the Uinta Valley Reservation during the 1880s.[30][better source needed] Afterward, the Utah Indians (or Timpanogos) became conflated with — and were often considered to have merged with — the Ute Indians in historical documents.
Although many historians refer to Sowiette, San-Pitch and their people as Utes, at the time of the Uinta treaty they were known as the Utah Indians or Timpanogos. According to some of their descendants, they became known as the Ute only after moving to the Uintah Reservation and joining other Ute there.[30][31]
In Timpanogos Tribe vs Conway, (2002), U.S. Appeals Court Judge Tena Campbell ruled: "Plaintiff asks the court to make unreasonable inferences and leap to the conclusion that because Mr. Montes and his ancestors are not Ute, the (Timpanogos Tribe), whose members include Mr. Montes, is a Shoshone tribe in existence since aboriginal times and for whom the reservation was set aside. The court will not make that leap, nor will it allow a jury to do so."[32]
According to the September 6, 1858 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Utah Superintendency, the Utah (Timpanogos) appear to have been considered separate from the Snake Indians and the other Shoshone:
The tribes and fragments of tribes with whom I had business relations ... are as follows, to wit: on the second day of December last I was visited by San-Pitch, a principal chief of the Utahs, and a few of his men ...
On the 10th of December following, Little Soldier, chief, and Benjamin Simons, sub-chief, of a band of Sho-sho-nes, with some of their principal men, called on me ... The territory claimed by them includes Salt lake, Bear river, Weber river and Cache valley ...
About the 22nd day of December last, I was visited at Camp Scott, by White-eye and San-Pitch, Utah chiefs, with several of their bands ... These Indians belong to one of the principal tribes of this Territory. There is but one other large tribe (the Snakes), as I am informed.
The best land belonging to the Utahs is situated in Utah valley ... Much has been done and is doing for this tribe, (the Utahs) ... Strenuous efforts will be made to induce this tribe (the Utahs) to locate permanently ...
I visited San-Pete creek farm [reservation] last month, (August,) which is situated in the west end of San-Pete valley and county. This farm was opened about two years ago, under the directions of Agent Hurt, for a band of the Utahs under Chief Arapeen, a brother of San-Pitch ...
I have heretofore spoken of a large tribe of Indians known as the Snakes. They claim a large tract of country lying in the eastern part of this Territory, but are scarcely ever found upon their own land. They generally inhabit the Wind river country, in Oregon and Nebraska Territories and they sometimes range as far east as Fort Laramie ... This tribe numbers about twelve hundred souls, all under one principal chief, Wash-a-kee. He has perfect command over them, and is one of the finest looking and most intellectual Indians I ever saw ...
For several years, an enmity has existed between the Utahs and the Snakes ... Accordingly, on the 13th of May, Wash-a-kee, of the Snakes, White-Eye, Son-a-at, and San-Pitch, of the Utahs, with the sub-chiefs of the different tribes, and also several chiefs of the Ban-acks, assembled in council at Camp Scott, when, after considerable talk and smoking, peace was made between the two tribes."[33]
Legal status
The Timpanogos relocated to the Uintah Valley Reservation. In court cases, they have been classified both as part of the Ute Indian Tribe and outside it.
The Ute tribe consists of bands of Uintah, White River, and Uncompahgre Ute people who were forced to relocate to Utah by the Congressional Act of 1880. They gradually intermarried, and some differences between bands lessened. Under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 (part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal), the Ute bands organized as a unified tribe with a constitution based on the election of a chief and council. Their documents did not mention the Timpanogos, who believe that the 1950s federal termination of Native American status of the Ute tribe's mixed-blood members should have had no effect on them.[citation needed][34][35]
In Hagen v. Utah (1994), 510 U.S. 399, 421–22, the US Supreme Court agreed with the state that a portion of Uintah Reservation had been reduced by Congressional action since 1985. When the state began again to prosecute Ute within the reservation in state courts for offenses, the Appeals Court brought the case back in 1997 to reconcile the boundaries of the different cases, calling it Ute V. The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that the boundary issue was resolved.
Afterward, the state began again to prosecute Ute for offenses in Indian country, apparently to challenge the court ruling. In 2015 the Appeals Court heard testimony from the Ute Indian Tribe plaintiffs and ruled that this disruptive behavior by the state and county officials had to stop, saying that the issues had been settled for nearly 20 years.
And the case for finality here is overwhelming. The defendants may fervently believe that Ute V drew the wrong boundaries, but that case was resolved nearly twenty years ago, the Supreme Court declined to disturb its judgment, and the time has long since come for the parties to accept it.
In 2000 the Timpanogos sued the state of Utah in Timpanogos Tribe v. Conway, seeking continued rights for their members for hunting, fishing, and gathering on the Uintah Valley Reservation within the boundaries established by the case known as Ute V (Ute Tribe v. Utah, 1997).[36] They sought an injunction against state prosecution within the reservation and acknowledgment by the state as the "Indians of Utah" referred to in the 1861 executive order and 1864 act of Congress establishing the reservation. The Ute Indian Tribe filed with the state against the Timpanogos, arguing that the latter was part of the Ute Tribe and not independent.
[37]
Historically, several independent bands of Utes had lived in the territory of Colorado and Eastern Utah. But their relocation by an act of Congress to the existing Uintah Valley Reservation in the 1880s had the legal effect of a treaty recognizing them as a tribe, as noted by the courts.
^"Derrotero y Diario", Early Americas digital archive, Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities, archived from the original on September 28, 2011, retrieved March 27, 2010
^Hose a Stout Diary, 8 vols., 4:48, typescript, Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. A renegade band of Ute Indians had raided herds and taken stock from Tooele Valley and southern Great Salt Lake Valley; the men had earlier declared their opposition to the white settlers. The band was led by three brothers, "Roman Nose," "Blueshirt," and possibly "Cone". Reportedly their chief had driven them out of Utah Valley because they refused to stop stealing cattle from the Mormons. See Oliver B. Huntington Diary, pp. 52–53, Lee Library.
^Note: This is in contrast with the Ute position in Ute Tribe v. Utah 773 F.2d 1087, 1093 (10th Cir. 1985) (en banc), what the parties called Ute III.
^Ute Indian Tribe v. State of Utah, et al., (D.C. Nos. 2:75-CV-00408-BSJ and 2:13-CV-01070-DB-DBP), Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals (2015). Note: The 1985 case had reaffirmed the boundaries of three areas of Ute reservation lands against the state challenge. The US Supreme Court declined to hear this case. But, the state continued to prosecute Ute persons on what was tribal reservation land and got a separate case to the state Supreme Court and the US Supreme Court.
Artikel ini tidak memiliki bagian pembuka yang sesuai dengan standar Wikipedia. Mohon tulis paragraf pembuka yang informatif sehingga pembaca dapat memahami maksud dari Hari toleransi internasional. Contoh paragraf pembuka Hari toleransi internasional adalah .... (November 2019) (Pelajari cara dan kapan saatnya untuk menghapus pesan templat ini)artikel ini perlu dirapikan agar memenuhi standar Wikipedia. Tidak ada alasan yang diberikan. Silakan kembangkan artikel ini semampu Anda. Merapikan a...
Gunung NilaTitik tertinggiKetinggian781 m (2.562 ft)[1]Koordinat6°44′S 129°30′E / 6.73°S 129.50°E / -6.73; 129.50 GeografiLetakLaut Banda, IndonesiaGeologiJenis gunungStratovulkanLetusan terakhirMei-Juni 1968 Gunung Nila adalah gunung berapi yang membentuk Pulau Nila seluas 5 × 6 km di Laut Banda, Indonesia. Gunung ini memiliki kaldera rendah yang pinggirannya bersentuhan dengan permukaan laut di sisi selatan dan timur. Gunung bera...
This article is about the headland in South Australia. For the associated locality, see Cape Borda, South Australia. Place in South AustraliaCape BordaSouth AustraliaCape Borda LighthouseCape BordaCoordinates35°44′57.2274″S 136°35′15.612″E / 35.749229833°S 136.58767000°E / -35.749229833; 136.58767000Elevation61 m (200 ft)[1]Location70 km (43 mi) west of Kingscote Cape Borda is a headland in the Australian state of South Australia...
Unit of volume This article is about a common unit of volume. For the plant commonly known as litre, see Lithraea caustica. litreOne litre is equal to the volume of a cubic decimetre.General informationUnit systemNon-SI unit accepted for use with SIUnit ofvolumeSymbolL, l[1]Named afterlitronConversions 1 L in ...... is equal to ... SI base unit 10−3 m3 U.S. customary ≈ 0.264 gallon...
Birkir Már Sævarsson Islandia kalah dari Kroasia dan meninggalkan Piala Dunia 2018Informasi pribadiNama lengkap Birkir Már SævarssonTanggal lahir 11 November 1984 (umur 39)Tempat lahir Reykjavík, IslandiaTinggi 186 cm (6 ft 1 in)Posisi bermain BekInformasi klubKlub saat ini ValurNomor 2Karier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)2018 – Valur 6 (0)Tim nasional2007 – Islandia 82 (1) * Penampilan dan gol di klub senior hanya dihitung dari liga domestik Birkir Már Sævarsso...
This article is about the visual diagram. For the geographical concept, see Mental mapping. Diagram to visually organize information A mind map about the cubital fossa or elbow pit, including an illustration of the central concept Information mapping Topics and fields Business decision mapping Data visualization Graphic communication Infographics Information design Knowledge visualization Mental model Morphological analysis Ontology (information science) Schema (psychology) Visual analytics V...
Radio station in San Benito, Texas KHKZSan Benito, TexasUnited StatesBroadcast areaRio Grande ValleyFrequency106.3 MHz (HD Radio)BrandingKiss FM 105.5 106.3ProgrammingFormatHot adult contemporarySubchannelsHD2: La Mezcla Fuego con DJ XtremeHD3: Bilingual AC “Magic”AffiliationsPremiere NetworksOwnershipOwneriHeartMedia(iHM Licenses, LLC)Sister stationsKTEX, KBFM, KQXX-FM, KVNSHistoryFirst air date1983; 41 years ago (1983)Former call signsKGAR (1983–1989)KBOR-FM (1989–...
Artikel ini perlu diwikifikasi agar memenuhi standar kualitas Wikipedia. Anda dapat memberikan bantuan berupa penambahan pranala dalam, atau dengan merapikan tata letak dari artikel ini. Untuk keterangan lebih lanjut, klik [tampil] di bagian kanan. Mengganti markah HTML dengan markah wiki bila dimungkinkan. Tambahkan pranala wiki. Bila dirasa perlu, buatlah pautan ke artikel wiki lainnya dengan cara menambahkan [[ dan ]] pada kata yang bersangkutan (lihat WP:LINK untuk keterangan lebih lanjut...
1919 friendly football match Football matchCopa Roberto CheryEstadio das Laranjeiras, venueEventFriendly match Brazil Argentina 3 3 No winner declared. The trophywas sent to C.A. Peñarol.Date1 July 1919 (1919-07-01)Venuedas Laranjeiras, Rio de JaneiroRefereeAngelo Minoli (Uru)Attendance30,000 The Copa Roberto Chery (English: Roberto Chery Cup) was a one time friendly football match realized between the national teams of Argentina and Brazil, on July 1, 1919.[1] The mat...
Queen Urraca, as depicted in the 16th-century Liber genealogiae regum Hispanie. Urraca Sánchez was an Infanta of Pamplona and Queen consort of León. Family Urraca was a daughter of Sancho I, King of Pamplona and his wife Toda of Navarre, and sister of García Sánchez I of Pamplona. She was the second wife of king Ramiro II of León, by him having two known children, later king Sancho I of León and regent Elvira Ramírez. References Viñayo González, Antonio (1998). Real Colegiata de San ...
Helen Delich Bentley Helen Delich Bentley (28 November 1923 – 6 Agustus 2016) adalah seorang politikus Amerika Serikat yang menjadi anggota Partai Republik dalam Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat Amerika Serikat dari Maryland dari 1985 sampai 1995. Sebelum masuk politik, ia menjadi wartawati maritim utama dan jurnalis.[1] Referensi ^ Dresser, Michael (August 6, 2016). Helen Delich Bentley, congresswoman who was a staunch advocate of the port of Baltimore, dies. The Baltimore Sun...
Irish nobleman Maurice FitzGeraldEarl of DesmondTenure1329-1356PredecessorNew creationSuccessorMaurice FitzMaurice FitzGeraldDied25 January 1356Dublin CastleBuriedTraleeSpouse(s)Margaret de BurghMargaret O'BrienAveline (or Eleanor)IssueMaurice FitzMaurice FitzGeraldNicholas FitzMaurice FitzGeraldGerald FitzMaurice FitzGeraldParentsThomas FitzMaurice FitzGeraldMargaret Barry or Margaret de Burgh Norman Ireland, showing the Earldom of Desmond in the southwest Maurice FitzThomas FitzGerald, 1st ...
The News Reporter11-17-2008 front pageTypeBiweekly newspaperFormatBroadsheetOwner(s)James C. HighEditorJustin SmithFounded1896LanguageEnglishHeadquarters127 W. Columbus St., Whiteville, North Carolina United StatesCirculation8,100Websitewhiteville.com The News Reporter is a broadsheet semi-weekly (Tuesday and Friday) newspaper based in Whiteville, North Carolina. The paper was founded in 1896 and serves Columbus County, North Carolina, United States. The News Reporter won the Pulitzer P...
Hand-operated drill A Persian drill is a drill which is turned by pushing a nut back and forth along a spirally grooved drill holder.[1] It was formerly used for delicate operations such as jewellery making and dentistry.[2] A ratcheting screwdriver with a spiral ratchet mechanism may be used as a Persian drill. References ^ Brown, Henry T. (1868). Five hundred and seven mechanical movements. Brown & Seward. p. 33. OCLC 6821027. ^ Nagyszalanczy, Sandor (2000). Th...
Indian film actor (1958 - 2015) Ahuti PrasadBornAdusumilli Janardhan Vara Prasad(1958-01-02)2 January 1958Koduru, Andhra Pradesh, IndiaDied4 January 2015(2015-01-04) (aged 57)Hyderabad, Telangana, IndiaOccupationActorYears active1986 - 2015 (death)SpouseVijaya Nirmala[1]Children2[2] Ahuti Prasad (born Adusumilli Janardhan Vara Prasad; 2 January 1958 – 4 January 2015) was an Indian actor who worked in Telugu film industry. He was renowned for the wide variety of rol...
Extinct group of Mammaliaformes that lived during the Upper Cretaceous through the Miocene GondwanatheresTemporal range: Late Cretaceous–Paleogene PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Skull of Adalatherium Mandible of Sudamerica Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Subclass: †Allotheria (?) Clade: †GondwanatheriaMones, 1987 Subgroups ?†Allostaffia Family †Sudamericidae †Bharattherium †Galulatherium? †Gondwanatherium †...
Un battoir à linge Le battoir à linge (connu sous le nom de thaapi en langues Haryanvi et Hindi), est un outil à main utilisé pour faire la lessive. Il est fait de bois, en forme de pelle à enfourner, mais avec un manche beaucoup plus court utilisé comme poignée. Il était utilisé pour battre les vêtements et les draps mouillés, repoussant la saleté en martelant les objets contre une planche à laver, ou contre les dalles plates établies dans la buanderie.Il a été créé en 1478...
Disambiguazione – Se stai cercando lo stato noto come Repubblica Dominicana con capitale Santo Domingo, vedi Repubblica Dominicana. Dominica (dettagli) (dettagli) (creolo delle Antille) Après Bondie, C'est La Ter(IT) Dopo il buon Dio, è la Terra(FR) Après le Bon Dieu, c'est la Terre Dominica - Localizzazione Dati amministrativiNome completoCommonwealth della Dominica Nome ufficiale(EN) Commonwealth of Dominica Lingue ufficialiinglese Altre linguefrancese, creolo delle Antille CapitaleRo...