- Big Bear, also
known as Mistahi-
maskwa (Cree: ᒥᐢᑕᐦᐃᒪᐢᑿ; c. 1825 – 17
January 1888), was a
powerful and po****r Cree
chief who pla**** many
pivotal roles...
- The
White Bear
First Nations (Cree: ᐚᐱ ᒪᐢᑿ wâpi-
maskwa, ****iniboine: Matóska oyáde) are a
First Nation band
government in
southeastern Saskatchewan, Canada...
-
Little Black Bear
First Nation (Cree: ᑲᐢᑭᑌᐤ ᒪᐢᑿ ᒪᐢᑯᓯᐢ kaskitêw-
maskwa-maskosis) is a Cree and ****iniboine
First Nation in
southern Saskatchewan, Canada...
-
player to wear a
jersey with his name
written in Cree
syllabics (ᒪᐢᑲᐧ;
Maskwa)
during an
exhibition match against the
Calgary Flames on July 28, 2020...
-
Canada Warden Chris Ritchie Notable prisoners Chief Big Bear (also
known as Mistahi-
maskwa), Ken Leishman,
Thomas Hogan,
Thomas Sophonow,
James Driskell...
-
Hills (known in Cree as Maskwacheesihkare). Therefore, they were
called Maskwa Wachi-is Ininiwak,
Maskwacheesihk Wiyiniwak or Amiskwacīwiyiniwak, meaning...
-
riverside streams, by the
outlet (coming from the southwest) from Lake
Maskwa and by the
outlet (coming from the northeast) of
several lakes including...
- Cree men,
including Big Bear (Mistahi-
maskwa)
trading with
colonists at Fort Pitt, Saskatchewan, 1884...
- Muskwa-Kechika
Management Area. The name
comes from the Cree word for bear (
maskwa). The term can
refer to:
Muskwa River, a 250 km long
tributary of the Fort...
- area is
named after the
Muskwa River and
Muskwa Ranges (from the Cree:
maskwa, "bear") and the
Kechika River and
Kechika Ranges (Kechika
means "long inclining...