- The Piankeshaw,
Piankashaw or
Pianguichia were
members of the
Miami tribe who
lived apart from the rest of the
Miami nation,
therefore they were known...
-
lived along the
Meramec River (″River of the ugly fish″) Piankeshaw,
Piankashaw, Pianguichia; autonym: Peeyankihšiaki (″those who separate″ or ″those...
-
living on the
Wabash River (in present-day Indiana) with
peoples of the
Piankashaw and the Kickapoo. The
surviving Mascouten are
noted in
United States records...
-
British and as "La Demoiselle" by the French, was an eighteenth-century
Piankashaw chieftain who
fought against the
French in 1747. In
November 1750, he...
-
called the
Arcadia Valley, was the
hunting grounds of the
Piankashaw Indians. The
Piankashaws had a
famous chieftain, Sauk-Ton-Qua.
Because the name was...
- year before. The
Pepikokia also joined,
having merged with the Wea and
Piankashaw in the
later part of the 18th century. In 1851, an
Indian agent reported...
-
Iroquois Confederacy Seven Nations of
Canada Wabash Confederacy (Wea,
Piankashaw, and others)
Illini Confederacy Wyandot Mississaugas Menominee Shawnee...
-
Joseph Butler,
English priest,
theologian (b. 1692) June 21 – Old Briton,
Piankashaw chieftain (b. c. 1695) July 20 –
Johann Christoph Pepusch,
German composer...
- Delaware, Shawnee, Ottawa, Chippewa, Potawatomi, Eel River, Wea, Kickapoo,
Piankashaw, and
Kaskaskia - Greenville,
August 3, 1795". "Treaty:
Ratified Indian...
- over 64. It is a part of
Quapaw Public Schools. The Peoria, Kaskaskia,
Piankashaw, and Wea
formed the
Confederated Peoria Tribe,
which in 1867
bought land...