 | | | ¿µÈ/ºñµ¥¿À | | Tribal Legacies - Last Stand at Little Big Horn |
Regular Price $29.95 Buy Info | | A historical corrective to the events and circumstances behind one of the most famous and inaccurately reported battles in history. The program invokes the views of the Lakota Sioux, Cheyenne and Crow, developed through oral histories and... | | Á¦Ç° ¼Ò°³ ÀÛǰ °ßº» ¹ø¿ª Á¦Ç° ¼Ò°³ Sioux, also known as Dakota, is spoken principally in South Dakota, and to a lesser degree in North Dakota, Montana, and Nebraska. It is the largest division of the Siouan family, which includes Winnebago, Crow, and a number of other languages. There are about 15,000 speakers of Sioux. The name Dakota is a Sioux word meaning "friends" or "allies." ¼ö »ç¶÷ ¸»°¡ ¸»ÇØÁö°í /¹Ì±¹¿¡ ¾²¿©Áø Language Family Family: North American Indian Subgroup: Siouan ÀúÀÛ±Ç ¹× µîº»; Kenneth Katzner,
The Languages of the World,
Routledge¿¡ ÀÇÇÏ¿© ÃâÆÇµÊ. ÀÛǰ °ßº» ¹ø¿ª A long time ago, the crow was a bird that was completely white. He was also a very good friend of the buffalo. When the Indians would try to catch and kill the buffalo, the crow would come and warn them. For this reason, the Indians were very angry at the crow. Finally, the Indians caught the crow. In order to punish the crow, they tied him to the top of a tall pole and built a big fire under him. As the black smoke rose, the crow became completely black. Finally, the fire burned the rope in two and the crow flew away,but he has been black ever since.
How the Crow Became Black
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