Wikipedia:WikiProject Indigenous peoples of North America/Anishinaabe/Images
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Images
[edit]Images currently available through the en.wikipedia or the commons.wikimedia unless specified as being elsewhere.
Culture
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Birch Bark Scroll
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Calendar
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Midew in a mide-wiigiwaam (medicine lodge)
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Pictographs on Mazinaw Rock in Bon Echo Provincial Park, Ontario
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Rock painting of an underwater panther (mishibizhiw) as well as two snakes and a canoe in Lake Superior Provincial Park, Ontario
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Stereoscopic vintage photo entitled "Chippewa lodges, Beaver Bay, by Childs, B. F."
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Snowshoe dance performed by Plains Ojibwe, George Catlin
Flags, Logos and Seals
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Anishinaabe Logo
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Ottawa Tribe of Oklahoma
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Temagama Flag
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Turtle Mountain flag
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White Earth Flag
Housing
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Ojibwe Wigwam at Grand Portage by Eastman Johnson, ca. 1906
Maps
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Homelands of Anishinaabe and Anishinini, ca. 1800
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2000 US Census map of Ojibwe use
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Pre-contact distribution of the Plains Ojibwe, Southwestern Ojibwe (Chippewa), and Algonquin dialects of the Ojibwe language
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Federal and state recognition:
Yellow = states with federal-recognized tribes
Red = states with state-recognized tribes
Orange = states with both federal- and state-recognized tribes
Grey: states with neither federal- or state-recognized tribes -
Location of all Anishinaabe Reservations/Reserves and cities with an Anishinaabe population in North America, with diffusion rings about communities speaking Anishinaabe languages
Native American People
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Simon Pokagon
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Wabaunseei
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William W Warren
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Ojibway women in canoe on Leech Lake
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1800s Odawa family, Little Traverse Bay Bands
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Sha-có-pay, The Six, Chief of the Plains Ojibwa
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A-na-cam-e-gish-ca (Aanakamigishkaang / "[Traces of] Foot Prints [upon the Ground]"), Rainy Lake Ojibwe chief, painted by Charles Bird King during the 1826 Treaty of Fond du Lac & published in History of the Indian Tribes of North America.
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Five Ojibwe chiefs in the 19th century
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An Ojibwe named Boy Chief, by the noted American painter George Catlin, who made portraits at Fort Snelling in 1835. In 1845 he traveled to Paris with eleven Ojibwe, who had their portraits painted and danced for King Louis Philippe
Places of Significance
[edit]Fair use images
[edit]Images on other language Wikipedias
[edit]- AbitibiAlgonkin.jpg at hr.wikipedia
- Anishinabe.jpg at hr.wikipedia
- BirchBarkCanoe.jpg at hr.wikipedia
- "Little River Outreach" at hr.wikipedia
- "Ojibway camp" at hr.wikipedia
- Container.jpg at hr.wikipedia
- "Chippewa on a horse" at hr.wikipedia
- Maple.jpg at hr.wikipedia
- Maw-je-ke-jik.jpg at hr.wikipedia
- MoccasinGame.jpg at hr.wikipedia
- OjibwaHunter.jpg at hr.wikipedia
- Timiskaming.jpg at hr.wikipedia