The Mandan's have vivid recollections of the coming of the Hidatsa many years later and established fixed villages on the Heart River. The earliest group to leave consisted apparently of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Crow, and of these the Mandan were probably a number of years ahead of the other tribes. The Ohio valley would seem to have served as a point of dispersal where the Plains members of the Siouxan stock are supposed to have moved in four successive migrations. The eastern origin corresponds with that of the rest of the Siouxan stock to which the Mandan's, both linguistically, and to a considerable extent, culturally belong. In relating their story to Maximilian, they came from the east out of the earth and entered the Missouri at the White Earth River in South Dakota. The Mandan had a origin narrative of coming out of the earth. " Maximilian says, "After the first alliance with the Hidatsa, the Mandan's lived in eight or nine villages at and above the Heart River." These villages were abandoned between 17. Lewis and Clark wrote in their journals on March 10,1805, "The Mandan's formerly lived in six large villages at and above the mouth of the Heart River. The Mandan had not yet suffered the losses by disease and war, which caused them to leave these villages. Verendrye described the Mandan as being in full power and prosperity. According to McKenzie and Sieur de la La Verendrye, the nine villages they visited in 17, were the oldest villages. Maximilian may be recognized as the best of the various authorities. Maximilian, Prince of Wied-Neuwied, spent the winter months of 1833-34 among the Mandan. The next visitor was the artist, George Catlin, who visited in the spring of 1833. They wrote additional information about the Mandan, but mostly about the Arikara. After Henry Brackenridge and Bradbury came to the area together in 1810. Alexander Henry, a trader for the Northwest Company, came to trade fur with the Mandan in 1806. They furnish only the location and early condition of the archaeological remains both of the Mandan and Arikara. Written accounts came from Lewis and Clark who arrived among the Mandan in the fall of 1804. The first known account of the Mandan is that of the French trader, Sieur de la La Verendrye, in the fall of 1738. The oral tradition preserved the history and ceremonies of the Tribes through a strict and sacred process, thereby adding to the validity of oral tradition. This guide links the oral and written histories of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Sahnish to provide a more accurate viewpoint. The Sahnish belong to the Caddoan linguistic group, along with the Pawnee, Caddo, Wichita, Anadarko, Skidi, Tawakoni and Waco. The Mandan and Hidatsa tribes belong to the Siouan linguistic group, along with the Crow, Dakota, Lakota, Yanktonai, Assiniboine, Iowa-Oto- Missouri, Quapaw, Omaha-Ponca-Osage-Kansa. Indian nations were divided into several linguistic groups. Ethnographers (people who study cultural societies) group people by the languages they used or were likely to be used by a single group at one time. Many of the sites were of Mandan, Hidatsa, and Sahnish origins. In the 1995 the North Dakota Historical Society completed the Missouri Trench National Historical Landmark Theme Study, that summarized the archeological investigation of the Missouri River area from southern South Dakota through North Dakota to Montana. Many of these sites, although collapsed and abandoned long before, were excavated along the Missouri River during the 1950’s and 1960’s. Dates of migrations all Three Tribes have been, determined by archeological investigation of village sites constructed along the Missouri and elsewhere. According to anthropologists, the Sahnish people lived in an area that extended from the Gulf of Mexico, across Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota. The Mandan and Hidatsa believe they were, created in this area and have always lived here. The Hidatsa moved from central Minnesota to the eastern part of North Dakota near Devils Lake, and moved to join the Mandan at the Missouri River about 1600 A.D. One theory is the Mandan moved from the area of southern Minnesota and northern Iowa to the plains in South Dakota about 900 A.D., and slowly migrated north along the Missouri River to North Dakota about 1000 A.D. The Mandan and Hidatsa people were originally woodland people who moved to the plains at various times. Historians document the first tribe, to occupy this area was the Mandan with the Hidatsa, and the Sahnish moving up the river later. The Mandan, Hidatsa, and Sahnish live in the Missouri River area.
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