Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Irataba> ?p ?o }
- Irataba abstract "Irataba (Mohave: eecheeyara tav [eːt͡ʃeːjara tav], also known as Yara tav, Yarate:va, Arateve; c. 1814 – 1874) was a leader of the Mohave Nation, known for his role as a mediator between his people and the United States. He was born near the Colorado River in present-day Arizona. Irataba was a renowned orator and one of the first Mohave to speak English, a skill he used to develop relations with the United States. Early records mention his large physical size and gentle demeanor. Irataba first encountered European Americans in 1851, when he assisted the Sitgreaves Expedition. In 1854, he met Amiel Whipple, then leading an expedition crossing the Colorado. Several Mohave aided the group, and Irataba agreed to escort them through the territory of the Paiute to the Old Spanish Trail, which would take them to southern California. He later helped and protected other expeditions, earning him a reputation among whites as the most important native leader in the region.Against Irataba's advice, in 1858 Mohave warriors attacked the first emigrant wagon train to use Beale's Wagon Road through Mohave country. As a result, the U.S. War Department sent a detachment under Colonel William Hoffman to pacify the tribe. Following a series of confrontations known as the Mohave War, Hoffman succeeded in dominating the natives, and demanded that they allow the passage of settlers through their territory. To ensure compliance, Fort Mohave was constructed near the site of the battle in April 1859. Hoffman also imprisoned several Mohave leaders. Having been an advocate for friendly relations with the whites, Irataba became the nation's Aha macave yaltanack, an elected, as opposed to hereditary, leader.As a result of his many interactions with U.S. officials and settlers, Irataba was invited to Washington, D.C., in 1864, for an official meeting with members of the U.S. military and its government, including President Abraham Lincoln. In doing so, he became the first Native American from the Southwest to meet an American president. He received considerable attention during his tours of the U.S. capital, and of New York City and Philadelphia, where he was given gifts, including a silver-headed cane from Lincoln. Upon his return he negotiated the creation of the Colorado River Indian Reservation, which caused a split in the Mohave Nation when he led several hundred of his supporters to the Colorado River valley. The majority of the Mohave preferred to remain in their ancestral homelands near Fort Mohave and under the leadership of their hereditary leader, Homoseh quahote, who was less enthusiastic about direct collaboration with whites. As leader of the Colorado River band of Mohave, Irataba encouraged peaceful relations with whites, served as a mediator between the warring tribes in the area, and during his later years continued to lead the Mohave in their ongoing conflicts with the Paiute and Chemehuevi.Some consider Irataba a great leader who championed peace, but others feel he should have done more to defend the Mohave way of life. The Irataba Society, a non-profit charity run by the Colorado River Indian Tribes, was established in 1970 in Parker, Arizona, where a sports venue, Irataba Hall, is also named after him. In 2002, the US Bureau of Land Management designated 32,745 acres (132.51 km2) in the Eldorado Mountains as Ireteba Peaks Wilderness. In March 2015, Mohave Tribal chairman Dennis Patch credited Irataba with ensuring that \"the Mohaves stayed on land they had lived on since time immemorial.\"".
- Irataba birthDate "1814".
- Irataba birthYear "1814".
- Irataba deathDate "1874".
- Irataba deathPlace Arizona_Territory.
- Irataba deathPlace Colorado_River_Indian_Tribes.
- Irataba deathPlace United_States.
- Irataba deathYear "1874".
- Irataba thumbnail Irataba.jpg?width=300.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink cdnc?a=d&d=DAC18651022.2.3&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN-------.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink seq-2.pdf.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink az1461.pdf.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink ?page_id=1152.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink 1up.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink 1up.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink 1up.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink mojaveindiantribe.com.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink www.crit-nsn.gov.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink 2up.
- Irataba wikiPageExternalLink books?id=2E-pQjaZNbYC&dq.
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- Irataba wikiPageLength "65667".
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- Irataba wikiPageRevisionID "687422005".
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink 35th_parallel_north.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink 6th_Infantry_Regiment_(United_States).
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Abraham_Lincoln.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Albert_S._Evans.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_L._Kroeber.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Amiel_Weeks_Whipple.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Ancestry.com.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Arizona.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Arizona_Territory.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Balduin_Möllhausen.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Pima_Butte.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Beales_Wagon_Road.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Black_Canyon_of_the_Colorado.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Boiler.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Bridge_(nautical).
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Bureau_of_Land_Management.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Cairook.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Category:1814_births.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Category:1874_deaths.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Category:Arizona_Territory.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Category:First_Nations_history.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mohave_tribe.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Category:Native_American_leaders.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_of_the_American_Old_West.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Debrille_Poston.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Chemehuevi.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Chronicling_America.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Colorado_River.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Colorado_River_Indian_Tribes.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Company_(military_unit).
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Dialect_levelling.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Dragoon.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Fitzgerald_Beale.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Eldorado_Mountains.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink European_Americans.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Executive_order.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink File:Ah-oochy_Kah-ma_and_Ireteba.jpg.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink File:Bluewater_Irataba.jpg.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Date_Creek.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Defiance,_Arizona.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Mohave.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Smith,_Arkansas.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Tejon.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Yuma.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink George_Crook.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink George_Devereux.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Gila_River.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Grand_Canyon.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Harpers_Weekly.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Hassayampa_River.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Herman_Ehrenberg.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Homoseh_quahote.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Hualapai.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Indian_reservation.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Isthmus_of_Panama.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Jack_Swilling.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Jackson_Street_(San_Francisco).
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink James_Henry_Carleton.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Christmas_Ives.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_R._Walker.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink La_Paz,_Arizona.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Lake_Mead_National_Recreation_Area.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Leanne_Hinton.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Lewis_Armistead.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Los_Angeles.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Major_general.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Maricopa_Wells,_Arizona.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Maricopa_people.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Mohave_Canyon.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Mohave_Valley.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Mohave_War.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Mohave_people.
- Irataba wikiPageWikiLink Mojave_language.