Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q6894651> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 28 of
28
with 100 triples per page.
- Q6894651 subject Q15336184.
- Q6894651 subject Q7482911.
- Q6894651 subject Q8499316.
- Q6894651 subject Q8667071.
- Q6894651 subject Q8977123.
- Q6894651 abstract "Template:ForThe historic Miami-Illinois people who are today referred to as the Moingona or Moingwena were close allies of or perhaps part of the Peoria. They were assimilated by that tribe and lost their separate identity about 1700. The name "Moingona" was probably the basis for the name of the City of Des Moines, the Des Moines River, and Des Moines County, Iowa.Jacques Marquette documented in 1672 that the Peolualen (the modern Peoria). and the mengakonkia (Moingona) were among the Ilinoue (Illinois) tribes who all "speak the same language."Other names for them mentioned in 1672-73 records were "Mengakoukia," and "Mangekekis."In 1673 Marquette and Louis Jolliet left their canoes and followed a beaten path away from the river out onto the prairie to three Illinois villages within about a mile and a half of each other. Marquette identified only one of the villages at the time, the peouarea, but a later map apparently by him identified another as the Moingwena. He said of the 1673 meeting that there was "some difference in their language," but that "we easily understood each other."Father Jacques Gravier reports helping the close allies "Peouaroua and Mouingoueña" deal with a common adversary in 1700.Pierre François Xavier de Charlevoix, a missionary who explored the region in 1721, recorded that "le Moingona" was "an immense and magnificent Prairie, all covered with Beef and other Hoofed Animals." He italicized the term to indicate it was a geographical term and noted that "one of the tribes bears that name." Charlevoix was a professor or belles lettres, and his spelling has come to be a preferred spelling in general and scholarly discussions.".
- Q6894651 thumbnail Iowa_1718.jpg?width=300.
- Q6894651 wikiPageExternalLink inoca_ethnohistory.htm.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q115386.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1379099.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q15336184.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1543791.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q2518090.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q3159032.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q336630.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q39709.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q492787.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q506618.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q5263526.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q715889.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q715984.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q7482911.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q8499316.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q8667071.
- Q6894651 wikiPageWikiLink Q8977123.
- Q6894651 comment "Template:ForThe historic Miami-Illinois people who are today referred to as the Moingona or Moingwena were close allies of or perhaps part of the Peoria. They were assimilated by that tribe and lost their separate identity about 1700. The name "Moingona" was probably the basis for the name of the City of Des Moines, the Des Moines River, and Des Moines County, Iowa.Jacques Marquette documented in 1672 that the Peolualen (the modern Peoria).".
- Q6894651 label "Moingona".
- Q6894651 depiction Iowa_1718.jpg.