Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q51754> ?p ?o }
- Q51754 subject Q21029608.
- Q51754 subject Q22085197.
- Q51754 subject Q6746701.
- Q51754 subject Q6932057.
- Q51754 subject Q7069207.
- Q51754 subject Q7107997.
- Q51754 subject Q8111469.
- Q51754 subject Q8180894.
- Q51754 subject Q8181520.
- Q51754 subject Q8246885.
- Q51754 subject Q8357803.
- Q51754 subject Q8357810.
- Q51754 subject Q8647762.
- Q51754 subject Q8729560.
- Q51754 subject Q8755993.
- Q51754 subject Q8756957.
- Q51754 subject Q8864394.
- Q51754 subject Q9882964.
- Q51754 abstract "Elias Boudinot (born Gallegina Uwati, also known as Buck Watie) (1802 – June 22, 1839), was a member of a prominent family of the Cherokee Nation who was born in and grew up in present-day Georgia. His Cherokee name reportedly means either 'male deer' or 'turkey.' Educated at a missionary school in Connecticut, he became one of several leaders who believed that acculturation was critical to Cherokee survival; he was influential in the period of removal to Indian Territory. In 1828 Boudinot became the editor of the Cherokee Phoenix, the first Native American newspaper. It published in Cherokee and English, to showcase Cherokee achievements as well as to build unity within the Nation while under United States pressure for Indian Removal.In 1826, Boudinot had married Harriet R. Gold, the daughter of a prominent New England family in Cornwall, Connecticut. He met her while a student at the Foreign Mission School in town. Following his cousin John Ridge's marriage to a local woman there in 1825, Boudinot's marriage was controversial and opposed by many townspeople. The Cherokee National Council had passed a law in 1825 enabling the descendants of Cherokee fathers and white mothers to be full citizens of the Cherokee. (Formerly they had no official place in the matrilineal tribe, as children belong to their mother's clan and people.) The Boudinots returned to Georgia to live at New Echota. They reared their six children as Cherokee.Boudinot believed that removal was inevitable. He and other treaty supporters signed the Treaty of New Echota in 1835, but it was not signed by John Ross, the Principal Chief, and was opposed by most of the tribe. The following year the tribe was forced to cede most of its lands in the Southeast, and remove to the West.After Harriet died in 1836, Boudinot moved with his children to Indian Territory. He and three other Treaty Party leaders were assassinated in June 1839 by members of the Ross faction known as the National Party. The orphaned children were sent to his parents-in-law in Connecticut and went to school there. His son Elias Cornelius Boudinot was educated there and then returned west, settling in Fayetteville, Arkansas. He became an attorney and active in tribal and Democratic Party politics.".
- Q51754 birthName "Gallegina Uwati".
- Q51754 birthPlace Q1022996.
- Q51754 birthYear "1802".
- Q51754 deathDate "1839-06-22".
- Q51754 deathPlace Q2281349.
- Q51754 deathYear "1839".
- Q51754 restingPlace Q2281349.
- Q51754 spouse Q5664295.
- Q51754 thumbnail Boudinot.jpg?width=300.
- Q51754 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=YuaSjyiVc1YC.
- Q51754 wikiPageExternalLink addresswhites.pdf.
- Q51754 wikiPageExternalLink www.cherokeephoenix.org.
- Q51754 wikiPageExternalLink Article.jsp?id=h-2722.
- Q51754 wikiPageExternalLink ArticlePrintable.jsp?id=h-626;.
- Q51754 wikiPageExternalLink swatie.htm.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1022996.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1049395.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1070337.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q11201.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1125021.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1136773.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q11812.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q11815.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q11817.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1357541.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1378555.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q14708404.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1550922.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q159318.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q16826451.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q182133.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q18813.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q192989.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q1983034.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q209152.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q21029608.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q219526.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q22085197.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q2281349.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q2446215.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q2519192.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q288408.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q313595.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q3453701.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q463561.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q463587.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q493074.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q5081850.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q5092177.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q51753.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q5360470.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q5360472.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q5453618.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q5468297.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q5664295.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q6254886.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q6746701.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q6932057.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q7069207.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q7107997.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q7412967.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q745832.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q7805678.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q786008.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8111469.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8180894.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8181520.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q81931.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8246885.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8357803.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8357810.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8463.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8647762.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8676.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q868245.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8729560.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8755993.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8756957.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q8864394.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q938906.
- Q51754 wikiPageWikiLink Q976845.