RF2NJX5YM–Chon-Ca-Pe - 1837 - Painted by Charles Bird King
RMMKNC91–Wah-Ro-Nee-Sah, Oto Chief
RFW14D94–Missouri Indian; Oto Indian; Chief of the Puncas - Karl Bodmer aquatint from Travels in the Interior of North America (Voyage dans l’intérieur)
RMMWWPBR–. Karl Bodmer lithograph of Missouria, Otoe, and Ponca Indians . 24 July 2009, 03:00 (UTC). Missouri indian Oto indian and chief of the Puncas 0040v.jpg: Karl Bodmer derivative work: Uyvsdi (talk) 89 Bodmer Missouria Otoe Ponca Indians
RF2H9RK03–Chou-Ca-Pe [ Choncape ('Big Kansas'),] an Oto [also Otoe here as Otto] chief. Native American chief of the Oto tribe who was a representative for his people and attended a delegation to Washington. By Charles Bird King from History of the Indian Tribes of North America ca. 1837-1844, hand-colored lithograph on paper, Published by McKenney and Hall
RMP7CBF1–Chiefs of the Otoe nation: N-way-ke-sug-ga, He Who Strikes Two at Once wearing necklace of bear claws and robe fringed with scalp-locks 143, and Raw-no-way-woh-krah, Loose Pipe-Stem in skin of grizzly bear and eagle feather headdress 144. Handcoloured lithograph from George Catlin's Manners, Customs and Condition of the North American Indians, London, 1841.
RMEX1XDW–Chiefs of the Otoe nation: N-way-ke-sug-ga, He Who Strikes Two at Once wearing necklace of bear claws and robe fringed with scalp-locks 143, and Raw-no-way-woh-krah, Loose Pipe-Stem in skin of grizzly bear and eagle feather headdress 144. Handcoloured lithograph from George Catlin's Manners, Customs and Condition of the North American Indians, London, 1841.
RMEF2B1X–Chon-Mon-I-Case, An Otto Half Chief
RM2WG0MAR–Map showing the lands assigned to emigrant Indians west of Arkansas and Missouri, 1836. Following passage of the Indian Removal Act in 1830, President Andrew Jackson implemented a policy of land exchanges and forced expulsion of the eastern Native Americans to regions west of the Mississippi River. It shows the approximate boundaries of the lands assigned to the relocated tribes in territories west of the Mississippi by 1836. Different shades of color are used to indicate the various tribes. The map also shows the southwestern border of the United States with Mexico, which at that time inclu
RMRGYMB6–. Bulletin. Ethnology. l^"-^s^^' f ^ ',3:^.^ W .^ i i ".s t^ ^ V- Under horsemen: August 6, 1851. Right, under figures: August 7, 1851.. Bottom: Oto Indians with a boat. May 15 ,1851.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington : G. P. O.
RMMKN665–Shaumonekusse
RMMKPADA–Assorted Radishes
RMMW25T5–. Karl Bodmer lithograph of Missouria, Otoe, and Ponca Indians . 24 July 2009, 03:00 (UTC). Missouri indian Oto indian and chief of the Puncas 0040v.jpg: Karl Bodmer derivative work: Uyvsdi (talk) 89 Bodmer Missouria Otoe Ponca Indians
RMP6H6W3–The Surrounder, Wah-no-nee-sah, an Otoe chief. His shirt is the skin of a grizzly bear with the claws on. Lithograph by J. Harris after a painting by George Catlin. Handcoloured lithograph by J. Bull from James Cowles Prichard's Natural History of Man, Balliere, London, 1855.
RMEF2B24–Hayne-Hudjihini, The Eagle of Delight.
RM2C71W5G–Wetcunie, Otoes, from the American Indian Chiefs series (N36) for Allen & Ginter Cigarettes, 1888.
RM2AN4E6B–Pioneer Spaniards in North America . oto made it his headquarters while he exploredthe neighborhood. Then occurred a singularcircumstance, the capture of a white man. Hewas none other than a lonely survivor of Narvaezsexpedition. His name was Juan Ortiz. Hehad come to Florida as a lad, had been taken butspared by the Indians, through the intercessionof a chiefs daughter, and had since lived with aneighboring tribe. He proved invaluable to theinvaders as a guide and interpreter. The fleet was unloaded, the large vessels sentback to Cuba, and the caravels kept for the ser-vice of the army. Then
RMMMJPMM–. Karl Bodmer lithograph of Missouria, Otoe, and Ponca Indians . 24 July 2009, 03:00 (UTC). Missouri indian Oto indian and chief of the Puncas 0040v.jpg: Karl Bodmer derivative work: Uyvsdi (talk) 89 Bodmer Missouria Otoe Ponca Indians
RM2R6H6HW–Ráw-no-way-wóh-krah, Loose Pipestem, a Brave. oil on canvas. Date: 1832. Museum: Smithsonian American Art Museum.
RM2CBA6YB–Otoe-Missouria Delegation, 1881.
RM2AKXDXD–North American Indians of the Plains . pecial interest because of the tendency to regulatemarriage so that it must be exogamic, or betweenindividuals from different clans and gentes, and alsobecause of the difficulty in discovering whether this isdue to the mere accident of blood relationship or someother obscure tendency. On this point, there is a largebody of special literature. An exogamic gentile system has been reported forthe Omaha, Ponca, Iowa, Oto, Missouri, Osage, andKansas. An exogamic clan system prevails among theHidatsa, Crow, and the Mandan. Among the Plateaugroup, the Arapaho, K
RM2R6H97P–No-wáy-ke-súg-gah, He Who Strikes Two at Once, a Brave. oil on canvas. Date: 1832. Museum: Smithsonian American Art Museum.
RMRGXMPN–. Bulletin. Ethnology. Oto and Ponca Indians. Left, Oto, painted by Carl Bodmer at Pilcher's Trading Post, May 12, 1834. Right, Ponca {Ce:{ SuJe-gdxe or S mo Ice-ma leer), painted by Carl Bodmer at Pilcher's Trading Post, May 11, 1833.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington : G. P. O.
RM2R6H6W2–Wah-ro-née-sah, The Surrounder, Chief of the Tribe. oil on canvas. Date: 1832. Museum: Smithsonian American Art Museum.
RMRGXJ6N–. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] OTO 1()5 tion is given by Maximilian, â who states that it was communicated to Maj. Bean, the Indian agent, by an old Oto chief. He related that, before the arrival of the whites a large band of Indians, the Hotonga ('fish-eaters'), who inhabited the lakes, migrated to the s. w. in pursuit of buffalo. At Green bay, "Wis., they di- vided, the part called by the whites Winne- bago remaining, while the rest contin- ued the journey until they reached the Mississippi at the mouth of Iowa r., where they encamped on the sand beach and again divided, one band, the
RM2R6H8K6–No-way-ke-sug-ga. Oil on paperboard. Date: ca. 1840?. Museum: Smithsonian American Art Museum.
RMRE73EX–. The earth and its inhabitants ... Geography. 192 AMAZONIA AND LA PLATA. up the surrouudiug valleys. Here are the suburbs of Icarahij, Junijaha, and S. Lourenço, the last-named originally a native settlement occupied by those Indians who had sided with the Portuguese in their wars Avith the French. Despite the vast space which it covers, Rio has a population which, according to the rough returns for 1893, cannot be estimated at more than about half a million. The official census of the municipality for 1890 gave 48,576 houses and Fig. 79.—Rio de Janeiro. Scale 1 : 90,000.. Oto 16 Feet. Depths