i:chi_isaac
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Chief Isaac, //Azhanta// and // | Chief Isaac, //Azhanta// and // | ||
- | Golan (Klukwan) and Madaka (Fort Selkirk) had one surviving child, Isaac, chief at Aishihik.((Dakeyi Teaching Guide: Southern Tutchone Place Names,// Yukon Native Language Centre, 1997: 63.)) | + | Golan (Klukwan) and Madaka (Fort Selkirk) had one surviving child, Isaac, chief at Aishihik. Chief Isaac had two Indigenous names and one, Gats' |
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- | Chief Isaac of Aishihik | + | |
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- | Mary Jacquot tells a story about how Chief Isaac saved his people from starvation by shooting a cow moose with a bow and arrow and feeding the people in his camp very slowly, so they would not get sick. He also took some meat to the starving people at Asheyi village where some people had already died. This was during the coldest winter in history. Gats' | + | |
- | Chief Isaac was the guide for Glave and Dalton when they wandered into Southern Tutchone territory in 1890-91.((Catherine McClelland, “The Girl Who Married the Bear: A Masterpiece of Oral Tradition.” Publications in Ethnology; 2. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada. 1970: 53-54. 2008 website: http:// | + | Chief Isaac was the guide for Glave and Dalton when they wandered into Southern Tutchone territory in 1890/91.((Catherine McClelland, “The Girl Who Married the Bear: A Masterpiece of Oral Tradition.” Publications in Ethnology; 2. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada. 1970: 53-54. 2008 website: http:// |
- | Isaac Creek, west of Aishihik Lake, is named for Chief Isaac.((// | + | Isaac Creek, west of Aishihik Lake, is named for Chief Isaac.((// |
i/chi_isaac.1727397858.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/09/26 17:44 by sallyr