Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin

Ho-Chunk Nation
Hoocąk
Total population
6,563 in 2010[1]
Regions with significant populations
 United States ( Wisconsin)
Languages
English, Ho-Chunk[2]
Religion
Waaksik Wosga, Native American Church[3]
Related ethnic groups
other Ho-Chunk, Otoe, Iowa people, and Missouria[3]

The Ho-Chunk Nation (Ho-Chunk language: Hoocąk) is a federally recognized tribe of the Ho-Chunk with traditional territory across five states in the United States: Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, and Missouri. The other federally recognized tribe of Ho-Chunk people is the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. The tribe separated when its members were forcibly relocated first to an eastern part of Iowa known as the Neutral Ground, then to Minnesota, South Dakota and later to the current reservation in Nebraska.[4]

Historically, the surrounding Algonquin tribes referred to them by a term that evolved to Winnebago, which was later used as well as by the French and English. The Ho-Chunk Nation have always called themselves Ho-Chunk. The name Ho-Chunk comes from the word Hocaagra (Ho meaning "voice", cąk meaning "sacred", ra being a definitive article) meaning "People of the Sacred Voice".[3]

  1. ^ Division of Intergovernmental Relations (July 2016). Tribes of Wisconsin (PDF). Madison: Wisconsin Department of Administration. p. 44. Retrieved October 9, 2016.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference ethno was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ a b c Pritzker (2000), p. 475.
  4. ^ https://www.wpm.edu/index.php/plan-visit/educators/wirp/nations/ho-chunk[permanent dead link] .

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