March 10, 2025 | Julian Karas

The Lakota: People Of The Plains


People Of The Northern Plains

The Lakota tribe are people of the North American plains who currently live in the Dakotas in the United States, as well as Saskatchewan and Alberta in Canada. However, the Lakota were once a powerful tribe whose traditional lands encompassed a much larger area where they travelled and hunted. Let's look at the incredible history and culture of the Lakota people.

Lakota Msn

Getting The Name Right

Through the centuries, the Lakota have often been called Sioux. In fact, the name Sioux and Lakota have been used interchangeably. The word "Sioux" apparently comes from the language of the Lakotas' traditional enemies, the Ojibwe, and means “snake” or “enemy”. On the other hand, “Lakota” means “friend” or “ally” in the Lakota tongue, and this is what the Lakota people prefer to call themselves.

Little, the instigator of Indian Revolt at Pine Ridge, 1890Buyenlarge, Getty Images

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The Lakota Language

The Lakota language is one of three major languages in the Sioux language family. Lakota speakers can understand and communicate with speakers of the Dakota language as well. Lakota is one of the most well-preserved of the Native American languages, with over 2,000 speakers. Lakota communities have active language immersion programs to keep their language in common use.

Seven Lakota Sioux WarriorsNPGallery, Picryl

The Bands Of The Lakota

The Lakota people are sub-divided into seven bands: the Brule, Oglala, Sans Arc, Hunkpapa, Miniconjou, Blackfoot, and Two Kettles. These bands formed on the basis of kinship, dialects, and geographic area. They live today in communities throughout North and South Dakota as part of the federally recognized Sioux Nation.

Lakota Indians, pictured 17 January 1891National Archives at College Park, Wikimedia Commons

Lakota People You May Have Heard Of

The Lakota have always been one of the biggest and most dynamic tribes of the American West. Many of their leaders and warriors gained fame during battles with the US cavalry in the 1800s. These include Sitting Bull, Red Cloud, Spotted Tail, and Crazy Horse. More recently, activists such as Russell Means and William Hawk Birdshead have become prominent voices for the Lakota to improve conditions in their territories.

Sitting Bull circa 1883David F. Barry, Bismarck, Wikimedia Commons

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Lakota Beliefs: The Power Of The Natural World

The Lakota people’s spiritual view was that there was life in every part of the natural world. Trees, rivers, rocks, and every living thing had the power of life within it. This belief system, called animism by Europeans, supported a powerful belief in the afterlife. It’s no surprise that the Lakota place a high value on living harmoniously as a part of nature.

A Pretty Group at an Indian TentJohn C.H. Grabill, Picryl

Lakota Clothing: Vivid Colors

Traditional Lakota clothing places great importance on colors, and each color has a meaning behind it. Red symbolizes courage, blue symbolizes the sky and water, while yellow indicates the sun’s warmth. Lakota headdresses are a symbol of courage, and are often decorated with eagle feathers as a mark of bravery.

Storage leather bagCleveland Museum of Art, CC0, Wikimedia Commons

Lakota Moccasins: Practicality And Beauty

Traditional Lakota moccasins are noted for their complex beadwork, deep and vibrant colors, and practical use as durable footwear for a people on the move in a harsh environment. Every pattern and color in Lakota moccasins carries a symbolic meaning, and represents an art handed down through generations of Lakota people.

Lakota Moccasins, 1880-1890 Daderot, CC0, Wikimedia Commons

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Lakota Society: A Nomadic People

Lakota society was traditionally centered around the buffalo hunt. Men were trained to be hunters and warriors, while women took care of children, made clothing, and prepared food. The complex beadwork seen in Lakota garments is an art perfected by Lakota women. The people lived in tipis made of buffalo hides, which were easy to set up, take down, and transport. But the Lakota weren’t always buffalo hunters.

Indian Encampmenteorge T. Clinton, Deer Lodge, Mont, Picryl

Lakota History: The Deepest Roots

The record of Lakota history dates back to 900 AD, the earliest recorded winter count. The winter counts are records that native people wrote on animal hides in order to mark the passage of time and important events. The tribes of the Great Plains were especially dedicated users of winter counts throughout their history.

Red Cloud and Indians Standing, Red Bear, Sons Are Young Man Afraid of His HorseLibrary of Congress, Picryl

White Buffalo Calf Woman: Where It All Began

The Lakotas' traditional history begins with the story of White Buffalo Calf Woman. The Lakota were suffering famine when two hunters saw a beautiful maiden clad in white buckskin. One of the hunters tried to seize her but vanished in a cloud of smoke. The other hunter watched and listened in awe as the woman gave him instructions for the ceremonies that would help the Lakota rise again. The Lakota have performed these ceremonies ever since.

Sioux WomenWikimedia Commons, Picryl

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Early Days Of The Lakota

The earliest records of the Lakota don’t offer exact information about where they lived in the earliest centuries of their existence. Some historians believe that the Lakota started out in the lower Mississippi valley and subsequently migrated upstream; others believe that the Lakota lived closer to the Great Lakes and contributed to the rich mound-building cultures that thrived in the region.

The plains of the Dakota SiouxEdward S. Curtis, Picryl

Hunting, Fishing, And Some Farming

The Lakotas’ oral history and legends indicate that prior to European contact, they lived in forested areas near Lake Superior, where they hunted, fished, gathered wild rice, and grew corn, though the area was at the outermost limit of suitability for farming.

Black Tail Deer, Sioux ChiefJessie Tarbox Beals, Wikimedia Commons

Centuries In The Upper Midwest

The 1600s saw the Lakota culture firmly developed in the upper Midwestern states of Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and into the Dakotas as well. But this region brought the Lakota into conflict with another powerful tribe in the area.

Lakota Indians tentsNational Archives and Records Administration, Wikimedia Commons

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Conflict And Westward Migration

The Anishinaabe and Cree people were both powerful tribes in the Great Lakes regions. The forests, meadows, and rivers of the region were the scene of an increasing amount of conflict as the 1600s drew on. Rather than continue struggling with their powerful Anishinaabe and Cree neighbors for scarce resources, the Lakota people moved west. The Great Plains were a new beginning for the Lakota.

Manoomin Picking, 1905, MinnesotaUnknown Artist, Wikimedia Commons

Saddling Up

The Lakota had always travelled and hunted on foot. But soon after they moved into the Great Plains region, they came into contact with the Cheyenne tribe, who hunted on horseback. This was a far more suitable way to get around for the Lakota, and opened up a new opportunity.

Chief American Horse Good Indian.S.D. Butcher & Son, Picryl

The Buffalo Hunt

The Lakota people quickly mastered hunting on horseback and thrived from following and hunting the vast herds of buffalo that roamed the northern plains. The animals were a source of food, clothing, and many other useful items. The Lakota population grew as the 1700s went on.

Farming Buffalo HerdThe U.S. National Archives, Picryl

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On The Banks Of The Missouri River

By the mid-1700s, the Lakota people were becoming much more numerous, but they were still confined to the east banks of the powerful Missouri River. Other major tribes were situated nearby who prevented the Lakota from migrating west across the Missouri. But that situation would soon change.

Yellow Hawk, Cheyenne River Sioux ChiefWikimedia Commons, Picryl

Their Rivals Disappeared

The coming of a smallpox epidemic in the 1770s decimated the Arikara, Mandan, and Hidatsa peoples who had previously thwarted Lakota migration west of the Missouri. In the epidemic’s aftermath, the path was open for the Lakota to move out into the vast open plains of the Dakotas and westward.

Indians of North AmericaU.S. National Archives and Records Administration, Picryl

The Pride Of The Plains

The vast territory of the northern plains of the Dakotas allowed the Lakota people to spread out further westwards into plentiful hunting grounds. The Lakota had mastered hunting on horseback for several generations as their culture began to find more room to prosper. But there was an even bigger surprise waiting for them.

Native Americans ritual Karl Bodmer, Wikimedia Commons

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A Sacred Land

As Chief Standing Bear and his Lakota migrated west, they found a land that seemingly rose out of nowhere from the flat prairies. Now known as the Black Hills, the area was already recognized as sacred by its then-residents, the Cheyenne. But this enchanting land proved an irresistible prize for the Lakota, whose amazement at the discovery soon became a desire to claim the beautiful land for themselves.

Chief Standing Bear, 1877Seth K. Humphrey, Wikimedia Commons

A New Homeland

The Cheyenne people had no intention of giving up their Black Hills territory. But the Lakota were far too powerful, and they took over the territory. The Black Hills have since become known as the center of Lakota culture. But conflict was far from over.

The North American IndiansEdward S. Curtis, Wikimedia Commons

First Encounter With The United States

The Lakota had, so far, managed to avoid any confrontations with the United States. But US independence and the relentless westward movement of the Europeans made conflicts inevitable. The first confrontation came in 1804 during the Lewis and Clark expedition, as the Lakota at first refused to allow the travellers to cross the Missouri. Armed conflict was avoided and a passage negotiated, but more troubles lay ahead.

Fort Laramie surrounded by IndiansAlfred Jacob Miller, Wikimedia Commons

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Trading Posts And Confrontation With The Arikara

The year 1823 saw the Lakota join forces with the United States to fight the Arikara people who wanted to have their own hunting and trading activities west of the Missouri. The promise of spoils from the defeated Arikara and greater power west of the Missouri was a strong inducement to the Lakota to help out the United States army. But the Lakota could not avoid conflict with the US for much longer.

Native Indian on a horseUnknown Artist, Wikimedia Commons

Fort Laramie

The US army established Fort Laramie in 1851 at an important trail junction for travellers heading west. The new fort was built without permission on the traditional lands of the Lakota and Arapaho people. But the Lakota and other tribes agreed to allow safe passage to travellers in exchange for an annuity from the federal government. This agreement was called the Treaty of Fort Laramie. Unfortunately, it wouldn’t bring peace.

Interior of Fort LaramieAlfred Jacob Miller, Wikimedia Commons

The Black Hills Enshrined

The Treaty of Fort Laramie had a provision that guaranteed official rights to the Black Hills for the Lakota people. Though this news caused dismay among other tribes, the Lakota were by no means secure in their sacred land. A huge wave of newcomers was about to surge into the area.

Spotted Tail, Dakota NaraU.S. National Archives and Records Administration, Picryl

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More Settlers, More Conflict

The discovery of gold in Colorado brought settlers flocking into the area. With no regard for the Treaty of Fort Laramie, they set up roads, settlements, and mining operations. Clashes between the Lakota and the US army ensued, and the situation would soon come to the very heartland of the Lakota.

Chief American Horse, SiouxBoston Public Library, Picryl

A Brief Respite

While the US Civil War raged, the pace of migration into Lakota territory slowed down a bit. But the end of that terrible conflict ushered in a new flood of settlers to the region. These newcomers were drawn by the promise of gold, and they were prepared to ignore treaties in order to get their hands on it. The Lakota and their allies, the Northern Cheyenne and Arapaho, would have none of it.

Indians of North AmericaBoston Public Library, Picryl

Red Cloud’s War

The Oglala chief Red Cloud led an alliance of Lakota, Arapaho, and Cheyenne against the encroachment of US army and settlers in the Powder River region. He and his men emerged victorious in Red Cloud’s War, signing another treaty at Fort Laramie in 1868. This gave the Lakota permanent ownership of the Black Hills and a huge reservation covering the western Dakotas and Nebraska. But the triumph was short-lived.

Red Cloud and American HorseWikimedia Commons, Picryl

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Loss Of The Buffalo

Hunting by settlers and diseases destroyed huge swathes of the buffalo herds that had once filled the Great Plains. As many of the biggest herds began to disappear, the Lakota found it much harder to survive. There was more bad news on the way as well.

A buffalo stands in a body of waterLibrary of Congress, Picryl

Black Hills Gold Rush

Gold had been discovered in the Black Hills and the existing treaty protections did nothing to deter men gripped by gold fever who continued to push into Lakota territory. A Lakota delegation travelled to Washington DC imploring President US Grant to enforce the treaty. The attempt failed. Now a new Lakota leader stepped forward.

The Badland Formations of the Black Hills RegionO'Harra, Cleophas C, Picryl

Sitting Bull Takes Command

Though some Lakota leaders tried to talk the settlers out of coming to the Black Hills, others were prepared to stand and fight. One such leader was Sitting Bull, who soon gathered all the Lakota bands to unite together to resist the incursions into their traditional lands.

Sitting Bull and Buffalo BillWikimedia Commons, Picryl

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Sitting Bull’s Eerie Dream

As the Lakota refused US demands to return to the reservations, the US cavalry gathered in the region to force the Lakota to submit. In the days leading up to the fateful confrontation, Sitting Bull reported a vivid dream of US cavalrymen falling in the hundreds from the sky. He believed it was an omen of victory. He wouldn’t have to wait long to see if his dream would come true.

Lakota American Indian Leaders, Fort Laramie, 1868Courtesy Edward Clown Family, Picryl

A Shattering Victory

US General George Custer thought there were only women and children at the Lakota camp on the banks of the Little Bighorn River. In fact, the whole warrior contingent was present. They turned on Custer’s men and wiped them out in one of the most shattering defeats ever suffered by the US army. At the Battle of Little Bighorn, Sitting Bull’s dream became a reality. But US forces continued to close in.

Charles Marion Russell - The Custer Fight (1903)Wikimedia Commons, Picryl

A Painful Loss

While the Lakota and their allies had won a historic victory, there was no way to stop the US forces as they continued to pursue the Lakota people. The US government seized the Black Hills and forced the Lakota people onto the Sioux Reservation.

He Dog in 1877Wikimedia Commons, Picryl

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Wounded Knee Tragedy

The Lakota people hit a tragic low point in 1890 at the Pine Ridge Reservation. Fear, mistrust, poor training, and out-and-out racism were a deadly combination as more than 100 Lakota were slain by US cavalrymen near Wounded Knee Creek. The Miniconjou chief Spotted Elk was one of the many victims. Sitting Bull also lost his life to US military action earlier that year.

Wounded Knee Occupation, 1973Bettmann, Getty Images

The Lakota Today

Today the Lakota mostly live on five reservations in western South Dakota. They have additional territory in Montana, and there are several bands in southern Saskatchewan and Manitoba in Canada. The population of the Lakotas numbers over 70,000.

Sitting Bull Haranguing the Sioux VillageEdwin Willard Deming, Picryl

Looking To The Future

While the Lakota people have survived hardships that few other peoples have had to endure, the conditions on Lakota reservations are still marked by a high poverty rate, unemployment, lack of access to health care, and historical traumas. While the conditions are far from ideal, the Lakota still maintain their traditions and language with pride, courage, and an eye to the future.

A photograph of a group of Sioux children.Wikimedia Commons, Picryl

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11


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