Category
page 1First Nations history in Canada
Sitting Bull
Hunkpapa Lakota medicine man and holy man (1831–1890)
War of 1812
conflict between the United States and the British Empire from 1812 to 1815
American Indian Wars
frontier conflicts between American, Canadian and European settlers and Indigenous peoples of the Americas

Pîhtokahanapiwiyin
Poundmaker ( – 4 July 1886), also known as pîhtokahânapiwiyin (), was a Plains Cree chief known as a peacemaker and defender of his people, the Poundmaker Cree Nation. His name denotes his special craft at leading buffalo into buffalo pounds (enclosures) for harvest.
Wabanaki Confederacy
Native American and First Nations confederacy
North-West Rebellion
1885 resistance by the Métis and Cree peoples against Canada
Big Bear
Cree leader (1825-1888)

buffalo jump
cliff formation of Native American historical importance used to hunt plains bison
Indian Act
1876 Canadian act of Parliament
Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
commission responsible for responding to harm inflicted on Canadian indigenous people by Canadian institutions
Numbered Treaties
series of treaties between the Government of Canada and the First Nations
Duncan Campbell Scott
Canadian civil servant and writer (1862–1947)
Irataba
Irataba ( , also known as Yara tav, Yarate:va, Arateve; – 1874) was a leader of the Mohave Nation, known as a mediator between the Mohave and the United States. He was born near the Colorado River in present-day Arizona. Irataba was a renowned orator and one of the first Mohave to speak English, a skill he used to develop relations with the United States.

Eastern Shoshone
Native American tribe in Wyoming
1837–1838 smallpox epidemic
disease outbreak in the United States
Iron Confederacy
organization
history of Saskatchewan
aspect of history
Sha-có-pay, The Six, Chief of the Plains Ojibwa
Sha-có-pay is an oil-on-canvas painting from life by American artist George Catlin, from 1832. It depicts an Indigenous American named Sha-có-pay, who was chief of the Plains Ojibwe. It was painted at Fort Union.
Mary Greyeyes
Canadian World War II servicewoman (1920-2011)
Indian Agent
Canadian colonial official supervising Indigenous peoples
Indian massacre
Wikipedia list article