{"id":13301,"date":"2024-01-20T16:35:12","date_gmt":"2024-01-20T15:35:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aboutriver.com\/?p=13301"},"modified":"2024-01-20T16:35:12","modified_gmt":"2024-01-20T15:35:12","slug":"what-did-the-native-americans-call-the-mississippi-river","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aboutriver.com\/what-did-the-native-americans-call-the-mississippi-river\/","title":{"rendered":"What Did The Native Americans Call The Mississippi River"},"content":{"rendered":"
\n

The Mississippi River is one of the great rivers in North America, and has played an important role in the lives of many people. In particular, various Native American tribes have had a long relationship with the river, and were the first to give it a name. This article focuses on What did the Native Americans call the Mississippi River?<\/p>\n

Returning back to history, The Mississippi River was given the name “Misi-ziibi” by the Ojibwe or Chippewa. The word comes from the Algonquian language, and translates roughly to “Great River.” This name is likely related to the days of the tribe’s grand discovery of the Mississippi. This same term was later used by the Sauk and Fox, who are also of Algonquian descent.<\/p>\n

Notably, the Mi’kmaq tribes of North America also referred to the river as “Misigamig” or “Great Waterway”. This term is slightly different from the Ojibwe’s “Misi-ziibi” which described the scale of the river only, without a specific reference to its nature. The Mi’kmaq were particularly inspired to give it a poetic name when the river provided an invaluable resource, allowing them to hunt and fish in a new way.<\/p>\n

The Mississippi River appears to have had a variety of names during the next centuries, depending on which tribe we look at. The Siouan-speaking Dakota tribes, who lived near and around it, called it “Hahatonwan”, which means “Lake of the Long Canoe”. The Chickasaw, another Siouan-speaking tribe, called it “Okhissa”, meaning “Singing River”. In other parts of the Mississippi River basin, too, different tribes have referred to it by distinct terms – the Natchez and the Quapaw, for instance, have both had their own name for the river.<\/p>\n