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List of Indiana placenames of Native American origin

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Many places throughout the state of Indiana take their names from Native American indigenous languages. This list includes rivers, lakes, counties, townships and towns. Some of the names have been anglicized, while others have been translated into English or French.

The primary Native American languages in Indiana are Miami-Illinois and Potawatomi; the largest number of place names on this list are from these two languages. Some place names are derived from other native languages, such as Kickapoo, Shawnee, and the Delaware languages Munsee and Unami. These are all Algonquian languages.

This list also includes names of ultimate Native American origin even if they were not used by Native Americans as place names in Indiana, such as Osceola and Wanatah, which were named by white settlers in honor of Seminole and Dakota leaders respectively.

The name of Indiana means 'land of the Indians' or "Indian Land."[1]

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Indigenous Tribes of Indiana

[2]

  • Miami
  • Wea - The Wea were a Miami-Illinois-speaking people.
  • Piankeshaw - The Piankeshaw, Piankashaw or Pianguichia Peoples are members of the Miami Indians.
  • Potawatomi - The Potawatomi call themselves Neshnabé.
  • Kickapoo - The Kickapoo People (Kickapoo: Kiikaapoa or Kiikaapoi) are an Algonquian-speaking people.
  • Mascouten
  • Shawnee, post 1794
  • Delaware, post 1818

Places

A

B

  • Baugo is a shortening of "Baubaugo", which is claimed by some local historians to be a Potawatomi word meaning "devil" or "devil river", referring to the intensity of its floods.[7][8]

C

D

E

F

  • Fish Lake, Indiana - translated from kiteepihkwanonki ("at the buffalo fish"), probably via French Lac Tipiconeau ("buffalo fish lake").[16]

H

I

K

M

  • The Maumee River, historically also known as the "Miami" in United States treaties with Native Americans, is an anglicized spelling of the Ottawa or Odawa name for the Miami people, (o)maamii.[24] An Odawa village was located near the mouth of the Maumee in present-day Ohio. The Miami in their turn called the river the "Odawa river" taawaawa siipiwi.[25]
  • Lake Maxinkuckee is from the Miami-Illinois term meenkahsenahkiki ("it is big-stone country").[26] The Potawatomi version of the name was recorded by Jacob Piatt Dunn as Mŏgsĭ́nkiki, which appears to be a borrowing from Miami-Illinois, as it does not correspond to any known Potawatomi words.[26]
  • Metea is named for the Potawatomi warrior and leader Metea (17781827), whose name in Potawatomi means "to sulk".[27]
  • Miami - named for the Miami, a Native American people, many of whom still live in this area.[28]
  • Michigan, borrowed via French from names meaning "great water" in one or more Algonquian languages, likely with particularly heavy influence from Old Potawatomi *mesigam.[29]
  • Mississinewa River - from the Miami-Illinois name for this river, nimačihsinwi ("it lies on an incline").[30][31]
  • Mishawaka - from Potawatomi and Miami-Illinois placenames meaning "firewood-tree land", referring to the large number of standing dead trees in the area.[13]
  • Mongo - shortened from Mongoquinong, representing maankwahkionka ("in the loon land"), which was the name of one of the Miami signatories of the 1840 Treaty of the Wabash.[32]
  • Monon first landed on the map as the name of Big Monon Creek, a tributary of the Tippecanoe River. The creek's name is also recorded in early 19th-century sources as Metamonoung and Old Woman's River.[33] The name may derive from the Old Potawatomi term mdamənəg ("at the corn", modern Potawatomi mdamnəg), which may have been a Potawatomi re-analysis of the Kickapoo place name metemooheki ("at the old woman's place").[34] The Kickapoo lived in the area near the creek in the 18th century.[34]
  • Muncie, originally Munsee Town, from the name of the Munsee Delaware people, originally from Munsee mənʼsi·w.[11]

N

O

P

  • Patoka River is likely from the Miami-Illinois word paatohka, "Comanche", which appears as a personal name in some historical records.[39] It may also be from the Munsee péhtakəw ("it thunders"), referring to the noisy waterfall at Jasper, Indiana.[39]
  • Pottawattamie Park, Indiana is named for the Potawatomi, who occupied this area when it was settled.

S

T

V

W

Y

  • Yellow River (Indiana) - translation of Miami-Illinois oonsasiipi ("yellow river") or Potawatomi wezawgəməg ("at the yellow water").[63]
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See also

References

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