Cheyenne Indians
Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings
Scope Note: found: Greene, Jerome A. Washita: The U.S. Army and the Southern Cheyennes, 1867-1869, 2004:page 8 (Among the incipient peoples who inhabited the prairies east of the Great Plains were a group of Algonquian hunters, fishermen and agriculturalists who lived in earthen lodges. They called themselves TsisTsisTsas, meaning "the human beings" or "the people", but in time were known as "Cheyennes", a name probably given them by a Siouian-speaking neighboring tribe)
Found in 1 Collection or Record:
Robert Anderson papers
Collection
Identifier: MS 0573
Abstract
The Robert Anderson papers (1940-1990) contain correspondence, notebooks, research notes, maps, articles, news clippings, and manuscript drafts related to the life and work of this University of Utah Professor of Anthropology. Dr. Anderson's early research files concern the Cheyenne Indians. His later interest in psychiatry and anthropological theory culminated in the publication of his textbook The Cultural Context in 1976.
Dates:
1940-1990