Noquet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Noquet
A Michigan Historical Marker mentioning the Noquet at Little Bay de Noc
Total population
No longer exists as a distinct tribe
Regions with significant populations
United States (Upper Peninsula of Michigan)
Languages
Noquet (extinct)
Religion
Indigenous religion
Related ethnic groups
Menominee, Ojibwe, Odawa

The Noquet (/ˈnk/, also spelled Nocquet, Noque, or Noc among others)[a] were a tribe of Native Americans who lived in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.[4] They spoke their own language in the Algonquian family, and are believed[who?] to have been most closely related to, and subsequently absorbed by, the Menominee people.[2][5]

Their name lives on in various places they inhabited throughout the peninsula, including Big Bay de Noc, Little Bay de Noc, Bay de Noc Township, and the Noquemanon River (today known as the Dead River), in addition to Lake Noquebay in northern Wisconsin.[1][2][4][6] The tribe's name is derived from a Proto-Algonquian phrase meaning 'bear claw' or 'bear foot'.[2][3][4][7] As of the 1800s, there remain no Native Americans who are recognized or identified as Noquet, either individually or collectively.[2]

Pre-colonial era

Notes

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI