Fine-Day
Fine Day or Kamiokisihkwew (Miyo-Kîsikaw) (c. 1852 – c. 1935) was a Cree war chief of the River People band of Plains Cree. He participated in the North-West Rebellion of 1885. During the Battle of Cut Knife, he acted as the Battle Chief, taking control of the war fighting parties from the political chief, Poundmaker. When Fine Day's men gained the upper hand and started to pursue the retreating Canadian soldiers, he was restrained by Poundmaker from doing so.
Described by a contemporary as "brave in all things," he was a skilled warrior, hunter, trapper and (in later life) a powerful shaman.[1]
Fine Day's memories of the North-West Rebellion were published by the Canadian North-West Historical Society in 1926.[2]
David G. Mandelbaum, in the introduction to his extensive study of the Plains Cree cites Fine Day as his principal informant.
References
- ^ Mandelbaum, David G. (1940). The Plains Cree: An Ethnographic, Historical, and Comparative Study. New York: Aims Pr Inc. ISBN 978-0-404-15626-8.
- ^ FINEDAY. Incidents of the Rebellion, as Related by Fine Day (Canadian North-West Historical Society, Publications, vol. 1, number 1, Battleford, Saskatchewan, 1926)
- Cree people
- Indigenous leaders in Saskatchewan
- People of North-Western Territory
- People of the North-West Rebellion
- Pre-Confederation Saskatchewan people
- 1850s births
- 1930s deaths
- Canadian animists
- Religious figures of the indigenous peoples of North America
- Indigenous peoples of North America biography stubs