When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grease:_Rise_of_the_Pink...

    June 1, 2023. (2023-06-01) Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies is an American musical romantic comedy drama television series that was created by Annabel Oakes for Paramount+. The series is a prequel to the film Grease (1978), based on the stage musical of the same name by Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey.

  3. William Bent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Bent

    William Wells Bent (May 23, 1809 – May 19, 1869) was a frontier trader and rancher in the American West, with forts in Colorado. He also acted as a mediator among the Cheyenne Nation, other Native American tribes and the expanding United States. With his brothers, Bent established a trade business along the Santa Fe Trail.

  4. Cheyenne Wells, Colorado - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheyenne_Wells,_Colorado

    Cheyenne Wells is located at (38.821141, -102.353637 [9]At the 2020 United States Census, the town had a total area of 684 acres (2.770 km 2), all of it land. [4]A small area about 10 miles southwest of Cheyenne Wells is antipodal, or globally opposite, to Île Saint-Paul, an island in the southern Indian Ocean.

  5. Cheyenne military societies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheyenne_military_societies

    Cheyenne military societies are one of the two central institutions of traditional Cheyenne native American tribal governance, the other being the Council of Forty-four. While council chiefs are responsible for overall governance of individual bands and the tribe as a whole, the headmen of military societies are in charge of maintaining ...

  6. Cheyenne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheyenne

    The Cheyenne (/ ʃaɪˈæn / shy-AN) are an Indigenous people of the Great Plains. The Cheyenne comprise two Native American tribes, the Só'taeo'o or Só'taétaneo'o (more commonly spelled as Suhtai or Sutaio) and the Tsétsêhéstâhese (also spelled Tsitsistas, [t͡sɪt͡shɪstʰɑs] [3]); the tribes merged in the early 19th century.

  7. Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheyenne_and_Arapaho_Tribes

    The Cheyenne (Tsitsistas/ The People) were once agrarian, or agricultural, people located near the Great Lakes in present-day Minnesota. Grinnell notes the Cheyenne language is a unique branch of the Algonquian language family and, The Nation itself, is descended from two related tribes, the Tsitsistas and the Suh' Tai. The latter is believed ...

  8. Lakota people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lakota_people

    Lakota people. The Lakota ([laˈkˣota]; Lakota: Lakȟóta/Lakhóta) are a Native American people. Also known as the Teton Sioux (from Thítȟuŋwaŋ), they are one of the three prominent subcultures of the Sioux people, with the Eastern Dakota (Santee) and Western Dakota (Wičhíyena). Their current lands are in North and South Dakota.

  9. Blackfoot Confederacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfoot_Confederacy

    The Blackfoot Confederacy, Niitsitapi, or Siksikaitsitapi [1] (ᖹᐟᒧᐧᒣᑯ, meaning "the people" or "Blackfoot-speaking real people" [a]), is a historic collective name for linguistically related groups that make up the Blackfoot or Blackfeet people: the Siksika ("Blackfoot"), the Kainai or Blood ("Many Chiefs"), and two sections of the Peigan or Piikani ("Splotchy Robe") – the ...