![](../I/The_Great_West-_its_attractions_and_resources._Containing_a_popular_description_of_the_marvellous_scenery%252C_physical_geography%252C_fossils%252C_and_glaciers_of_this_wonderful_region%253B_and_the_recent_(14595480049).jpg.webp)
Lithograph of the Stikine village at Fort Wrangell, Alaska, c. 1880.
The Stikine people (Shtaxʼhéen Ḵwáan) are a ḵwáan or regional group of the Tlingit, today based at Wrangell, Alaska.[1] Their historical territory included Wrangell Island and other islands of the Alexander Archipelago, as well as the basin of the lower Stikine River.
References
- ↑ Dean, Jonathan R. (1995). ""Uses of the Past" on the Northwest Coast: The Russian American Company and Tlingit Nobility, 1825-1867". Ethnohistory. 42 (2): 265–302. doi:10.2307/483087. ISSN 0014-1801.
See also
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