Wiikwemkong | |
---|---|
Wiikwemkong Unceded Reserve | |
Nickname: Wiiki | |
Coordinates: 45°42′N 81°43′W / 45.700°N 81.717°W | |
Country | Canada |
Province | Ontario |
District | Manitoulin |
First Nation | Wiikwemkoong |
Government | |
• Type | First Nation |
• Chief | Tim Ominika |
• MP | Carol Hughes (NDP) |
• MPP | Michael Mantha (NDP) |
Area | |
• Land | 412.97 km2 (159.45 sq mi) |
Population (2021)[1] | |
• Total | 8,431 |
• Density | 6.3/km2 (16/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC-5 (EST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-4 (EDT) |
Postal code span | P0P 2J0 |
Area code | 705 |
Website | www.wiikwemkoong.ca |
The Wiikwemkong First Nation is a First Nation on Manitoulin Island in Northern Ontario. The Wiikwemkong Unceded Territory (nicknamed Wiky, previously named Wikwemikong) is the First Nation reserve in the northeast of Manitoulin Island in Manitoulin District, Ontario, Canada. Wiikwemkong is an unceded Indigenous reserve in Canada, which means that it has not "relinquished title to its land to the government by treaty or otherwise."
The local Ojibwe placename is wiikwemkong (Manitoulin dialect; notice the vowel dropping) with the locative -ong ('at') form of wiikwemik 'bay with a gently sloping bottom'.[2] The spelling Wikwemikong is from dialects spoken elsewhere (or in earlier times) that retain the i. The initial element wiikwe- occurs in other forms as 'bay'; the final element -mik cannot be for amik 'beaver' (its local form is mik), a folk etymology that violates the rules for Algonquian stem formation. It can be identified as a variant of the medial element aamik-, which appears, for example, in Southwestern Ojibwe minaamikaa 'there are breakers, shoals, banks (of sand or rocks)',[3] which has initial min- 'islandlike'. The presence or absence of aa- is found in several medial elements in Ojibwe and other Algonquian languages.[4]
The reserve's former name was Manitoulin Unceded Indian Reserve. The Wiikwemkong Band changed it on August 20, 1968, to Wikwemikong Unceded Indian people.
The reserve is occupied by Ojibwa, Odawa, and Potawatomi peoples under the Council of Three Fires.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)