The Denaüina ( ; Inland Denaüina: ; Upper Inlet Denaüina: ; ), or formerly Tanaüina or Kenai people (), are an Alaska Native Athabaskan people. They are the original inhabitants of the south central Alaska region ranging from Seldovia in the south to Chickaloon in the northeast, Talkeetna in the north, Lime Village in the northwest and Pedro Bay in the southwest. The Denaüina homeland () is more than in area. They arrived in the south-central Alaska sometime between 1,000 and 1,500 years ago. They were the only Alaskan Athabaskan group to live on the coast. The Denaüina have a hunter-gatherer culture and a matrilineal system. The Iditarod Trail's antecedents were the native trails of the Denaüina and Deg Hitüan Athabaskan Native Alaskans and the Inupiaq Inuit.
Their neighbors are other Athabaskan peoples and Yupik peoples: Deg Hitüan (northwest), Upper Kuskokwim (central north), Koyukon (northeast), Lower Tanana (a little part of northeast), Ahtna (east), Pacific Yupik (, 'slaves'; Chugach Sugpiaq, south-southeast from Kenai Peninsula to Prince William Sound, and Koniag Alutiiq, south on Kodiak Archipelago and the Alaska Peninsula), and Central Yupik (, 'down-river people', west and southwest).
Name
The name "DenaâÂÂina" comes from two parts: dena meaning "person" and ina, the human plural marker in DenaâÂÂina language means "the people", and is related to the autonym for the Southern Athabaskan Navajo people "Diné." The Denaüina name for Cook Inlet is Tikahtnu meaning "Big Water River", "Ocean River" or Nuti meaning "Saltwater."
Culture
The Denaüina are the only Northern Athabascan group to live near saltwater which allowed them to have the most sedentary lifestyle of all Northern Athabascans. The Denaüina were organized in regional bands or HtâÂÂana ("people of [a place or area]"), which were composed of local bands. The regional bands had several villages or qayeh, each containing multi-family dwellings called NichiÃ
Â. Each NichiÃ
 was led by a qeshqa ("rich man" or "leader") who Russian and American traders and religious referred to as "Chiefs." Men and women in villages belong to their mother's clan. The clans were grouped into two sides or "moieties." Villagers could only marry outside of their own clan and moiety, maintaining diversity in the gene pool and strength in the village lineage. Archaeological work suggests that the Dena'ina have occupied the Upper and Outer Cook Inlet areas for the last 1,000 years, migrating from the Mulchatna and Stony River areas, where they had lived for thousands of years prior.
Language and bands
Their traditional language, Denaüina (DenaâÂÂina Qenaga), currently has about 70-75 fluent speakers out of a total population of about 1,400. Denaüina is one of eleven Alaska Athabascan languages. There are four primary dialects of Denaüina (grouped with regional bands, local groups and today's tribal names):
- Inland / Lake Clark Denaüina: (Qizhjeh Vena (Lake Clark), Qeghnilen ("Canyon" Village on Stony River), KâÂÂqizaghtetnu / K'qizaghetnu Hdakaq' (Stony River Village), Htsit (Tishimna Lake Village), Nunvendaltin (Nondalton on/or Sixmile Lake), Dilah Vena (Telaquana Lake), Hek'dichen Hdakaq' (Lime Village), Tanilen/Tanalian Point (near Port Alsworth), Qizhjeh (Kijik at Lake Clark), VaÃ
Âts'anaq' (Mulchatna River villages), Vandaztunhtnu (Upper Mulchatna River), Ã
Âiq'a Qilanhtnu (Tlikakila River)) - today: Lime Village, Village of Stony River, and Nondalton Village
- Nondalton Dena'ina or NundaltinhtâÂÂana/Nuvendaltin QuhtâÂÂana ("People at Sixmile Lake/Nundalton Village") - today: Nondalton Village
- Iliamna Denaüina: (Verna Kolyaha (Pedro Bay), Tsayehtnu Hdakaq' (Pile Bay Village), Ch'ak'dalitnu/Nuch'ak'dalitnu (Old Iliamna), Nilavena (Lake Iliamna), Nughilen (aka Nughiltnu Kaq' / Nughil Kaq', today Newhalen), Chix Kaq' (Chekok), Vighutiztin Hkayitaghi'u (Lonesome Bay Village))
- Iliamna Denaüina or Nilavena/Nilan Vena HtâÂÂana ("People at islands lake, i.e. Lake Iliamna") - today: Village of Iliamna, Newhalen Village, and Pedro Bay Village Council
- Upper Inlet Denaüina: (Idlughet/Eydlughet (Eklutna), Niteh (Old Knik, Matanuska), Nughay Bena (New) Knik), Qiduk'ggat (Montana Creek), Tsat'ukegh/Susitnu Qayeh (Susitna Station), Tubughnenq' ((Old)Tyonek), Ch'aghaÃ
Ânikt (Point Possession Village), Tuqen Kaq'Qayeh (Alexander Creek Village), Tsuk Qayeh (Lower Yentna River Village), Benteh/Bentalit (Fish Lake Village sites), Dashq'e (Kroto Creek Village), Ch'aniltnu Hdakaq' (Chunilna Creek Village), Tatik'niÃ
Âtun Bena (Stephan Lake Village), Tudli Bena (Nancy Lake Village), K'enakatnu (Fish Creek Village), Ã
Âajat (Cottonwood Creek Village), Nik'udatl'ech'a (Dinkle Lake Village), Nuk'din'itnu (Chickaloon), Skintuk'eÃ
Âaha (Swan Lake Village), Tak'at/Tak'at Qenuch'en ("[Across from] Dip Net Platform", Cairn Point Village), Nuch'ishtunt ("Place Protected from Wind", Point Woronzof Village), Nen GhiÃ
Âgedi ("Rotten Land", near Point Woronzof), K'dalkitnu (Talkeetna River, Talkeetna townsite), Dgheyaytnu (Stickleback Creek (Ship Creek), original Anchorage townsite), Dgheyey Kaq' ("Mouth of Stickleback Creek", Anchorage), Chanshtnu ("Grass Creek, i.e. Chester Creek", original Anchorage townsite), Qin Cheghitnu ("Crying Ridge Creek", i.e. Campbell Creek)
- Tyonek (TubughnenqâÂÂ) / Cook Inlet (Tikahtnu) Denaüina or Tebughna/Tubughna ("Beach People") - today: Native Village of Tyonek
- Susitna (River) Dena'ina or Susitnu HtâÂÂana ("Sandy River, i.e. Susitna River People") (Ahtna term: Dustnay - "People out in front", partly Western Ahtna band)
- Alexander Creek Village Denaüina or Tuqen Kaq'Qayeh HtâÂÂana ("Clear water mouth village People") - today: Alexander Creek Native Village
- Susitna Station Denaüina or Susitnu Qayeh HtâÂÂana ("Sand River Village People") / Yusdishla Qayeh HtâÂÂana ("Little Point Village People") - today: Native Village of Tyonek
- Rainy Pass Dena'ina or Shandala Nununk'dnilghuyna ("People who holler to make migrating birds fall down")
- Yentna River Dena'ina or Yentnu HtâÂÂana ("Backbone River, i.e. Yentna River People")
- Lower Yentna Old Village Denaüina or Tsuk Qayeh Qayeh HtâÂÂana ("Old Village Village People")
- Middle Susitna River Denaüina or Dunüena ("Near Upriver People")
- Kroto Creek Denaüina or Dashq'e HtâÂÂana ("On the shoal People" or "On the shallows People")
- Montana Creek Village Denaüina or Qiduk'ggat HtâÂÂana ("Frozen Overflow People")
- Talkeetna Mountains Ahtna-Denaüina or Dghelay TehtâÂÂana/Dzelyi HtâÂÂana ("(Talkeetna) Mountains People", mixed Western Ahtna-Denaüina band)
- Knik (Arm area) (KâÂÂenakatnu) Dena'ina or KâÂÂenah HtâÂÂana ("Vision People?") - today: Knik Tribal Council
- Eklutna (Idlughet) Village Dena'ina or Idlughet/Eydlughe HtâÂÂana/Idluytnu Qayeh HtâÂÂana ("at the plural objects People") - today: Native Village of Eklutna
- Matanuska (Old Knik) Village Dena'ina or Niteh HtâÂÂana ("Among the islands People") - today: Knik Tribal Council
- Turnagain Arm Dena'ina or Tutl'uht'ana ("Headwaters People") - today: Knik Tribal Council and Native Village of Eklutna
- Point Possession Dena'ina or Tuzqunt HtâÂÂana/Tuyqunt HtâÂÂana ("Stillwater People, i.e. Point Possession People")
- Western Ahtna-Dena'ina or Htsay HtâÂÂana (Dena'ina name) / Hwtsaay HwtâÂÂaene (Ahtna name) ("Small Timber People")
- Chickaloon Dena'ina or Nuk'din'itnu HtâÂÂana (Dena'ina name - "Bridge goes across-stream People") or NayâÂÂdiniâÂÂaa Naâ HwtâÂÂaene (Ahtna name - "The river with the two logs across it People") - today: Chickaloon Village Traditional Council
- Wasilla area Dena'ina or Benteh HtâÂÂana ("Among the Lakes People") - today: Knik Tribal Council
- Fish Creek-Knik Village Dena'ina or K'enakatnu HtâÂÂana ("'?-stream People") - today: Knik Tribal Council
- Outer Inlet / Kenai (Kahtnu) Denaüina (KahtnuhtâÂÂana Qenaga): (Shk'ituk't/Ch'k'ituk't (Old Kenai Village Site), Kahtnu Qayah (Kenai), Sqilant (Kenai Lake Village), Qezdeghnen (Kustatan sites), Ts'eslahtnu (Old Seldovia), Angidahtnu (Seldovia), Unhghenesditnu (Kalifornsky Village), TaÃ
Âin Ch'iÃ
Âtant (Polly Creek), Nihnalchint (Ninilchik), Tsayehq'at (China Poot Bay Village), K'kaq' (Anchor Point Village), K'echan DaÃ
Âkizt (Humpy Point Village), Ggasilat (Kasilof Village), Quqegh Nik'eteleht (Libby Creek (Seven Egg Creek) Village), Tiduqilts'ett (Titukilsk Village), Ken Dech'etl't (Salamatof), Ch'anilnat (Chinila Village), Chunuk'tnu (Russian River), Tikahtnu (Cook Inlet), Yaghenen ("Good Land, i.e. Kenai Peninsula"))
- Kenai (River) Dena'ina or KahtnuhtâÂÂana/NkahtnuhtâÂÂana ("Kahtnu (Kenai River) People", lit. "River mouth river People") - today: Kenaitze Indian Tribe
- Skilak Lake Dena'ina or QâÂÂes Dudilent HtâÂÂana ("Skilak Lake People", lit. "Flows Into Outlet Place (at Skilak Lake) People") - today: Kenaitze Indian Tribe
- Kenai Lake Dena'ina or Sqilan Bena HtâÂÂana ("Kenai Lake People", lit. "Ridge Place Lake People") / Sqilant HtâÂÂana ("Ridge Place Village People")
- Kenai Mountains Dena'ina or TsahtâÂÂana ("(Kenai) Mountains People", mixed Denaüina-Western Ahtna band) - today: Seldovia Village Tribe
- Kenai Peninsula / Swanson River Dena'ina or Yaghanen HtâÂÂana/YahtâÂÂana/Yaghedna ("Good Land, i.e. Kenai Peninsula People") - today: Seldovia Village Tribe and Ninilchik Traditional Council
- Nikiski area Dena'ina or Qeghnen HtâÂÂana ("Adjacent Land People") - today: Village of Salamatof
- Kustatan and West-Lower Cook Denaüina or Qezdeghtna/Qeydaghetna (anglicised "Kustatan" - "Peninsula People, lit. Point of Land People") - today: Ninilchik Traditional Council
- Kasilof River Denaüina or Ggasilahtnu Denaüina - today: Ninilchik Traditional Council
DenaâÂÂina Alaska Native Regional Corporations/Alaska Native village corporations
Cook Inlet Tribal Council (CIRI) ("Upper Inlet" and "Outer Inlet / Kenai Denaüina"-speaking bands)
- Chickaloon Village Traditional Council (Ahtna name: Nay'dini'aa Na' - "the river with the two logs across it", DenaâÂÂina name: Nuk'din'itnu - "bridge goes across-stream") (Western Ahtna and DenaâÂÂina peoples)
- Native Village of Eklutna (Idlughet QayehtâÂÂana - "at the plural objects People" and Tutl'uht'ana - "Headwaters People")
- Kenaitze Indian Tribe (KahtnuhtâÂÂana - "Kahtnu (Kenai River) People", and QâÂÂes Dudilent HtâÂÂana - "Skilak Lake People")
- Knik Tribal Council (Kâ²enah HtâÂÂana - "Vision People?", other groups are Niteh HtâÂÂana - "Among the islands People", Benteh HtâÂÂana - "Among the Lakes People", Tutl'uht'ana - "Headwaters People", and K'enakatnu HtâÂÂana - "'?-stream People") (DenaâÂÂina and Western Ahtna peoples)
- Ninilchik Traditional Council (Niqnalchint Qayeh Kenu - "Ninilchik Village Tribe" or Niqnalchint - "A place were a lodge is built", historic Yaghanen HtâÂÂana/YahtâÂÂana/Yaghedna - "Good Land People, i.e. Kenai Peninsula People", Qezdeghtna/Qeydaghetna - "Peninsula People" and Ggasilahtnu HtâÂÂana - "Kasilof River People") (DenaâÂÂina, Chugach Sugpiaq (Alutiiq), Western Ahtna, and Central Alaskan Yup'ik peoples)
- Salamatof Tribal Council (Ken DechâÂÂetlâÂÂt - "scrub timber flat lake, i.e.Salamatof Lake")
- Seldovia Village Tribe (historic DenaâÂÂina bands: Yaghanen HtâÂÂana/YahtâÂÂana/Yaghedna - "Good Land People, i.e. Kenai Peninsula People", TsahtâÂÂana - "Mountain People") (Unangax (Aleut), Yupik, Chugach Sugpiaq (Alutiiq), DenaâÂÂina, and Western Ahtna peoples)
- Native Village of Tyonek (Tebughna/Tubughna - "Beach People", and Susitnu Qayeh HtâÂÂana - "Sand River Village People")
Alexander Creek, Incorporated ("Upper Inlet Denaüina"-speaking bands)
Calista Corporation ("Inland / Lake Clark Denaüina"-speaking bands)
- Lime Village (Hek'dichen Hdakaq - "lack of abundance mouth", therefore formerly known as Hungry Village) (YupâÂÂik, CupâÂÂik, Denaüina and Alaska Athabascan)
Bristol Bay Native Association ("Inland / Lake Clark Denaüina" and "Iliamna Denaüina"-speaking bands)
- Iliamna Village Council (Nilavena/Nilan Vena HtâÂÂana - "People at islands lake, i.e. Lake Iliamna") (General Central Yup'ik, Alutiiq, and DenaâÂÂina peoples)
- Newhalen Tribal Council (DenaâÂÂIna name: Nughilen - "Newhalen River Village" or Nughiltnu - "flows-down river, i.e. Newhalen River", Central Alaskan Yup'ik name: Nuuriileng, historic bands: Nilavena/Nilan Vena HtâÂÂana - "People at islands lake, i.e. Lake Iliamna"), as Newhalen Village also part of the Alaska Peninsula Corporation(YupâÂÂik, Alutiiq, and DenaâÂÂina peoples)
- Nondalton Tribal Council or Nondalton Village (NundaltinhtâÂÂan - "Sixmile Lake/Nundalton Village" or Nuvendaltin QuhtâÂÂana - "People at Sixmile Lake/Nundalton Village")
Pedro Bay Corporation ("Iliamna Denaüina"-speaking bands)
- Pedro Bay Village Council (Verna Kolyaha, historic Nilavena/Nilan Vena HtâÂÂana - "People at islands lake, i.e. Lake Iliamna") - also part of the Bristol Bay Native Association
Kuskokwim Corporation ("Inland / Lake Clark Denaüina"-speaking bands)
- Village of Stony River (DenaâÂÂina name: K'qizaghetnu Hdakaq' - "Village at the distant river", Deg Xitüan name: Gidighuyghatnoâ Xidochagg Qayâ ) (DenaâÂÂina, Deg Xitüan, Upper Kuskokwim, and Yupik peoples)
- Village of Aniak (Yupik name: âÂÂthe place where it comes outâÂÂ, which refers to the mouth of the Aniak River) (Yupik and DenaâÂÂina peoples)
- Native Village of Chuathbaluk (Yupik name Curapalek meaning âÂÂthe hills where the big blueberries growâÂÂ) (Yupik and DenaâÂÂina peoples)
- Native Village of Georgetown (Yupik and DenaâÂÂina peoples)
- Village of Red Devil (Yupik and DenaâÂÂina peoples)
Namesakes
The city of Anchorage chose to honor the Denaüina by naming the city's new convention center the Denaüina Civic and Convention Center.
Notable Denaüina people
See also
References
External links