Pawnee-Kitsai Mythology
The Mythology Pawnee-Kitsai includes the following Native American peoples: Arikaras, Sahnishs, Pawnees, Kitsai
The Arikaras or, as they prefer to call themselves, the Sahnishs, are a Native American tribe of farmers living in the Dakota North. Close to the Pawnees, they belong to the linguistic family of Caddos.
The Pawnees are a Native American people from Nebraska and Kansas (United States). Within the United States, they constitute the federally recognized entity of the Pawnee Nation of Oklahoma. Historically, they lived in Nebraska and Kansas.
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Pawnee-Kitsai Mythology (texts)
Arikara book book Arikara book book Arikara Free Book Arikara Free Book Arikara Myths and Legends- Arikara Corn: The First to Know Maize
- The Legend Of The Peace Pipes
- The Magic Windpipe
- How Corn Came to the Earth
- How Antelope Carrier Saved the Thunderbirds
- An Address to Mother Corn
- A Cheyenne Blanket
- Pawnee Acopalyptic Myth
- The Girl Who Was The Ring
- The Medicine Grizzly Bear
- The Mud Pony
- The Offended Rolling Stone
- The Woman Who Became a Horse
- Making the Sacred Bundle
- The Prisoners of Court House Rock
- Pawnee creation myth
- Big Turtle's War Party
Books on Muskogean Mythology
Comics / Illustrated:
In French :
Only in English:
- Cherokee Mythology: Captivating Myths and Legends of a Native American Tribe
- Cherokee Myths and Legends: Thirty Tales Retold
- Choctaw Tales
- Legends of the Seminoles
- Indian Creek Chronicles
- Myths and Traditions of the Arikara Indians
- Pawnee Hero Stories and Folk-Tales
- Native American Legends of the Southeast
- Aunt Mary, Tell Me a Story: A Collection of Cherokee Legends & Tales