Before it was known as "Indian Territory," the plains and woodlands were the ancestral homelands of the Wichita, Caddo, Osage (Wazhazhe), and Quapaw.
A Confluence of Nations
Oklahoma is home to 39 sovereign tribal nations. The geography is divided between the lush Ozark Plateau in the east and the vast, arid Great Plains in the west. This land became the destination for the "Trail of Tears," bringing the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Muscogee (Creek), and Seminole to a region already inhabited by others.
Regional and Cultural Designations
Because Oklahoma served as a crossroads for so many displaced nations, the "names" for the land are as diverse as the tribes themselves:
- Wazhazhe (Osage) Lands: In the north, the Osage referred to their territory as a place of spiritual and physical sustenance. Their name for themselves means "People of the Middle Waters."
- The Wichita and Caddo: These are the "First Families" of Oklahoma. The Wichita referred to themselves as the Kirikir'iish, meaning "Raccoon-Eyed People" because of their distinctive tattoos. They saw the southern plains as a land of permanent grass-house villages.
- The Nations of the Southeast: For the Choctaw and Cherokee, the new land in the west was initially a foreign wilderness. Over time, they gave the landscape new names in their own languages, such as the Cherokee name Ayali-i, meaning "Place in the Middle."
Significant Indigenous Place Names
The map of Oklahoma is a living dictionary of Indigenous languages. The Ouachita Mountains carry a Caddo name often translated as "Good Hunting Grounds" or "Sparkling Silver Water." The Tulsa area derives its name from the Muscogee (Creek) word Tallasi, meaning "Old Town."
The city of Muskogee honors the Muscogee people, while Sapulpa is named after a Creek chief. In the west, the Kiowa and Comanche left their mark on the landscape; the name Anadarko is a corruption of the Caddoan word Nadako, referring to a specific tribal group. Even the Arkansas River, which flows through the heart of the state, carries a name derived from the Quapaw people, whom the Illinois tribes called the Akansa.
A Living Sovereign Landscape
Oklahoma today is a place where tribal sovereignty is a defining characteristic of daily life. From the Osage Hills to the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, the presence of Indigenous government, culture, and language is pervasive.
By recognizing the origin of the name Ukla-humá, we acknowledge a history that is both an ancient legacy of the Wichita and Caddo and a modern testament to the resilience of the dozens of nations that were moved there and made the "Land of the Red People" their own.