A look at the Indigenous names for Edmonton’s 12 wards
EDMONTON — The City of Edmonton approved a bylaw earlier this month to change the names of its 12 wards to Indigenous ones. Here are the new names and their meanings:
Nakota Isga (Ward 1): (NAH’-koh-tah EE’-ska). Of Sioux origin meaning “the people.” In 1880, the Alexis Nakota Sioux were set up on a reserve on the shore of what is now called Lac St. Anne after signing an adhesion, or sacred agreement, to Treaty 6. They established themselves along the Saskatchewan and Athabasca rivers and set up fur-trading posts.
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Anirniq (Ward 2): (ah-NIHL’-nook). Means “breath of life” or “spirit.” In the 1950s and ’60s, about one-third of Inuit were infected with tuberculosis. Most were flown south to Edmonton for treatment. Many died without their families being notified and were buried in city cemeteries. Recommended by Inuit elders because tuberculosis took the breath and spirit of many Indigenous people.