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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WovokaWovoka - Wikipedia

    Wovoka (c. 1856 – September 20, 1932), also known as Jack Wilson, was the Paiute religious leader who founded a second episode of the Ghost Dance movement. Wovoka means "cutter" or "wood cutter" in the Northern Paiute language.

  2. Wovoka (born 1858?, Utah Territory—died October 1932, Walker River Indian Reservation, Nevada) was a Native American religious leader who spawned the second messianic Ghost Dance cult, which spread rapidly through reservation communities about 1890.

  3. A Paiute medicine-man, Wovoka originated the Ghost Dance, which spread throughout the Native American tribes of the west, causing white settlers and officials a great deal of consternation. Wovoka. Born southwest of what is now Carson City, Nevada, in about 1856, his father, Tavibo, was also a medicine man.

  4. www.encyclopedia.com › north-american-indigenous-peoples-biographies › wovokaWovoka | Encyclopedia.com

    May 29, 2018 · Encyclopedia of Religion Grim, John. Wovoka >In response to a vision, Wovoka (1856-1932) founded the Ghost Dance [1] >religion. A complex figure, he was revered by Indians while being denounced >as an impostor and a lunatic by the local settlers throughout his entire >life.

  5. Jun 10, 2024 · Quick Reference. ( c. 1865–1932) A Native American (Paiute) prophet, who instigated the ghost dance, a millenarian movement in the late 19th century that promised beleaguered Native Americans redemption and freedom from oppression.

  6. During a solar eclipse on January 1, 1889, Wovoka, a shaman of the Northern Paiute tribe, had a vision. Claiming that God had appeared to him in the guise of a Native American and had revealed to him a bountiful land of love and peace, Wovoka founded a spiritual movement called the Ghost Dance.

  7. The Ghost Dance of 1890 was a more widespread spiritual movement that originated under the inspired leadership of the Numu (Northern Paiute) Indian Wovoka (Jack Wilson). The dance was taken up by a large number of Native American groups from the West Coast to the Great Plains.

  8. Wovoka was a religious leader of the Northern Paiute (Numu) tribe of Native Americans. He was the creator of the 1890 Ghost Dance movement. The Ghost Dance was an attempt to regain traditional Native American culture. It was partly a reaction to the U.S. government’s attempt to get rid of Native American culture.

  9. www.encyclopedia.com › history › news-wires-white-papers-and-booksThe Ghost Dance | Encyclopedia.com

    Wovoka. Spreading rapidly from it origins among the Northern Paiutes of Nevada, the Ghost Dance became the major pan-Indian religious movement of the late nineteenth century. The movement was based on responses to visions recounted by a Paiute holy man named Wovoka, who claimed to have inherited his father ’ s powers as a dreamer

  10. The Ghost Dance cult caught hold among several tribes of Plains Indians in the late 19th century. It first arose in the 1870s among the Paiute. In the late 1880s it swept many of the reservations, especially among the Sioux. It was Wovoka who inspired the second movement.