Though it remains debated whether or not he has ever been photographed, the person you are referring to is Crazy Horse. There are sketches of his likeness, however, so we know what he looked like.
Crazy Horse was a Lakota leader who became famous as a warrior for continually fighting to preserve the traditional way of life for the Lakota people in the face of encroaching white culture.
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the Sioux Indian tribes actually refer to three distinct groups of Plains Natives...all share similar dilects of the siouan language..."Referred to collectively by outsiders as Sioux, a French rendition of the Ottawa name na•towe•ssiwak, meaning 'enemy,' the Sioux call themselves Lakota or Dakota, depending on dialect, signifying 'allies.'"edited out > well they were called the Indians but then later changed the name to SIOUX cause there was one reason why this name has been changed tho SIOUX!
KIMIMELA, Sioux
"Dakota" is actually the name of the Sioux Tribe in the Santee dialect. There are Sioux all over the U.S. and Canada, but their main reservations are in South Dakota. They also have reservations in Minnesota, Nebraska, Manitoba and southern Saskatchewan.
World Leader, it's Scottish
Minnesota did not exist by that name before the USA was formed, long after European explorers arrived.The area that later became Minnesota was occupied by the Ojibwe or Chippewa in the north and the tribes collectively called Sioux, who later became the Lakota, Nakota and Dakota. Before 1700 these Sioux tribes were in the area of Lake Mille Lacs and the Blue Earth and Cannon Rivers in the southern half of Minnesota.Only after the arrival of Europeans did some of the Sioux tribes move west into the areas that later became North and South Dakota.