Wp/chn/champʰuyk-luʔluʔ

< Wp | chn
(Redirected from Wp/chn/Shampuwi-lo7lo7)
Wp > chn > champʰuyk-luʔluʔ

hayu hayash tilixam-loʔloʔ uk "champʰuyk-loʔloʔ". kʰapa 1841, 1842 pi 1843 kʰul, kʰanumakwst hayu bastən pi pʰasayuks ɬaska chaku kʰapa champʰuyk, ixt tənəs tʰawn kʰapa olekin-iliʔi, wik saya poɬən. ɬaska munk uk "champʰuyk-loʔloʔ." ukuk bastən ɬaska tiki t’uʔan tayi-kʰompani pus munk la; kʰapa 1841, dret hilu tayi pi la ulman-olekin-iliʔi. kʰapa 5-mun 2-san kʰapa 1843 kʰul, bastən pi pʰayasayks ɬaska munk-kʰəpit ɬaska loʔloʔ pi ɬaska wawa: aɬqi ɬaska munk ixt dret tayi-kʰompani pi tayi-tʰawn.

Joseph Meek kʰapa ixt champʰuyk-loʔloʔ, 1843 kʰul.Joseph Meek at a Champoeg gatahering, 1843.
champʰuyk-iliʔi.The Champoeg area.

hayu bastən ɬaska tiki t’uʔan ixt tayi-kʰompani, bət wik-hayu pʰasayuks ɬaska tiki iskam ukuk, qʰiwa hayu bastən ɬaska təmtəm: pus ulman-olekin-iliʔi iskam ixt tayi-kʰompani, iysi ulman-olekin-iliʔi chaku kʰapa bastən-iliʔi. (kʰapa 1841 kʰul, kʰanumakwst bastən-iliʔi pi kʰinchuch-kʰanada ɬaska tiki t’uʔan kʰanawi ulman-olekin-iliʔi. 5 kʰul iləp-chxi bastən pi kʰinchuch ɬaska ɬq’up ukuk iliʔi, pi bastən-iliʔi iskam ixt sitkum pi kʰanada iskam ixt sitkum.)

alta kʰapa olekin-iliʔi, ixt hayash iliʔi pus kwansəm-kəmtəks iləp-chxi champʰuyk-loʔloʔ miɬayt.

k’alapʰuya tilixam ɬaska kəmtəks champʰuwik-iliʔi kakwa čʰámpuik "iliʔi qʰa [nsayka] iskam yampa-lalasin."

The "Champoeg Gatherings" were a series of large gatherings. In 1841, 1842 and 1843, many American settlers and French Canadians came together in Champoeg, a small town in Oregon, near Portland. They held the Champoeg Gatherings. The "Bostons" wanted to create a government to make laws; in 1841, Oregon Country had neither a government nor [its own] laws. On May 2nd, 1843, the American pioneers and "Pasiooks" ended their meetings and they said that decided to create a proper government and capital city.

Many of the Americans wanted to have a government, but few of the French-Canadians wanted this, because many of the "Bostons" believed that if a government was installed in Oregon Country, the region would easily become part of the United States. (In 1841, Oregon Country was jointly owned by the USA and British North America. 5 years later, the Americans and Canadians divided the region, and the USA took one half and the other half went to Canada.)

Today a large area of land to commemorate the last Champoeg Gathering can be found in Oregon.

The Kalapuya know the Champoeg region as čʰámpuik, or "the place where [we] obtain yampah root."