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Narrated by Oglala Lakota actor Mo Brings Plenty (Yellowstone), the two-part Sitting Bull airs over two nights. It offers an overarching exploration of the fiercely brave chief’s remarkable life ...
Sitting Bull, the revered leader of the Great Sioux Nation, stood as a powerful figure among Plains Tribal Nations resisting ...
Sitting Bull was born around 1831, a member of the Hunkpapa band of Lakota. The location of his birth is disputed. Most historians say he was born in what is today South Dakota.
Sitting Bull was destined to be known throughout nations and spent his life fulfilling this vision, according to a new four-hour documentary series on the life of the legendary Lakota leader. “I ...
The Sitting Bull docuseries is a four-hour exploration of a Hunkpapa Lakota leader’s life story. It premieres on the History Channel on May 27, 2025, at 9 p.m. ET/PT, with the second part airing ...
The new documentary "Sitting Bull" charts the extraordinary life of the renowned leader of the Lakota people, who refused to back down and gathered an alliance of Native nations to rebel against ...
O ne of the refreshing things about “Sitting Bull,” the History Channel’s two-night, four-hour documentary on the Sioux leader, is its attempt at some kind of balance amid the hosannas. The ...
The Bozeman-based actor is playing the legendary Lakota leader in History's two-part series "Sitting Bull," premiering Tuesday and Wednesday. For him, the connection was more than worth the challenge.
In the end, the U.S. Indian agent who had invited Sitting Bull to travel with him to St. Paul, James McLaughlin, admitted the trips failed to convince the Lakota leader to abandon his traditional ...
Researchers from the University of Cambridge have successfully identified a living descendant of the Lakota leader Sitting Bull by analyzing fragments of DNA. Using advanced methods, the ...
He had stunning news: On his orders, Lakota resistance leader Sitting Bull was dead. “The Indian police arrested Sitting Bull at his camp, 40 miles northwest of the agency, this morning at daylight.
One of the refreshing things about “Sitting Bull,” the History Channel’s two-night, four-hour documentary on the Sioux leader, is its attempt at some kind of balance amid the hosannas.