1763
Royal Proclamation

Recognizes Indigenous title and rights; creates the basis for Crown-Indigenous relations.

1807
First trading post in Ktunaxa homelands

David Thompson crosses the Rocky Mountains and establishes "Kootenae House."

1870
Honour of the Crown

Staff and medallion given to Kootenay Peoples from the Crown; now housed at Fort Steele Museum.

1876
The Indian Act

The Indian Act becomes federal law.

1887
Reserves
Kootenay Indian Reserves are established.
1895
Sundance banned

Amendment to the Indian Act makes the Sundance illegal.

1912
Indian Rights Association

The association petitions Prime Minister Borden on
Indigenous rights; includes Kootenay Chiefs.

1916
Delegation to Ottawa

Indian Rights Association presses for recognition of rights; Kootenay Chief David participates.

1916
Allied Tribes of B.C.

Indian Rights Association dissolves, folds into Allied Tribes of B.C., which includes Kootenay / Ktunaxa.

1927-1951
Ban on hiring lawyers

Canada makes it illegal to advance Aboriginal Title cases through the Indian Act.

Allied Tribes of B.C. dissolves.

1969
Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs forms

144 Chiefs meet to oppose the ‘White Paper’ and assert title.

Kootenay Chiefs attend.

1970
Kootenay Indian District Council

The KIDC is formed by five bands.

It is later renamed Kootenay Indian Area Council (1974), Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Tribal Council (1991),
and Ktunaxa Nation Council (2005).

1980
The Constitution Express

A caravan travels to Ottawa to lobby for Indigenous rights to be part of the Canadian constitution. Ktunaxa people participate and the caravan later travels to Europe.

1981
First declaration
Kootenay Nation Land Claim and Declaration

The declaration is signed by Kootenay Chiefs and the Kootenay Indian Area Council Coordinator.

1982
Canadian government
Constitution Act, Section 35

Recognizes “existing Aboriginal and treaty rights.” 
Leads to hundreds of court cases.

1984
Justice and Simonette Report

Kootenay Traditional Land and Resource Use Study completed.

1987
Centennial Gathering

ʔakisq̓nuk hosts this event to marks 100 years under the reservation system.

2014
Tsilhqot’in Supreme Court Ruling

Court rejects Crown claim that Aboriginal title was
extinguished in 1871 when B.C. joined Canada.

2015
Calls to Action

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada publishes its Calls to Action.

2019
British Columbia
Declaration Act

The B.C. government passes the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (Declaration Act, DRIPA) into law.

2021
Canadian government
UNDRIP

The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act
becomes federal law in Canada on June 21, 2021.

2025
Ktunaxa Land Declaration

Ktunaxa First Nations' nasuʔkin and Ktunaxa Nation Council Chair sign
an updated declaration, outlining who we are, our covenants
and territory, our rights and our expectations.

2021
Land declaration revision starts

The Ktunaxa Nation Council Lands and Resources Council (with representatives from each Ktunaxa First Nation in Canada) states its intention to revise the land claim declaration into today's language.

2022 – 2025
Land Declaration developed and approved

Three years of intensive engagement with Ktunaxa Leaders, Elders and ʔaqⱡsmaknik̓ informs a modernized Ktunaxa Land Declaration, which builds upon the work of 1981 Kootenay Land Claim and Declaration authors.

The Ktunaxa Leadership Table approves the updated declaration on April 23, 2025, and signs the declaration on July 16, 2025 during the Ktunaxa Nation Annual General Assembly.