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Haudenosaunee

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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2024) 71 (2): 249–269.
Published: 01 April 2024
...Nathan Ince Abstract John Norton (fl. 1770–1823) has long fascinated historians. After having been taken in by the prominent Mohawk leader Thayendanegea Joseph Brant as a young man, Norton claimed to imperial outsiders that he occupied a position of great influence among the Haudenosaunee. Norton...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2010) 57 (2): 201–223.
Published: 01 April 2010
... discusses the unusual voice Haudenosaunee women had in governance. It then observes significant freedom of speech and action among their French and Dutch colonial neighbors. The article investigates the blending of those voices as colonial women colluded with the Haudenosaunee to seal bargains...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2021) 68 (4): 547–548.
Published: 01 October 2021
...Chad Anderson The Clay We Are Made Of: Haudenosaunee Land Tenure on the Grand River . By Susan M. Hill ( Winnipeg : University of Manitoba Press , 2017 . 307 pp., illustrations, maps. $27.95 softcover.). Copyright 2021 by American Society for Ethnohistory 2021 Susan M...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2022) 69 (1): 125–126.
Published: 01 January 2022
... for Ethnohistory 2022 According to Chad L. Anderson, “Humans create an imagined landscape to correspond with the physical one” (8). In The Storied Landscape of Iroquoia , Anderson examines the imagined landscape of Iroquoia, the ancestral homelands of the Haudenosaunee, in the late eighteenth and early...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (4): 556–557.
Published: 01 October 2023
... of the American Revolution. Anderson’s primary aim is to illustrate the vital, independent role played by the Haudenosaunee Six Nations, the Seven Nations of Canada, and the Mississauga at the Cedars, a goal at which he succeeds. He appropriately emphasizes complex inter- and extrarelations between various...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2021) 68 (3): 407–427.
Published: 01 July 2021
... the Cornstalks), a cooperative of ten Oneida families growing, harvesting, and cooking Indigenous corn together. 1 My family and I also own a ten-acre farm. We grow traditional, heirloom foods with an emphasis on Haudenosaunee varieties of corn, beans, and squash. We host events where the community comes...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2022) 69 (2): 223–232.
Published: 01 April 2022
... of their homeland mid-17 th century through European-allied struggles with the English-connected Haudenosaunee ‘they extend a house,’ known to English and French then as the Iroquois. The translation into English and linguistic analysis are my own, based on what I have learned about the language for over 45 years...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2014) 61 (1): 57–77.
Published: 01 January 2014
... members no longer able to get along had been able to resolve their issues through movement. When in the nineteenth century this was no longer pos- sible, to some removal seems to have offered a similar solution. Iroquois History prior to the Removal Period The Iroquois or Haudenosaunee originally...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2014) 61 (3): 419–444.
Published: 01 July 2014
... manager of the Oneida Indian Centennial Celebration. For three days in August 1921, Indians and whites gathered to the west of Green Bay to mark the hundredth anniversary of the Oneida Nation’s arrival in Wisconsin from their Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) homelands in central New York. The Oneida...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (3): 231–258.
Published: 01 July 2023
... ). By Haudenosaunee tradition the Peacemaker, who brought the Haudenosaunee Confederacy together, was born to a Huron mother on the north shore of Lake Ontario by a “long winding bay” often identified as the Bay of Quinte (Parker 1916 : 14), called Kenhtè:ke in Kanyen’kéha. In the 1670s and 1680s Onyota’a:ka (Oneida...
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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2017) 64 (2): 191–215.
Published: 01 April 2017
... of Haudenosaunee diplomacy at Tioga in 1790 (Oberg 2016 : 51, 54) and later amassed a stockpile of wampum for official use (Wayne 1959 : 422; Oberg 2016 : 87). Following his enumeration to Wayne of the precise terms that the United States would offer in the upcoming treaty, he nevertheless instructed...
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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2020) 67 (4): 603–619.
Published: 01 October 2020
... in multiple imperial repositories. Repeatedly, indigenous people turn up in small numbers in strange places: Brazilian Tupis in Honduras; Mosquito people of Nicaragua in Charlestown or Barbados; Haudenosaunee in France; Sioux in Montreal, or the Lenape and Algonquian people of eastern America on the slave...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2021) 68 (4): 555–556.
Published: 01 October 2021
... ties of alliance to Great Britain. Carrying the narrative through the upheavals of the Revolutionary War, Hart also offers a detailed and nuanced assessment of the role of Anglican religious performance in the establishment of post-Revolutionary Mohawk/Haudenosaunee diasporic communities in Upper...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2016) 63 (4): 756–757.
Published: 01 October 2016
... about the Indian sources of Apess’s radicalism, although the evidence is stronger. Apess was clearly influenced by Handsome Lake and the Haudenosaunees among whom he spent time. He also shared a stage with Elias Boudinot at an important moment in the Cherokees’ antiremoval fight. And, as suggested...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2021) 68 (4): 551–552.
Published: 01 October 2021
... such as the Creek, Haudenosaunee, and Shawnee wielded and how they mounted a genuine challenge to American expansionist aims. Calloway also highlights the ingenuity and skill of Native leaders such as Red Jacket, Alexander McGillivray, and Joseph Brant, showing them to be Washington’s equal as tacticians...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2019) 66 (4): 759–760.
Published: 01 October 2019
.... Violence in the Ohio Valley also owed much to the region’s long history as contested colonial space. The French and British empires, British settlers from the seaboard colonies, and Shawnees, Delawares, Wyandots, and Haudenosaunees, all jockeyed for control of the region in the seventeenth and early...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2024) 71 (1): 142–143.
Published: 01 January 2024
... is its unwavering focus on a single community. Explicitly following in the footsteps of Susan M. Hill’s research on the Haudenosaunee of the Grand River in her book The Clay We Are Made Of , Rück centers his scholarship on the Kanien’kehá:ka community of Kahnawà:ke, located on the south shore of the St...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (2): 217–218.
Published: 01 April 2023
... that led to the creation of the colonial militia in 1669 through the militia’s participation in different colonial, imperial, and inter-Indigenous conflicts, including French offensives against the Haudenosaunee in the late seventeenth century, culminating in what Dechêne terms “the Sixteen Year War...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2012) 59 (2): 261–291.
Published: 01 April 2012
... doubted his reliability because of concerns about his truthfulness. John Norton Jr., Iroquois Leader and Author Norton was one of the more signižcant žgures among the Iroquois (or Haudenosaunee) of the Grand River on the north shore of Lake Erie in the British colony of Upper Canada...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (1): 25–44.
Published: 01 January 2023
... was not an imposition by force but rather long-standing social practice facilitated through the logic of the Dish with One Spoon; agreements between Anishinaabeg, Haudenosaunee, and other Indigenous peoples to share mutually recognized hunting grounds and territories in specific areas of the broader Great Lakes region...
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