Powhatan's Mantle

Powhatan's Mantle
Title Powhatan's Mantle PDF eBook
Author Gregory A. Waselkov
Publisher U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages 564
Release 2006-12-01
Genre History
ISBN 9780803298613

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Considered to be one of the all-time classic studies of southeastern Native peoples, Powhatan's Mantle proves more topical, comprehensive, and insightful than ever before in this revised edition for twenty-first century scholars and students.

The Powhatan Landscape

The Powhatan Landscape
Title The Powhatan Landscape PDF eBook
Author Martin D. Gallivan
Publisher University Press of Florida
Total Pages 285
Release 2018-09-17
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0813063671

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Southern Anthropological Society James Mooney Award As Native American history is primarily studied through the lens of European contact, the story of Virginia's Powhatans has traditionally focused on the English arrival in the Chesapeake. This has left a deeper indigenous history largely unexplored--a longer narrative beginning with the Algonquians' construction of places, communities, and the connections in between. The Powhatan Landscape breaks new ground by tracing Native placemaking in the Chesapeake from the Algonquian arrival to the Powhatan's clashes with the English. Martin Gallivan details how Virginia Algonquians constructed riverine communities alongside fishing grounds and collective burials and later within horticultural towns. Ceremonial spaces, including earthwork enclosures within the center place of Werowocomoco, gathered people for centuries prior to 1607. Even after the violent ruptures of the colonial era, Native people returned to riverine towns for pilgrimages commemorating the enduring power of place. For today's American Indian communities in the Chesapeake, this reexamination of landscape and history represents a powerful basis from which to contest narratives and policies that have previously denied their existence. A volume in the series Society and Ecology in Island and Coastal Archaeology, edited by Victor D. Thompson

Pocahontas

Pocahontas
Title Pocahontas PDF eBook
Author Lisa Sita
Publisher The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc
Total Pages 120
Release 2004-08-15
Genre Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN 9781404226531

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Traces the life of Pocahontas and looks at the role she played in the realtionship between the Powhatan Indians and the English settlers.

The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology

The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology
Title The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology PDF eBook
Author Timothy Pauketat
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 693
Release 2015-04
Genre History
ISBN 0190241098

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"The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology explores 15,000 years of indigenous human history on the North American continent, drawing on the latest archaeological theories, rich datasets, and time-honored methodologies. From the Arctic south to the Mexican border and east to the Atlantic Ocean, all of the major cultural developments are covered in fifty-three chapters"--Back cover

Paper Sovereigns

Paper Sovereigns
Title Paper Sovereigns PDF eBook
Author Jeffrey Glover
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages 328
Release 2014-05-14
Genre History
ISBN 0812245962

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In many accounts of Native American history, treaties are synonymous with tragedy. From the beginnings of settlement, Europeans made and broke treaties, often exploiting Native American lack of alphabetic literacy to manipulate political negotiation. But while colonial dealings had devastating results for Native people, treaty making and breaking involved struggles more complex than any simple contest between invaders and victims. The early colonists were often compelled to negotiate on Indian terms, and treaties took a bewildering array of shapes ranging from rituals to gestures to pictographs. At the same time, Jeffrey Glover demonstrates, treaties were international events, scrutinized by faraway European audiences and framed against a background of English, Spanish, French, and Dutch imperial rivalries. To establish the meaning of their agreements, colonists and Natives adapted and invented many new kinds of political representation, combining rituals from tribal, national, and religious traditions. Drawing on an archive that includes written documents, printed books, orations, landscape markings, wampum beads, tally sticks, and other technologies of political accounting, Glover examines the powerful influence of treaty making along the vibrant and multicultural Atlantic coast of the seventeenth century.

Ireland in the Virginian Sea

Ireland in the Virginian Sea
Title Ireland in the Virginian Sea PDF eBook
Author Audrey Horning
Publisher UNC Press Books
Total Pages 408
Release 2013-12-16
Genre History
ISBN 1469610736

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In the late sixteenth century, the English started expanding westward, establishing control over parts of neighboring Ireland as well as exploring and later colonizing distant North America. Audrey Horning deftly examines the relationship between British colonization efforts in both locales, depicting their close interconnection as fields for colonial experimentation. Focusing on the Ulster Plantation in the north of Ireland and the Jamestown settlement in the Chesapeake, she challenges the notion that Ireland merely served as a testing ground for British expansion into North America. Horning instead analyzes the people, financial networks, and information that circulated through and connected English plantations on either side of the Atlantic. In addition, Horning explores English colonialism from the perspective of the Gaelic Irish and Algonquian societies and traces the political and material impact of contact. The focus on the material culture of both locales yields a textured specificity to the complex relationships between natives and newcomers while exposing the lack of a determining vision or organization in early English colonial projects.

Pocahontas and the Powhatan Dilemma

Pocahontas and the Powhatan Dilemma
Title Pocahontas and the Powhatan Dilemma PDF eBook
Author Camilla Townsend
Publisher Macmillan + ORM
Total Pages 245
Release 2005-09-07
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1429930772

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Camilla Townsend's stunning new book, Pocahontas and the Powhatan Dilemma, differs from all previous biographies of Pocahontas in capturing how similar seventeenth century Native Americans were--in the way they saw, understood, and struggled to control their world---not only to the invading British but to ourselves. Neither naïve nor innocent, Indians like Pocahontas and her father, the powerful king Powhatan, confronted the vast might of the English with sophistication, diplomacy, and violence. Indeed, Pocahontas's life is a testament to the subtle intelligence that Native Americans, always aware of their material disadvantages, brought against the military power of the colonizing English. Resistance, espionage, collaboration, deception: Pocahontas's life is here shown as a road map to Native American strategies of defiance exercised in the face of overwhelming odds and in the hope for a semblance of independence worth the name. Townsend's Pocahontas emerges--as a young child on the banks of the Chesapeake, an influential noblewoman visiting a struggling Jamestown, an English gentlewoman in London--for the first time in three-dimensions; allowing us to see and sympathize with her people as never before.