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Mourning War Summary

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The new warfare of the Europeans was a large defect to the Mourning Wars, however it was not the leading factor that diminished this ritual along with majority of the population of Native Americans. Disease was the primary murderer of the Indians. Once the Europeans initiated the Columbian exchange, which brought various goods and livestock over to the Americas, their epidemic diseases came too. The Native Americans never had to deal with or experience an epidemic disease and that is why they were hit so hard. Since the smallpox was an indirect agent there was no direct murderer. There was no one to place the blame on in order to capture for the Mourning Wars. This made capturing people much more difficult for the Indians because sometimes they did it without being prompted by any opposing tribe or colony. The other and primary issue was the rate at which the Indians were being killed at …show more content…

Nothing had a greater impact on relations between Natives and newcomers in the Americas than the Spread of epidemic diseases.
The deaths of so many Native Americans caused the Mourning War to go off the rails and nearly fall into inexistence. Melissa Halverson, the author of Native American Beliefs and Medical Treatments During the Smallpox Epidemics: An Evolution, stated:
Families, clans, and villages were consolidated, further fragmenting the previous societal norms. The population loss also forced the fusion of different residential groups. For example, eighteen Arikara villages were amalgamated into one group of three villages in the Middle Missouri River Valley.
This shows how diminished the Native American tribes and villages became due to these spreading epidemics. Smallpox cost the lives of so many people and forced consolidation between tribes to the point where they had to discontinue

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