Iroquois Nation Essay

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    Assignment The Iroquois: People of the Longhouse Prepared for: Victor Gulewitsch TA: Cecibel Rodriguez ANTH*1150*02 Prepared By: Ellen Griffin Student ID: 0726506 Date: March 17, 2011 The Iroquois: People of the Longhouse Introduction The Iroquois are considered a branch of North American Indians, also known as Haudenosaunee or the “People of the Longhouse”. The Iroquois have greatly contributed to society through initiating the Iroquois confederacy also called the Iroquois League formed in

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    systems of social and political organizations established long before first contact. The Iroquois Confederacy is an example of such an organization; one of such great significance that its’ extent and impact can be observed in present-day American democracy. On Wednesday September 16, 1987 Congress passed Senate Concurrent Resolution 76 which acknowledged “the contribution of the Iroquois Confederacy of Nations to the development of the U.S. Constitution.” In the book The American Heritage Book of

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    In Matthew Dennis’ article, “The League of the Iroquois,” he focusses a lot of his attention on drawing comparisons between the Iroquois and the ancient civilization of Rome. Dennis even goes on to quote Dewitt Clinton in his address to the New York Historical Society in 1811 in which he refers to the Iroquois as “the Romans of the western world.” After personally studying the Iroquois nation over the course of this semester, I am surprised that I had not already made this stark comparison. Indeed

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    Native American and The US government The Iroquois Nation was a nation of five tribes, which was comprised of Mohawks, Senecas, Oneidas, Cayugas, and Onondagas. These tribes were originally separated, but later brought together by two Indians named Hiawatha and Deganawidah. Hiawatha seemed to be the spokesman while Deganawidah took on the role as a philosopher. These two men formed a nation where some of the ideas are still intact today. One aspect that made them so strong was the way

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    more complex interactions once thoroughly examined. The U.S, once a colony of the Europeans, eventually grew into the strong standing nation that it is today. Meanwhile the original inhabitants, the Native Americans, often received the aggression and oppression of this growing nation, but they weren’t the savages the U.S. claimed them to be. In fact, the Iroquois Confederacy was the main influence of the U.S Constitution. This paper will discuss the differences as well as the similarities, which

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    The Huron first Nation in Canada The Huron were Iroquois tribes who lived in the area around Georgian Bay. They were first nation in Canada. Wendake was the original homeland of the Huron occupying a fairly compact area of central Ontario between the southern end of Georgian Bay and Lake Simcoe. After the dispersal of the Huron by the Iroquois in 1650, one group relocated to Lorette (just north of Quebec) where it has remained. The population of Huron in 1535 probably numbered somewhere between

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    HIS Part 3

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    issue between the French and the English? - The rivalry between the French and the English in obtaining Indian allies as well as defining boarders between the two colonies. b. Why did the French want to attack the Iroquois and not the English colonies? - The English employed the Iroquois and excited all other Indians against the French . “They sent those last year to attack the Hurons and the Outawas.” The

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    the northern tribes. The Huro had an important role in the fur trade with France. The Huron tribes were enemies of the Iroquois Confederacy, with whom they competed in fur trading. Samuel de Champlain agreed to an alliance with the Huron Indians. The alliance created a long lasting friendship, between the French and the Huron. Huronia was bathed in blood and fire. The Iroquois set the Huron tribe on fire by tying them to stakes in the cabins of St. Ignace and then they set the village on fire.

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    but served unique functions in each community. For both the Iroquois and Wampanoag, their relationships to land embodied their lifeways; their land was their identity, their resource, their claim to power and sovereignty, and more. While the Iroquois vested leadership powers in the institution of the Great League of Peace, the Wampanoag depended on the leadership of powerful sachems such as Massasoit and Metacomet. However, both the Iroquois and Wampanoag used leadership in their tribes to preserve

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    The Native American 's encounters with European colonists led to different interactions between the two, as well as a development of varied relationships. America had been home to Native Americans since around 13,000 B.C. The Europeans arrived in America around 1492 to find that the land was already inhabited. Before the Europeans arrived, the Native Americans had lived in harmony with nature and with each other in communities, having strong family ties. When the Europeans arrived, they held different

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