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         Iroquois Indians Native Americans:     more books (100)
  1. Joseph Brant, 1743-1807, Man of Two Worlds (An Iroquois Book) by Isabel Kelsay, 1986-08
  2. Longhouse (Native American Homes) by Cynthia Breslin Beres, 2000-09
  3. Indians and Colonists at the Crossroads of Empire: The Albany Congress of 1754 by Timothy J. Shannon, 2000-01
  4. An Ethnography of the Huron Indians, 1615-1649 (Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by Elizabeth Tooker, 1991-05
  5. To Die Game: The Story of the Lowry Band, Indian Guerrillas of Reconstruction (Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by William McKee Evans, 1995-12
  6. The Iroquois Eagle Dance: An Offshoot of the Calumet Dance (Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by William N. Fenton, 1991-12
  7. Sketches of Ancient History of the Six Nations (Massinahigan Series: Brief Accounts of Early Native America, 2) by David Cusick, 2004-05-30
  8. Naked Bear Folktales of Iroquois
  9. The Renewed, The Destroyed, And The Remade: The Three Thought Worlds Of The Iroquois And The Huron, 1609-1650 by Roger M. Carpenter, 2004-12-30
  10. Boy Who Lived With Bears and Other Iroquois Stories by Joseph Bruchac, 1995-09
  11. The Sun's Daughter by Pat Sherman, 2005-03-28
  12. Basic Call To Consciousness
  13. Dreamways of the Iroquois: Honoring the Secret Wishes of the Soul by Robert Moss, 2004-12-16
  14. The Iroquois (Digging Up Native American History) by Connie R. Miller, 2003-09

81. American Indian Culture Resources
A Comment; Elders and American Indian Culture; Ethics Lacrosse An iroquois Tradition. nativeAmerican Philiosophies; native American Traditions Lakota Welcoming
http://cobalt.lang.osaka-u.ac.jp/~krkvls/culture.html
General

82. Native American Research By History Link 101
and Indian Wars Article and photo of blacks and natives during Indian Wars Visual= 4 Content = 4 I5550 Lacrosse An iroquois Tradition One page article
http://www.historylink101.com/1/native_american/native_american_research.htm

Native American Research
Welcome to History Link 101's Native American Research Page. History Link 101 is a site developed for World History Classes, by a World History Teacher.

Tribal Information
Directory of Tribes in Continental United States List address, phone, and fax.
Visual = N/A Content = 5 I5000
Tribal Contact List by State

Visual = N/A Content = 5 I5010
Populations Ranking by Tribe in U.S.A.

Visual = N/A Content = 5 I5030
Census of 1980 and 1990 of Native Tribes
Has comparison stats between 1980 and 1990.
Visual = N/A Content = 5 I5040
Data about Native Americans From 1990 Census
Visual = N/A Content = 5 I5050 Native Languages Spoken in the Home Visual = N/A Content = 5 I5070 Language Classifications of Native Tribes Visual = N/A Content = 5 I5080 Meanings of Tribal Names Visual = N/A Content = 5 I5090 Flags of Native Groups of America Visual = 3 Content = 5 I5100 Native American Facts Look under "My Information" in a drop box, there is a list of Native Tribes.

83. 98.03.08: The Environmental Adaption Of The Native American Indian
Both the Reader’s Digest book, Through Indian Eyes, and Peter Nabokov’s book,native American Architecture, have chapters on longhouses. iroquois DIORAMA.
http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1998/3/98.03.08.x.html
Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute Home
The Environmental Adaption of the Native American Indian
by
Victor Leger
Contents of Curriculum Unit 98.03.08:
To Guide Entry
In this unit I concentrate on four tribes that exemplify some of the diversity of the North American continent. The Inuits people of the Arctic region, the Iroquois of the Eastern Woodlands, the nomadic Plains Indians of the Sioux tribe and the Southwestern Hopi. For each of the above tribes I inform and demonstrate the creation of some artifact endemic to their culture. For instance, the Inuits crafted many masks to be used in rituals to ask for assistance in the hunt for arctic animals. The Iroquois used Wampum Beads in a wide variety of ways. The Sioux documented important events on buffalo hides, which were called winter counts. The Hopi had Kachina dolls that were the personification of spirit helpers. Even though these items are particular to each of these tribes, the concepts behind them are not. All Native American created some type of mask that was used in rituals to ask the Spirit-that-moved-in-all-things for help or to give thanks. Likewise, many other tribes besides the Iroquois had items which had symbolic value for trading. The Sioux were certainly not the only people to come up with pictographic writing, and there are many other Native Americans that used some type of miniature spirit helper like a Kachina. After the students have created their own interpretation of each of the above artifacts, they move on to learning about the shelters and the villages of each of these tribes. For the Inuits the class will construct a diorama of a typical snow covered igloo, the longhouse of the Iroquois, a tepee for the Sioux and a pueblo for the Hopi. In this unit I demonstrate what materials work well and suggest ways to develop those materials to construct entire village dioramas for maximum authenticity.

84. Catawba
with Virginia, the Carolinas, or their native allies was Peace with the iroquois wasreconfirmed at Albany in 1759 first years of the French and Indian War (1755
http://www.dickshovel.com/Catawba.html
CATAWBA HISTORY [Note: This is a single part of what will be, by my classification, about 240 compact tribal histories (contact to 1900). It is limited to the lower 48 states of the U.S. but also includes those First Nations from Canada and Mexico that had important roles (Huron, Micmac, Assiniboine, etc.). This history's content and style are representative. The normal process at this point is to circulate an almost finished product among a peer group for comment and criticism. Using the Internet, this can be more inclusive. Feel free to comment or suggest corrections via e-mail. Working together we can end some of the historical misinformation about Native Americans. You will find the ego at this end to be of standard size. Thanks for stopping by. I look forward to your comments... Lee Sultzman Location Catawba River near the North and South Carolina border extending west to Broad River, their boundary with the Cherokee. Population Before contact, the Catawba were probably two separate tribes: the Catawba proper and the Iswa. Together, they may have numbered as many as 10,000, but when the first British estimates were made in 1692, their population was about 5,000. During the next 70 years the Catawba absorbed remnants from other Siouan-speaking tribes in the region. Despite this, their population declined rapidly from the combination of disease, war, and alcohol. By 1728 they had 400 warriors and a population of about 1,400. They lost half of these to smallpox epidemic during 1738. A generation later (1759-60), smallpox again took half leaving a total of 400. The census of 1826 found only 110 Catawba. Presently, about 1,200 descendants are living in the vicinity of Rock Hill, SC. Total tribal membership lists 2,600. The Catawba are recognized as a tribe by the federal government and the State of South Carolina.

85. Indian Tribes Of Maine
Unyjaware, iroquois name for an Abnaki village. Lake were known as Moosehead LakeIndians, but their native tradition brings the Penobscot from the Southwest
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/maine/
document.write('');
Indian Tribes of Maine Indian Tribes of North America, Swanton
1900 Indian Territory Census

Dawes Commission Index, 1898-1914
Circle of First Nations
Our Free Newsletter 14-day Free Trial of Ancestry.com's Databases
Add a link or report a Broken Link!!
Abnaki . Properly Wabanaki, "those living at the sunrise," "those living at the east," "easterners." Also called:
Aln nba , own name, meaning "Indians," or "men."
Aquannaque, Wabanaki as pronounced by Huron.
Bashabas, name given them from a principal chief.
Cannon-gageh-ronnons, name given by Mohawk.
Moassones, from a name applied to their country; perhaps from Penobscot Maweshenook, "berry place." Nar nkamigdok epitsik arenanbak, "villages of the Nar nkamigdog," said to be a collective name for all the Abnaki villages. Natio Luporum, "Wolf Nation." Nats gana, name given by Caughnawaga Iroquois.

86. Indian Tribes Of New York
The group of tribes known as the iroquois is famous from the position to which itattained among the Indian tribes of northeastern North America, and for
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/newyork/
document.write('');
Indian Tribes of New York Indian Tribes of North America, Swanton
1900 Indian Territory Census

Dawes Commission Index, 1898-1914
Circle of First Nations
Our Free Newsletter 14-day Free Trial of Ancestry.com's Databases
Add a link or report a Broken Link!!
Delaware Erie ... Delaware . Bands of two of the main divisions of the Delaware Indians, the Munsee and Unami, extended into parts of New York State, including the island of Manhattan. (See New Jersey Erie . The Erie occupied parts of Chautauqua and Cattaraugus Counties. (See Ohio Iroquois . From Algonkin Iri n akhoiw, "real adders," with the French suffix -ois. Also called:
Ongwano n sio ni', their own name, meaning "We are of the extended lodge," whence comes the popular designation, "People of the longhouse."
Canton Indians.
Confederate Indians.
Five Nations, from the five constituent tribes.
Mat-che-naw-to-waig, Ottawa name, meaning "bad snakes." Mingwe, Delaware name.

87. Selected Native American Resources: Internet Bibliographies: New York State Libr
disconnecting the term primitive from perceptions of native American technologyand iroquois Indian Museum This museum in Cobleskill, NY provides information
http://www.nysl.nysed.gov/reference/nativeref.htm
New York State Library Internet Bibliographies
Selected Native American Web Sites
General ... New York Last Reviewed: January 11, 2001
General
Native American Sites
Prepared by a librarian at the University of Pittsburgh, this set of Web pages covers a wide range of topics dealing with Native American issues. Separate pages exist for general Indian-oriented home pages; information on individual native nations; native organizations and urban Indian centers; tribal colleges, native studies programs, and Indian education; languages; the mascot issue; native media (organizations, journals, newspapers, radio and television, powwows and festivals); native music and arts organizations and individuals (singers, drums, artists, performers, celebrities, actors, actresses, storytellers, authors); and native businesses.
http://www.nativeculture.com/lisamitten/indians.html Techniques for Evaluating American Indian Web Sites
Elaine Cubbins of the University of Arizona has presented these techniques for evaluating American Indian Web sites. There are links to sources of books and reference materials as well as clear explanations of the criteria to be used.
http://www.u.arizona.edu/~ecubbins/webcrit.html

88. NATIVESTOCK - Native American Indian Pictures
The leading provider of native American Indian pictures that to sensitive portrayalsof native American People, their iroquois Homeland, Maple Syrup Production.
http://www.nativestock.com/
Native American Stock Photography Toll Free: 1 angel@nativestock.com Find ANY word Find ALL words Find EXACT phrase Help photography by Marilyn "Angel" Wynn Marilyn “Angel” Wynn . All images are available for editorial purchasing and publication. Our files contain over 100,000 images taken throughout Indian Country. Contact Angel if you don't see what you are specifically looking for. Over 600 stock images can be viewed by clicking on "View Stock Images" below. Gallery prints are for sale upon request. Our most popular size is 11 x 17 for $95. plus $6.95 shipping. Please call for additional sizes and quotes. Quantity postcards (with or without stands) are available at wholesale prices to retailers. To view our postcard line click on "Postcards and Cards" below. You can call Angel to request samples. Thank you for visiting Nativestock.com. Enjoy! Contents: Stock Photography The File: Over 100,000 35mm slide images

89. Iroquois Photography Sources Available By Nativestock.com
iroquois photography related ideas on nativestock.com include pictures of seminoleindians, native american coloring photos, indian art om pictures, native
http://www.nativestock.com/iroquois_photography_q.html
Iroquois Photography Sources Available by Nativestock.com
Iroquois photography related ideas on Nativestock.com include pictures of seminole indians, native american coloring photos, indian art om pictures, native american white buffalo art, and image of seminole indian medicine. Gallery prints are for sale upon request. Our most popular size is 11 x 17 for $95. Over 600 stock images can be viewed by clicking on "View Stock Images" below. Contact Angel if you don't see what you are specifically looking for. Professionally prepared submissions delivered promptly. Rates negotiable, assignments welcome, model releases available on request. You can call Angel to request samples. Thank you for visiting Nativestock.com. Northeastern Woodlands, Southwest, Great Plains, Southeast, Northwest Coast, Plateau, Great Basin, Alaska, California, Hawaii. You can call Angel to request samples. Thank you for visiting Nativestock.com.
NATIVESTOCK is the leading provider of Native American Indian pictures. Find iroquois photography on Nativestock.com with the terms

90. NYG&B: A Selected Bibliography For Native American Research
A Proud Heritage native American Services in New York Walker, Homer A. CherokeeIndian Census of 1838 iroquois. Beauchamp, William M. iroquois Folklore NY G
http://www.nygbs.org/info/articles/Native_American_Bibliography.html
Compiled by Catherine M. Ellard, Assistant Librarian General
  • Brandon, William Indians [E 58 B82]
  • Church, Benjamin The History of Philip's War, Commonly called the Great Indian War, of 1675 and 1676 [E 83.67 C5 Rare Book]
  • Drake, Samuel Gardner History of the Early Discovery of America and Landing of the Pilgrims; with a Biography of the Indians of North America [E 78 D76]
  • Hill, Edward E. Guide to the Records in the National Archives of the United States Relating to American Indians [E 93 H55]
  • Indian Affairs Papers, American Revolution [E 99 I7 I38]
  • Indian Treaties Printed by Benjamin Franklin, 1736-1762 [Penn. G 76.5 Oversize]
  • Josephy, Alvin M. The Indian Heritage of America [E 58 J6]
  • A Mixed Race : Ethnicity in Early America [PS 186 M58]
  • Ottery, Will A Man Called Sampson [G SA 4863]
  • Thayer, Henry Otis The Indians' Administration of Justice [Maine G 27]
  • United States. National Archives and Records Service American Indians: a Select Catalog of National Archives Microfilm Publications [E 93 U53]
  • Waldman, Carl

91. Hudson Valley Indians
villages were being annihilated since the natives lacked immunity lands of the lowerRiver indians were hunted was taken over by the iroquois indians, and from
http://www.hudsonriver.com/gazette/indians.htm
The Information Resource for New York's Hudson Valley
Indians of the Lower Hudson Valley
By Lillian Boonstra Croton Historical Society When the first European explorer sailed into New York harbor in 1524, the native civilization found on the banks of the Hudson was a complex and ancient one. The natives' ancestors had entered the Hudson Valley some twelve thousand years earlier, after the last continental glacier receded from North America. A significant change took place in the northeast from 1000 to 1600 AD as these early people gradually discovered they could grow their own vegetables. Horticulture or garden farming added to the traditional lifestyle of hunting, fishing and gathering. Corn, beans, squash and pumpkins, sunflowers and tobacco came from the south and southwest, perhaps initially from Mexico, where agriculture had been practiced for several thousand years. At the time of encounter with the Europeans, the entire area in and around New York City was densely populated by the natives. On the banks of the Hudson, as far north as Albany, Algonquin tribes lived in fortified villages, protected by sturdy walls of upright logs. There were also many unfortified villages on both banks of the Hudson according to early colonists and explorers journals. An Indian village believed to have been one of the most heavily fortified along the Hudson was located on Croton Point on the high plateau immediately beyond the railroad bridge. This ideal location afforded protection for the oyster beds in Haverstraw Bay and surrounding waters. The village was protected by a wall of tree trunks set upright in the ground and reinforced with earth embankments. A short distance east of the village was the burial ground. In death, the bodies where buried in a sitting position facing southwest. Buried with them were weapons, ornaments, utensils, wampum and parched corn.

92. SULAIR: Native American Repatriation & Reburial: A
L. Constitutional Law Preserving native American Cultural and Archeological Artifacts. American Indian Law Review 4 Fenton, William N. iroquois Masks A
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/native/appf.html
skip to main navigation Articles A-Z Humanities and Area Studies Engineering Social Sciences Interdisciplinary Government Numeric Data Archive of Recorded Sound Biology (Falconer) Bing Wing Business (Jackson) Eng.(Swain) Earth Sciences (Branner) East Asia Education (Cubberley) Engineering Government Docs. (Jonsson) Green Library Hoover Institution Information Center Lane Reading Room Law (Crown) Map Collections Marine Biology (Miller) Sciences Media and Microtext Medical (Lane) Meyer Music Physics Special Collections Social Science Social Science Resource Center Stanford Auxiliary Library SLAC Library
Printer-Friendly
Native American Studies Collections
Compiled by Barb Bocek
Stanford Archaeologist
Offered as a Green Library General Reference Department guide, 1992 N.B. Photocopies of all numbered items listed in this bibliography are found in the Reference Collection at Z1209.2.N67.N38.
Contents
INTRODUCTION GENERAL REPATRIATION REBURIAL
Introduction
The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) was signed into law in November 1990 by President George Bush. It protects burial sites on federal and tribal lands and creates a process for repatriating cultural items, including artifacts and human remains, to native tribes. In November 1993, museums holding certain native american artifacts were required to prepare written summaries of their collections for distribution to culturally affiliated tribes. In November 1995, museums were required to prepare detailed inventories of their Native American collection.

93. Table 1. Top 25 American Indian Tribes For The United States 1990
Census 1980 Census Tribe Number Percent Number Percent All American indians .. 53,3302.8 35,861 2.4 iroquois 3 .. 52,557 2.7 38,218 2.6
http://www.census.gov/population/socdemo/race/indian/ailang1.txt
Table 1. Top 25 American Indian Tribes for the United States: 1990 and 1980 Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census Release date: August 1995 (Data are based on a sample) 1990 Census 1980 Census Tribe Number Percent Number Percent All American Indians..... 1,937,391 100.0 1,478,523 100.0 Cherokee...................... 369,035 19.0 232,080 15.7 Navajo........................ 225,298 11.6 158,633 10.7 Sioux 1....................... 107,321 5.5 78,608 5.3 Chippewa...................... 105,988 5.5 73,602 5.0 Choctaw....................... 86,231 4.5 50,220 3.4 Pueblo 2...................... 55,330 2.9 42,552 2.9 Apache........................ 53,330 2.8 35,861 2.4 Iroquois 3.................... 52,557 2.7 38,218 2.6 Lumbee 4...................... 50,888 2.6 28,631 1.9 Creek......................... 45,872 2.4 28,278 1.9 Blackfoot 2................... 37,992 2.0 21,964 1.5 Canadian and Latin American... 27,179 1.4 7,804 0.5 Chickasaw..................... 21,522 1.1 10,317 0.7 Tohono O'Odham................ 16,876 0.9 13,297 0.9 Potawatomi.................... 16,719 0.9 9,715 0.7 Seminole 2.................... 15,564 0.8 10,363 0.7 Pima.......................... 15,074 0.8 11,722 0.8 Tlingit....................... 14,417 0.7 9,509 0.6 Alaskan Athabaskans........... 14,198 0.7 10,136 0.7 Cheyenne...................... 11,809 0.6 9,918 0.7 Comanche...................... 11,437 0.6 9,037 0.6 Paiute 2...................... 11,369 0.6 9,523 0.6 Osage......................... 10,430 0.5 6,884 0.5 Puget Sound Salish............ 10,384 0.5 6,591 0.4 Yaqui......................... 9,838 0.5 5,197 0.4 Table 1. Top 25 American Indian Tribes for the UnitedStates: 1990 and 1980Con. (Data are based on a sample) Change Tribe Number Percent All American Indians..... 458,868 31.0 Cherokee...................... 136,955 59.0 Navajo........................ 66,665 42.0 Sioux 1....................... 28,713 36.5 Chippewa...................... 32,386 44.0 Choctaw....................... 36,011 71.7 Pueblo 2...................... 12,778 30.0 Apache........................ 17,469 48.7 Iroquois 3.................... 14,339 37.5 Lumbee 4...................... 22,257 77.7 Creek......................... 17,594 62.2 Blackfoot 2................... 16,028 73.0 Canadian and Latin American... 19,375 248.3 Chickasaw..................... 11,205 108.6 Tohono O'Odham................ 3,579 26.9 Potawatomi.................... 7,004 72.1 Seminole 2.................... 5,201 50.2 Pima.......................... 3,352 28.6 Tlingit....................... 4,908 51.6 Alaskan Athabaskans........... 4,062 40.1 Cheyenne...................... 1,891 19.1 Comanche...................... 2,400 26.6 Paiute 2...................... 1,846 19.4 Osage......................... 3,546 51.5 Puget Sound Salish............ 3,793 57.5 Yaqui......................... 4,641 89.3 1 Any entry with the spelling "Siouan" in the 1990 census was miscoded to Sioux in North Carolina. 2 Reporting and/or processing problems in the 1980 census have affected the data for this tribe. 3 Reporting and/or processing problems in the 1990 census have affected the data for this tribe. 4 Miscoding of entries in the 1980 census for "Lummee," "Lummi," "Lumbee," or "Lumbi" have affected the data for this tribe. Source: Racial Statistics Branch Population Division Bureau of the Census Washington, DC 20233 The data in this table are consistent with those published in 1990 CP-3-7, 1990 Census of Population, "Characteristics of American Indians by Tribe and Language," issued July 1994. The report is available from the Government Printing Office (GPO) for $51.00. The GPO stock number for the report is 003-024-08700-6. The GPO telephone number is (202) 512-1800. The Subject Summary Tape File (SSTF) 13, "Characteristics of American Indians by Tribe and Language," can be ordered from the Census Bureau's Customer Service Office on (301) 763-INFO(4636) or FAX (301) 457-3842. Also, a CD-ROM presenting these data will be available from the Customer Services Office in Summer 1995.

94. Silver Wave Records: Native American Music, World Music & New Age Music.
of lullabies from various Indian Nations all tribes and include Joanne Shenandoah(iroquois) and Robert native American Currents. native American Currents is an
http://www.silverwave.com/native.html
Music that honors traditional Native songs and brings them into the present with the addition of contemporary instrumentation and unique collaborations.
Renowned Pianist Peter Kater collaborates with premiere Native American Flutist R. Carlos Nakai on eight unique recordings including How the West Was Lost volumes I and II, Honorable Sky, Migration, Natives, Improvisations in Concert and the NEW Song for Humanity Listen to sound samples or purchase recordings by from Amazon.com
Mary Youngblood is one of the first Native women to professionally record the sacred Native American Flute. Her debut release, The Offering , features all original solo flute compositions recorded in the underground Moaning Caverns of California. Her second release, Heart of the World , includes additional instrumentation and accompanying vocals by Joanne Shenandoah. Her Grammy award winning recording, Beneath the Raven Moon , explores further styles such as Classical and Blues. Listen to sound samples or purchase recordings from Mary Youngblood from Amazon.com

95. Exceptional Links
There are a tremendous number of websites by and about native americans.This is a collection us know about it. native American Nations.
http://www.nativeamericanlinks.com/nai/links.html

[Translate]

Use this feature to translate Native American Images into French, German, Italian, Portuguese or Spanish Native American Images is underwritten by:
Arts of Native America
Visit River Trading Post
There are a tremendous number of websites by and about Native Americans. This is a collection of the finest sites on the web based on research by Native American Images. If you know of a site that should be included here, contact Native American Images and let us know about it. Native American Nations Navajo Nation
Hopi People

The Lakota

Seneca
...
Ute Mountain Utes
Native American Archives Native American Population
Navajo Map and Navajo Settlements

Dine Family History of Harrison Lapahie Jr.
Welcome to Navajoland ... Carolina Algonkians Native American Media Indian Country Today - America's Largest Indian Newspaper The Cherokee Observer Native American Public Telecommunications Indian Country News ... Tribal College Journal Native American Services Native American Health Council Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute North American Indian Children's Organization Koyemsi Designs Vocational Program ... American Indian College Fund Exceptional Personal Home Pages Editors note
: Sometimes individuals create a Native American home page that is worth special note. We would like to call to your attention to these as very special, worthwhile places to visit. These sites are exceptionally well designed, and provide information that is highly unique in subject matter, creativity and overall direction. We believe that you will love them and learn from them. The list is a short one. We have researched hundreds of sites for this list. If you know of a site that should be considered for inclusion in this very short list, please let us know. E-mail

96. The Seeker Magazine
a story unlike any other story about a native American nation and The Seneca, a memberof the iroquois League of the British in the French and Indian War, and
http://www.the-seeker.com/cover.htm
Index Generally Seeking
Seeking Classmates
Seeking Ex-Coworkers
Seeking Ex-Neighbors
Seeking Ex-Lovers Relatively Seeking
Seeking Missing Parent
Seeking Birth Parent
Seeking Adopted Child
Seeking Missing Siblings
Seeking Other Relatives
Seeking Heritage Answers Seeking Missing Children Militarily Seeking Seeking Miscellaneous Military Seeking Military Brats Seeking Navy Veterans Seeking Army Veterans Seeking Air Force Vets Seeking Marine Veterans Seeking Coast Guard Vets Seeking Beneficiaries Beneficiaries Seeking Treasury Dept. Refunds Seeking IRS Refunds Seeking State Tax Refunds Seeking Misc. Insurance Policy Holders Place Your Own Message Site Seeking Miscellaneous Database ... Radio Cornplanter Chronicles by Harold Thomas Beck Cornplanter Chronicles is a story unlike any other story about a Native American nation and its war chief. The Seneca, a member of the Iroquois League of Six Nations, is the only tribe to survive intact to this day on their ancestral land. They are the only tribe in the United States that was never defeated by American armies and forced to accept the white man's terms. They fought on the losing side several times (The French against the British in the French and Indian War, and the British against the United States in the Revolutionary War), but in each case the war was lost elsewhere and they fought on. When it finally came in 1791, it was Cornplanter, head chief of the Seneca, who negotiated the terms and brought peace to the Alleghenies.

97. Native American Genealogy Mine
Accohannock native American Living Village. AKChin Indian Community of MaricopaAZ. Inupiaq/Inupiat Alaska native Cultural Profile. iroquois Indian Museum.
http://home.ptd.net/~nikki/nativeam.htm

Guest Book
Native American Genealogy Mine American Revolution Genealogy Mine Memorial Day North American Indians ...

98. American Indians And The Natural World
The enduring heritage of connections between American indians and the natural universe are the focus of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History's new Alcoa Foundation Hall of American indians.
http://www.carnegieinstitute.org/cmnh/exhibits/north-south-east-west

99. THE ILLINI: LORDS OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY
end of the French and Indian War and deterioration of relations with neighboring NativeAmerican tribes which antagonized the Fox, the iroquois, the Chickasaw
http://members.tripod.com/~RFester/
var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Check out the NEW Hotbot Tell me when this page is updated
The Illini Confederation: Lords of the Mississippi Valley Kaskaskia Peoria Cahokia Tamaroa Michigamea When you visit Illinois remember that others walked here first. The Illiniwek When French explorers first journeyed down from Canada to the upper Mississippi Valley in the early Seventeenth Century, they found the region inhabited by a vigorous, populous Algonquin nation who called themselves "Hileni" or "Illiniwek" which means "men." . This the French rendered as "Illinois". Today most people know little about this once powerful confederation of tribes: the Peoria, Kaskaskia, Tamaroa, Cahokia, and Michigamea. The purpose of this web page is to provide an overview of the Illinois People which will hopefully stimulate the reader to further investigate the history of the Illinois people and their population decline. Peoria warriors with captive near Lake Pimitoui Diorama photograph used with permission of Illinois State Museum The Confederation The five most populous tribes of the Illini Confederation were the Kaskaskia, the Cahokia, the Peoria, the Tamaroa, and the Michigamea. Other smaller affilliated groups were the Taporouas, the Moingwenas, the Chinkoa, the Omouahoa, the Coiraconetanon, and the Chepoussa, While some authors (e.g., Scott) consider the Wea (Ouiatenon) and Piankeshaw to be Illinois affilliates, in fact these two well-known tribes are members of the Miami family. The Miami and Illini did speak a mutually intelligible language, albeit with dialectical differences. Early French commentators believed that the Illini and Miami came from a common ancestral tribe that split in the late prehistoric period

100. Creation/Migration/Origin Stories
North American indians tell many stories about the stars individual stars and groups
http://www.indians.org/welker/legend.htm
Creation/Migration/Origin Stories
Ancient One Anishnabe Migration Story Apache Creation Story Aztec Creation Story Blessed Gift of Joy is Bestowed Upon Man California Creation Story (Yokut) Commanche Creation Story Coyote and Multnomah Falls (Wasco) Creation of the First Indians (Chelan) Creation of the [Maya] World - Version 1 Creation of the [Maya] World - Version 2 Creation of the Red and White Races (Flathead/Salish) Diguenos Creation Story First Fire (Cherokee) First Moccasins (Plains Nations) Flood on Superstition Mountain (Pima) Gaelic Myths/Legends Godasiyo the Woman Chief (Seneca) Grandmother's Creation Story (Creek) Great Flood (Salish) Great Serpent and the Great Flood (Chippewa) How Corn Came to the Earth How the Great Chiefs Made the Moon and the Sun (Hopi) How the Hopi Indians Reached Their World (Hopi) How the Old Man Made People How Rabbit Brought Fire to the People (Creek) In the Beginning In the Beginning (Yuchi) Men Visit the Sky (Seminole) Morning Star (Plains Indians) MicMac Creation Story Origin of Earth (Tuskegee) Origin of Fire (Jicarilla-Apache) Origin of Game and of Corn (Cherokee) Origin of Medicine (Cherokee) Origin of Summer and Winter (Acoma/Laguna) Origin of the Animals (Jicarilla-Apache) Origin of the Buffalo (Cheyenne) Origin of the Clans (Hopi) Origin of the Iroquois Nations (Iroquois) Origin of the Lakota Peace Pipe (Lakota) Origin of the Medicine Man (Passamaquoddy) Origin of the Sweat Lodge (Blackfeet/Piegan) Origin of the Thunderbird (Passamaquoddy) Origin of the Winds (Aleuts) Origin of Tu-Tok-A-Nu-La (Yosemite)

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