Indigenous Tribes & Culture: How Colonialism and Borderlands Affected Tribal NationsMain MenuIndigenous Tribes & Culture: How Colonialim and Borderlands Affected Tribal NationsIntroduction & Brief OverviewThe Cheyenne TribeIntroductionThe Big IdeaConclusionBibliographyJasmine Lowe52411ef32f68bb5f2d058f54ea2ae7d73c768819Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6a
The Mohawk Indians
1media/Mohawk Council of Chiefs.pngmedia/Iroquois Confederacy Map.jpg2021-03-19T15:01:40-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6a3874317An introduction into one of the Tribes of the Iroquois Confederationplain2021-05-06T14:25:52-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6aSmoke rose from inside the longhouse where the men were meeting with the outsiders. Many winters ago these fiercely proud people had fought against the strangers for encroaching on their land, these people were strange to them. Pale of skin with light eyes, hungry eyes that desired all that they see, eyes that could not satisfy their hunger for the land on which the Mohawk were born. Now the fighting has stopped, and the proud Keepers of the Eastern Door of the Iroquois Confederation sat in conference with the strangers from a land called "Denmark" far across the sea. The conference business was about trade, the Danish people wanted the furs from the animals that the Mohawk hunted. In return the European traders would provide the Mohawk with weapons in which to defeat their enemies and increase their strength. Some of the men in the longhouse were pleased with this arrangement, for since the arrival of these Europeans they had benefitted from trading with them. Then there were those men, older wiser men who watched with sad eyes and empty hearts. They had seen the change that the Europeans had brought to their people, and they had watched how the Mohawk became more dependent on the goods from the white traders. They were the only ones that remember the hungry eyes that first arrived in their land, and they knew in their heart that those eyes would envelope not only the Mohawk, but the entire Iroquois Confederation.
1media/Native American storytelling.png2021-03-22T13:35:39-07:00Jasmine Lowe52411ef32f68bb5f2d058f54ea2ae7d73c768819BibliographyJasmine Lowe11plain2021-05-06T21:55:43-07:00Jasmine Lowe52411ef32f68bb5f2d058f54ea2ae7d73c768819
1media/Iroquois Confederacy Map.jpgmedia/Mohawk Council of Chiefs.pngmedia/Longhouse-Northeast-Indians-of-North-America.jpg2021-04-26T14:58:20-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6aMohawk Culture before the arrival of European ColonistsJason Ragan26image_header2021-05-06T14:27:32-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6a
1media/Mohawk trading with Europeans.jpg2021-04-28T16:42:05-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6aMohawk Culture after the arrival of European ColonistsJason Ragan8image_header2021-05-06T14:28:26-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6a
1media/Longhouse-Northeast-Indians-of-North-America_thumb.jpg2021-04-29T14:09:50-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6aMohawk LonghouseJason Ragan2From Stories of American History by Wilbur F. Gordy (Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1913)plain2021-04-29T14:12:21-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6a
1media/Iroquois Confederacy Map.jpgmedia/Mohawk Council of Chiefs.pngmedia/Longhouse-Northeast-Indians-of-North-America.jpg2021-04-26T14:58:20-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6aMohawk Culture before the arrival of European Colonists26image_header2021-05-06T14:27:32-07:00Jason Raganfaf0424ba78a3758eed2369a69bdcccedf842c6a
1media/Native American storytelling.png2021-03-22T13:35:39-07:00Jasmine Lowe52411ef32f68bb5f2d058f54ea2ae7d73c768819Bibliography11plain2021-05-06T21:55:43-07:00Jasmine Lowe52411ef32f68bb5f2d058f54ea2ae7d73c768819