• Thumbnail for Iroquoian peoples
    The Iroquoian peoples are an ethnolinguistic group of peoples from eastern North America. Their traditional territories, often referred to by scholars...
    18 KB (1,835 words) - 03:02, 23 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Iroquoian languages
    The Iroquoian languages are a language family of indigenous peoples of North America. They are known for their general lack of labial consonants. The...
    14 KB (1,191 words) - 07:32, 3 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Erie people
    The Erie people were an Indigenous people of the Northeastern Woodlands historically living on the south shore of Lake Erie. An Iroquoian-speaking tribe...
    21 KB (2,594 words) - 13:26, 22 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Wyandot people
    the people were located near the present-day site of Montreal and former sites of the historic St. Lawrence Iroquoian peoples. Wendat is an Iroquoian language...
    59 KB (7,164 words) - 17:50, 29 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Iroquois
    Iroquois (redirect from Early Iroquoian)
    HOH-din-oh-SHOH-nee; lit. 'people who are building the longhouse') are an Iroquoian-speaking confederacy of Native Americans and First Nations peoples in northeast...
    253 KB (31,544 words) - 09:09, 2 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Tuscarora people
    Indigenous Peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands in Canada and the United States. They are an Iroquoian Native American and First Nations people. The Tuscarora...
    30 KB (3,625 words) - 19:03, 24 October 2024
  • The St. Lawrence Iroquoians were an Iroquoian Indigenous people who existed until about the late 16th century. They concentrated along the shores of the...
    35 KB (4,352 words) - 03:33, 17 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mohawk people
    of the Haudenosaunee, or Iroquois Confederacy. Mohawk are an Iroquoian-speaking people with communities in southeastern Canada and northern New York...
    53 KB (6,064 words) - 03:13, 21 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Petun
    Petun (redirect from Tabacco people)
    Wendat. Similarly to other Iroquoian peoples, they were structured as a confederacy. One of the less numerous Iroquoian peoples when they became known to...
    24 KB (2,769 words) - 19:39, 24 October 2024
  • O-non-dowa-gah/Onöndowa'ga:', lit. 'Great Hill People') are a group of Indigenous Iroquoian-speaking people who historically lived south of Lake Ontario...
    96 KB (11,446 words) - 03:37, 17 October 2024
  • Pennsylvania, and the Erie Nation and Susquehannock peoples in Pennsylvania. Southern speakers of Iroquoian languages ranged from the Cherokee in the Great...
    35 KB (556 words) - 14:20, 26 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Oneida people
    about this. Iroquoian elders would have to be consulted on the oral history of this identification. The association may correspond to Iroquoian concepts...
    23 KB (2,854 words) - 03:36, 17 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Onondaga people
    and Meaning in Spatial Archaeology: Investigations into Pre-Columbian Iroquoian Space and Place. Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado. pp. 189–214...
    19 KB (1,990 words) - 21:11, 25 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Piscataway people
    hunted, and fished. By 1600, incursions by the Susquehannock and other Iroquoian peoples from the north had almost entirely destroyed many of the Algonquian...
    38 KB (4,334 words) - 04:18, 21 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Indigenous peoples of Maryland
    Algonquian and Iroquoian peoples, with a smaller Siouan-speaking population emigrating to the area in the mid-18th century. Many of these peoples assimilated...
    18 KB (1,861 words) - 19:56, 15 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Wenrohronon
    Wenrohronon (redirect from Wenro people)
    The Wenrohronon or Wenro people were an Iroquoian indigenous nation of North America, originally residing in present-day western New York (and possibly...
    11 KB (1,232 words) - 05:50, 29 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Susquehannock
    Andaste, were an Iroquoian people who lived in the lower Susquehanna River watershed in what is now Pennsylvania. Their name means “people of the muddy river...
    45 KB (4,987 words) - 00:02, 20 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Longhouses of the Indigenous peoples of North America
    Wyandot (also called Huron) and Erie people, both Iroquoian peoples, also built longhouses, as did the Algonquian peoples, such as the Lenni Lenape, who lived...
    10 KB (1,231 words) - 02:41, 3 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Neutral Confederacy
    Confederacy (also Neutral Nation, Neutral people, or Attawandaron) was a tribal confederation of Iroquoian peoples. Its heartland was in the floodplain of...
    38 KB (4,220 words) - 12:22, 28 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Cherokee
    Cherokee (redirect from Cherokee People)
    where other Iroquoian peoples have been based. However, anthropologist Thomas R. Whyte, writing in 2007, dated the split among the peoples as occurring...
    114 KB (13,329 words) - 20:05, 31 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mingo
    Mingo (redirect from Mingo people)
    The Mingo people are an Iroquoian group of Native Americans, primarily Seneca and Cayuga, who migrated west from New York to the Ohio Country in the mid-18th...
    10 KB (1,201 words) - 11:51, 18 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Cayuga people
    joined by eastward remnants of Susquehannock and large groups of Delaware peoples had also traveled the ancient trails through the gaps of the Allegheny...
    15 KB (1,937 words) - 03:35, 17 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Seneca–Cayuga Nation
    Oklahoma and are headquartered in Grove. They are descended from Iroquoian peoples who had relocated to Ohio from New York state in the mid-18th century...
    14 KB (2,012 words) - 15:31, 23 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nottoway people
    Nottoway (also Nottaway) are an Iroquoian Native American tribe in Virginia. The Nottoway spoke a Nottoway language in the Iroquoian language family. The term...
    16 KB (1,887 words) - 23:14, 24 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Joseph Coulon de Jumonville
    Joseph Coulon de Jumonville (category French Canadian people of the French and Indian War)
    Tanacharison, known as the Half King and the leader of a band of new Iroquoian peoples allied to the British, the Mingos, believed he was planning an ambush...
    18 KB (2,532 words) - 09:40, 20 September 2024
  • The Massawomeck were an Iroquoian people who lived in what is now western Maryland and eastern West Virginia during the early 17th century. Their territory...
    8 KB (842 words) - 01:03, 27 July 2024
  • The Indigenous people of the Eastern Woodlands spoke languages belonging to several language groups, including Algonquian, Iroquoian, Muskogean, and...
    5 KB (548 words) - 04:11, 21 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for New York (state)
    Tuscarora became the sixth nation of the Iroquois. In the 1700s, Iroquoian peoples would take in the remaining Susquehannock of Pennsylvania after they...
    216 KB (20,295 words) - 15:01, 3 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Timeline of Quebec history (beginnings–1533)
    can be traced back 10,000 years, preceded the Algonquian and Iroquoian aboriginal peoples, with whom the Europeans first made contact in the 16th century...
    2 KB (204 words) - 12:06, 14 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Lenape
    Lenape (redirect from Delaware (people))
    careful to keep firearms from the coastally located Lenape, while rival Iroquoian peoples in the north and west such as the Susquehannocks and Confederation...
    97 KB (11,935 words) - 02:45, 26 October 2024