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         Iroquois Indians Native Americans:     more books (100)
  1. "Your fyre shall burn no more": Iroquois Policy toward New France and Its Native Allies to 1701 (The Iroquoians and Their World) by Jose Antonio Brandao, 1997-01-01
  2. Beyond the Covenant Chain: The Iroquois and Their Neighbors in Indian North America, 1600-1800 (Iroquois Book.)
  3. Realm of the Iroquois (American Indians) by Time-Life Books, 1993-08
  4. Roots of the Iroquois by Tehanetorens, 2000-01
  5. Exiled in the Land of the Free: Democracy, Indian Nations, and the U.S. Constitution
  6. Skunny Wundy: Seneca Indian Tales (Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by Arthur C. Parker, 1994-08
  7. Cornplanter: Chief Warrior of the Allegany Senecas (The Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by Thomas S. Abler, 2007-04-30
  8. To Be Indian: The Life of Iroquois-Seneca Arthur Caswell Parker by Joy Porter, 2001-12
  9. The Great Law and the Longhouse: A Political History of the Iroquois Confederacy (Civilization of the American Indian Series) by William N. Fenton, 1998-03
  10. The Woman Who Fell from the Sky: The Iroquois Story of Creation by John Bierhorst, 1993-03
  11. The Ordeal of the Longhouse: The Peoples of the Iroquois League in the Era of European Colonization (Institute of Early American History & Culture) by Daniel K. Richter, 1992-12-14
  12. Extending the Rafters: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Iroquois Studies
  13. The Iroquois (Peoples of America) by Dean R. Snow, 1994-11
  14. Samson Occom and the Christian Indians of New England (The Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by William Deloss Love, 2000-09-01

61. Prairie Public.Org: Prairie School Television Home: Programs: Great Native Ameri
2 iroquois indians of the Northeast — Five warring native American tribesnegotiated the great Law of Peace or iroquois League, which influenced American
http://www.prairiepublic.org/education/pstv/titles/nations.html
@import "/css/alternate.css";
Opportunities

Program

defaultOpen=6
Learners

Education - Prairie School Television Home Reading Rainbow Teacher Testimonials Video on Demand Newsletter ... Programs
Great Native American Nations
Series Information Curricular Areas:
Cultural Studies and Social Studies Length: 6/10-Minute Programs Grade Levels: 3-8 Teaher Guides (see descriptions below)

Episode Descriptions
The Cheyenne: Indians of the Plains
Teachers Guide
(in Microsoft Word format)
Iroquois: Indians of the Northeast
Teachers Guide
(in Microsoft Word format) Lakota Sioux: Indians of the Plains Teachers Guide (in Microsoft Word format) Navajo: Indians of the Southwest Teachers Guide (in Microsoft Word format) Seminoles: Indians of the Southeast Teachers Guide (in Microsoft Word format) Shawnee: Indians of the Midwest Teachers Guide (in Microsoft Word format) Broadcast Schedules See when you can watch programs or tape them for use anytime from year to year. More...

62. Iroquois
The Seneca, however, are the only native American tribe to own an American Joined by iroquois and other native allies, St. Leger moved down the Mohawk
http://www.tolatsga.org/iro.html
Iroquois 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. At the end of this History you will find links to those Nations referred to in the History of the Iroquois. 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 Iroquois Location The original homeland of the Iroquois was in upstate New York between the Adirondack Mountains and Niagara Falls. Through conquest and migration, they gained control of most of the northeastern United States and eastern Canada. At its maximum in 1680, their empire extended west from the north shore of Chesapeake Bay through Kentucky to the junction of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers; then north following the Illinois River to the south end of Lake Michigan; east across all of lower Michigan, southern Ontario and adjacent parts of southwestern Quebec; and finally south through northern New England west of the Connecticut River through the Hudson and upper Delaware Valleys across Pennsylvania back to the Chesapeake. With two exceptions - the Mingo occupation of the upper Ohio Valley and the Caughnawaga migration to the upper St. Lawrence - the Iroquois did not, for the most part, physically occupy this vast area but remained in their upstate New York villages.

63. Native American Wisdom
Index of native American Indian Legends, Myths Lore. 1. A Legend of Devil sTower Sioux How Chipmunks Got Their Stripes Seneca, iroquois
http://www.angelfire.com/ca/Indian/stories.html
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Angelfire 40 Yr Old Virgin Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next
Native American Legends, Myths and Lore
December 19, 2002 " In ages past, our old ones were the storytellers. This was the way things were passed along to the generations that followed. For this reason the aged people made it a point to remember every detail so they could relate it at a later time. They were the word and picture carriers making history and spirtual values alive and important. In recent times we have made our old ones think they are not so important. We spoof their stories and make them feel foolish. The truth is that we are ignorant of what is precious and how to 'a da li he li tse di appreciate age. Rigidity can creep in and set even the young mind if there are no soft memories, no laughter, no times too deep for tears. Age is grace a time too valuable to waste."
A Cherokee Feast of Days - Daily Meditations, Joyce Sequichie Hifler

64. New York Indian Tribes
Early native American Tribes and Culture Areas. $ Ancestry.com Indian Records $ Delaware Indian Tribe. Erie Indian Tribe. iroquois Indian Tribe
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/newyork/
Free Genealogy Indian Genealogy Genealogy Records
Biographies

Cemetery Records

Census Records

Free Family Tree Website
...
World Genealogy
Free Indian Records
Index and Database of Rolls

Indian Cemeteries

Indian Census Records

Indian Chiefs
...
How to Register
Native American Research Dawes: Getting Organized Indian Tribes of the Frontier Your American Indian Ancestors ... Early Native American Tribes and Culture Areas $ Ancestry.com Indian Records $ 1900 Indian Territory Census Dawes Commission Index, 1896 The Dawes Commission Allotment Cherokee Connections ... Indian Affairs, Laws and Treaties New York Indian Tribes 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:

65. 1987: "Native American Political Systems And The Evolution Of Democracy: An Anno
This 36page booklet provides an overview of native American June 10 aboutthe influence of the iroquois Indian Federation on the drafters of the
http://www.ratical.org/many_worlds/6Nations/NAPSnEoD87.html
Next ToC Prev Native American Political Systems
and the Evolution of Democracy:
An Annotated Bibliography

Bruce E. Johansen
Professor of Communication and
Native American Studies
University of Nebraska at Omaha
Books, Scholarly, and Specialty Journals
. "From One Sovereign People to Another," National Geographic, September, 1987, pp. 370-373.
    This article briefly describes the Iroquois Great Law of Peace, then asks: "Could it be that the U.S. Constitution owes a debt to the Iroquois?" The article describes Franklin's view of native politics.
. "Selected Readings on Iroquois Contributions to the U. S. Constitution." Northeast Indian Quarterly 4:3 (Fall, 1987), p. 29. (*) Delgado, Richard. "Review Essay: Derrick Bell and the Ideology of Racial Reform: Will We Ever Be Saved..." Yale Law Journal 97 (1988), p. 923.
    Most of this review essay is concerned with the intractable nature of racial tension in American society. Delgado finds that civil-rights law usually acts only as a corrective for minorities when it runs congruent with established interests. Delgado says that the books of Derrick Bell, a professor of law at Harvard, bears this out. As an aside, Delgado writes that "Although books praising the Constitution and tracing the origins of its miraculous ideas generally neglect to mention this fact, some of the ideas in our form of government came from the Iroquois. Before Columbus 'discovered' America, the Five Nations of the Iroquois had formed a constitutional confederation based on a document called the Great Law of Peace...." Delgado then lists a summary of similarities, citing Johansen

66. Eastern Woodland Indians : Northeastern Indians Bibliography
Part of the American Indian Lives series. Young Adult. Rev. in SLJ. IncludesIroquois, Cherokee and other outstanding native American leaders.
http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/indnorth.htm
Eastern Woodland Indians: Northeastern Indians Bibliography
By Inez Ramsey
The Northern Maize (Corn) Area extended from southern New England and Maryland to the Lower Missouri River. These peoples practiced agriculture and were hunters and fishermen. Some tribes included the Iroquois [Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca Indians]; the Huron, the Lenni-Lenape [Delaware]. The Penobscots lived in the far northeastern corner of the United States [Maine, Vermont, etc.]. The Ojibwa, Winnebago, Algonquin and Potawatomi Indians lived in the north central part of the U.S. in the Great Lakes Area [Superior, Erie] The Fox, Sauk and Menomini tribes also lived in this area. Tribes in this area had wild rice as a staple in their diets.
For availability information check visit your school or public library or Amazon Books
Biography. Juvenile

Fiction. Juvenile

Nonfiction. Juvenile
Bierhorst, John. The Woman Who Fell from the Sky; The Iroquois Story of Creation
Ill. by Robert Parker. Morrow, 1993. Rev. in Bklst. Challenging work for ages 5 to 9. Wonderful imagery.
Bruchac, Joseph.

67. Encyclopedia Of North American Indians - - Tuscarora
The League of the iroquois admitted them as its sixth member nation in 1722.The last Tuscaroras left the 15 of Handbook of North American indians ed.
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_041100_tuscarora.htm
Entries Publication Data Advisory Board Maps ... World Civilizations Encyclopedia of North American Indians
Tuscarora
Several thousand Tuscaroras were living in Virginia and North Carolina when Europeans arrived in the sixteenth century. Speaking an Iroquoian language, a fact that indicates a probable northern origin, they were the most powerful Indians in the region, occasionally raiding neighboring Algonquins. The Tuscaroras brokered furs, rum, and other trade items between Europeans and Native Americans. They established agriculture, permanent settlements, and a strong political organization. In winter they moved to hunting quarters, bringing with them corn that the women had cultivated, with some help from the men. Peaceful relations prevailed during the first two centuries of European colonization. But Tuscarora territories were increasingly seized by whites. Tuscaroras were frequently cheated, abused, and captured and sold into slavery. Bent on vengeance, southern Tuscaroras attacked several white settlements, killing families and capturing some women. North Carolina whites appealed to Governor Edward Hyde for protection. Though Hyde asked Virginia for help, he received little because of North Carolina-Virginia boundary disputes. He petitioned South Carolina, and an expedition of whites and British tributary Indians ruthlessly devastated several Tuscarora villages. The Tuscaroras and their Iroquoian allies—the Merherrins, the Nottaways, and several smaller bands—were defeated, but later regrouped and continued the Tuscarora War (1711-13) under the leadership of Hancock (Hencock). This conflict provided the English with an opportunity to exterminate the Tuscaroras or drive them from North Carolina. The Northern Tuscaroras, led by the ambitious, accommodationist Tom Blount, professed neutrality but soon joined the English in the war against their southern kindred. Pretending friendship, Blount betrayed Hancock to the English, who promptly executed him. Another expedition under James Moore finally vanquished the Tuscaroras.

68. Native American Genealogy Links
iroquois/ native American Homepage (link sited added 20 November 1998 ) Deer With Horns native American Indian SiteIndex (link site added 11 March 1999
http://members.aol.com/bbbenge/newlinks.html
To make it easier to search for information we have added local page references. By Tribes
A
B C D ... Z
by States Alabama Georgia North Carolina Oklahoma ... United States Government
general adoptions politics myths crafts ... resources
By Tribes
Apache Blackfeet Catawaba Cherokee ... Wampampoag This website last updated 5 May 2002 Treaties of the Five Tribes
For this week in Native American history
(link site added 22 September 1997)
American Truths
(link site added 21 January 1999)
American Indian Genealogy Help Center and Message Board

Bulletin Board for Native American Postings
(new link site added 6 November 1999
Native American Libraries
(link site added 6 November 1999)
AXIOM Financial Management
for Native Americans (link site added 28 January 2000)
Wickiup's Treaty grids
, interesting graphs of the results of early treaties (link site added 10 February 2000) Woihanble Yuwita Habitat for Humanity (link site added 10 February 2000) Turtle tracks (link site added 15 March 2000 Multicultural Grant Guides
Tribes, States and Government Agency
Abenaki Indians
The Abenaki Webpage (link updated 5 May 2002) Traditional Abenaki of Mazaipskwik and related bands (link site added 25 May 1998)
Culture
Abenaki Culture
History
Abenaki History by Lee Sultzman,First Nations Historian

69. Native American Resources
Tracy s Joanne Shenandoah s iroquois Music native American Music links native American IndianCulture, Education, Art, Science
http://www.geocities.com/~webwinds/friends/bknative.htm
Tracy Marks'
Native American Bookmarks
See also: Native American art
See also: Torrey Philemon's home at Ancient Sites
and Tika Yupanqui's home at Ancient Sites
and the Fabularum Bibliotheca Message Board
BY TRACY MARKS:
Apache Female Puberty Ceremony
Apache Puberty Seminar Transcript
Iroquois Dreamwork and Spirituality
Iroquois MidWinter Festival
...
Sarah Winnemucca, Paiute Chief
See also: Prehistoric/Native Fiction links See also: Yahoo's Club for Prehistoric/ Native American fiction Go to: Windweaver Web and Windows 95 Resources Go to: WebWinds Web Cameras Go to: Webwinds K12 Links: Social Studies
The Best Native American Link Centers Hanksville site: Native American resources on the Net Native American Cultural Resources on the Internet (Hanksville) Digital Librarian: Best Native American sites Dusters Native American Links ... Shea's Native Place
Cherokee
Cherokee Communications, Inc. Cherokee history Cherokee Home Page History of the Cherokee ... United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians
Eastern Tribes miscellaneous Mashpee Indian Culture Mashpees of Cape Cod Seminole Tribe of Florida Education (Native) American Indian Schools on the Web B.C., Canada: First Nations Teaching

70. Iroquois: How Fire Came To The Six Nations
A native AMERICAN INDIAN FACTOID The iroquois Confederacy, made up of six Nations,was formed in about 1575. The iroquois Nation includes the Onondaga,
http://www.bedtime-story.com/bedtime-story/iroquois-fire.htm
Bedtime-Story
For the Busy Business- Parent

Whimsical Bedtime Stories for Children of All Ages
http://www.bedtime-story.com/bedtime-story
Special Section: Native American Bedtime-Stories
Courtesy of Home Office Mall

Iroquois: How Fire Came To The Six Nations A NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN FACTOID : The Iroquois Confederacy, made up of six Nations, was formed in about 1575. The Iroquois Nation includes the Onondaga, the Oneida, the Senecca, the Mohawk, the Cayuga, and the Tuscarora. The Iroquois are from New York State. Near their pallisaded villages which were often surrounded by moats, the Iroquois planted maize, squash, and beansthe Three Sisters. They hunted deer and bear, caught fish, tapped the sugar maples, and gathered a variety of plant foods. They lived in large bark longhouses, each house holding as many as sixty people and headed by a clan mother. The Iroquois have always prided themselves on diplomacy and even today the Iroquois travel the world speaking of peace. Often, around the fire in the long house of the Iroquois, during the Moon of the Long Nights, this tale is told.

71. Indians! - The Native American Bedtime-Story Collection
Special Section The native American BedtimeStory Collection A lot of thehistory books talk about us indians in the past tense, but we don t plan on
http://www.bedtime-story.com/bedtime-story/indians.htm
Bedtime-Story
For the Busy Business- Parent

Whimsical Bedtime Stories for Children of All Ages
Special Section: The Native American Bedtime-Story Collection
http://www.bedtime-story.com/bedtime-story
Courtesy of Home Office Mall The Native American
Bedtime-Story Collection
Being Indian is mainly in your heart. It's a way of walking with the earth instead of upon it. A lot of the history books talk about us Indians in the past tense, but we don't plan on going anywhere... We have lost so much, but the thing that holds us together is that we all belong to, and are protectors of the earth; that's the reason for us being here. Mother Earth is not a resource, she is an heirloom." David Ipinia, Yurok Indian Artist Apache: How the Buffalo Were Released on Earth What's It About? Tell Me The Story! Apache: Creation Story What's It About? Tell Me The Story! Apache: The Origin of Fire What's It About? Tell Me The Story! Hopi: Yaponcha - The Wind God What's It About?

72. Native American Sites
native American culture lessons links and indian nations tribes. Edit Web site that describes Sainte Marie Among the iroquois Edit
http://oswego.org/staff/cchamber/resources/nativeamericans.cfm
American Indians and the Natural World
he 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. Through exploration of four different visions of living in and with the natural worldthose of the Tlingit of the Northwest Coast, the Hopi of the Southwest, the Iroquois of the Northeast, and the Lakota of the PlainsNorth, South, East, West: American Indians and the Natural World examines the belief systems, philosophies, and practical knowledge that guide Indian peoples' interactions with the natural world. [ Edit Cherokees of California
Cherokees of California, Inc., is a non-profit tribal organization. We are banded together as descendants of a common Cherokee heritage. Our primary purpose is to preserve and pass on to the next generation our traditions, history and language. We invite all interested people who want to re-new ties with their Cherokee heritage to come and join us. [ Edit Cheyenne/Grassland Vocabulary
This is a set of Quia games on the Cheyenne.The game was created by Cindy Murabito from the Oswego City School District. [

73. Native American Home Pages - Nations
Pacific Northwest connecting American Indian/Alaska native Communities North American iroquois Veterans Powwow - Salamanca, NY, July 16 17, 2005.
http://www.nativeculturelinks.com/nations.html
NATIVE AMERICAN NATIONS
Last update - July 5, 2005
Maintained by Lisa Mitten
INFORMATION ON INDIVIDUAL NATIVE NATIONS
This section contains links to pages that have either been set up by the nations themselves, or are pages devoted to a particular nation, and are ALPHABETICAL BY TRIBAL NAME. Pages maintained by Indian Nations or individuals are indicated with this symbol: . Pages without this symbol are primarily ABOUT specific nations, but not by them. Included are both recognized and unrecognized tribes. First Nations Histories - a good source for student papers! Dick also has a listing of tribes , both federally and state recognized, as well as those with no formal governmental recognition at all. Added 8/3/99; updated 5/15/00. A-C D-H I-L M-N ... T-Z

74. Native American Home Pages - Education
native American Science Bowl Program a competition for K-12 Indian students . The Great Peace CD-ROM - an extensive resource for schools on iroquois
http://www.nativeculturelinks.com/education.html
TRIBAL COLLEGES, NATIVE STUDIES PROGRAMS, and INDIAN EDUCATION
Last update - November 12, 2004
Maintained by Lisa Mitten Native Education Organizations Tribal Colleges Indian / Native Studies Departments ... List of all Native American and Canadian Indian tribes, nations, and groups, recognized or otherwise NATIVE EDUCATION ORGANIZATIONS

75. Ohio History Central - Historic Indian - Lifestyles - Dwellings
The iroquois indians used a rounded or Quonsettype roof, In prehistorictimes and even after the Europeans arrived in North America, some Indian tribes
http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/ohc/history/h_indian/life/dwelling.shtml

76. Ohio History Central - History - Groups - Delaware Tribe
Some Delaware indians came to live in eastern Ohio along the Muskingum River Despite the Delawares fears, many americans hoped that they could count on
http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/ohc/history/h_indian/tribes/delaware.shtml

77. Native Americans
Indian Stories How native americans Saw Their World Disappear native AmericanRights Fund Indian Trust Funds Mismanagement
http://www.teacheroz.com/Native_Americans.htm
Updated July 19, 2003
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS

Treaties Between the United States and Native Americans

The Avalon Project : Statutes of the United States Concerning Native Americans

World History Archives: Indigenous Peoples of the Americas

KAPPLER'S INDIAN AFFAIRS: LAWS AND TREATIES
...
IMAGES: The Illustrating Traveler: Customs of the Country

More primary documents are available within some of the sites listed below.
Alphabetical Listing of Reservations

THIS WEEK IN NORTH "AMERICAN INDIAN" HISTORY by PHIL KONSTANTIN

Native Ways..A journey through modern Native America
Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Native American Resources ... Linkpage: Native Web Pages Listings For info on the Maya, Inca, Aztec and other Central and South American native cultures, please visit my Meso and Latin America page. NATIVE AMERICANS - LEGISLATION - ISSUES - AGENCIES CODETALK: Code Talk is the official website of HUD's ONAP Legislation Affecting the American Indian Community Legislation Impacting American Indians American Indian Liaison Office ... American Indian Gambling and Casino Information Center TIMELINES TIMELINE: Native American History Native American Timeline TIMELINE: Canadian St. Lawrence River Valley Native Tribes

78. Indians Of Indiana
This turned the indians in the area against the americans. Many of the Nativeamericans turned against him for this, but in 1806 he correctly predicted
http://members.lycos.co.uk/brisray/th/thist2.htm
HomePage Optical Illusions War Stories QBasic ... Prehistory Indians Explorers (Page 1) (Page 2) (Page 3) ... Other Sites Terre Haute - A history and a guide This is my history and guide to my adopted home - Terre Haute, Indiana. Indians of Indiana This is not a history of any particular tribe but of Indiana. From first contact with the white man and their relentless move westward, pushing the Native Americans before them, from about 1650 onwards many tribes lived for a while in Indiana. The story of Indiana between 1750 and 1840 is the story of what happens when two very different cultures meet. The Kickapoo also belong to the Alogonquian speaking people. They take their name from Kiwegapawa, which means "he stands about" or "he moves about". The Kickapoo homeland was originally in northwest Ohio and southern Michigan in the area between Lake Eerie and Lake Michigan. By 1658 attacks from the east by the Ottawa, Neutral and Iroquois Indians had forced them into southwest Wisconsin. Around 1700 they had begun to move south into central Illinois and the Wabash Valley in Indiana. The Miami are also an Alogonquian speaking nation. Their original homeland was northern Indiana, north eastern Illinois and north western Ohio. The Wea and Piankashaw are part of the Miami nation but were forced from the area by the Iroquois in the 1650's. They settled in Wisconsin and northern Illinois but by around 1710 had mostly returned to Indiana. Their name, Me-ah-me (whence Maumee), and in the full plural form Ou-miami-wek, is of uncertain meaning and derivation. Early English writers called them Twightwee, a corruption of their Iroquois name, intended to imitate the cry of a crane. The first European contact was recorded as being about 1654 when two French explorers found some Miami refugees northwest of Green Bay, Wisconsin. The first written record of them was in 1658.

79. Native Americans
native American tribal websites. Links to over 100 sites on the web that American Indian Law This page is designed for Indian law practitioners,
http://killeenroos.com/link/amind.html
Native Americans back to social studies link index Tribal Websites
  • Animal Legends and Symbols Animals played an important part in Native American tradition. This site shows you some of those animals and offers examples of their symbolic meanings. American Indian Law This page is designed for Indian law practitioners, Tribes or tribal members, law students, and anyone interested in Indian law. Features of this site include a list of the best law schools for Indian law, links to researching Indian law issues, and links of organizations related to Indian law. American Indian Resources American Indian Web page American Indians and the Natural World Through exploration of four different visions of living in and with the natural worldthose of the Tlingit of the Northwest Coast, the Hopi of the southwest, the Iroquois of the Northeast, and the Lakota of the PlainsNorth, South, East, West: American Indians and the Natural World examines the belief systems, philosophies, and practical knowledge that guide Indian peoples' interactions with the natural world. Though all of these peoples have chosen different pathways and strategies for making a life in their various environments, one similar concept is voiced by allthat a reciprocal connection exists between people and the rest of the world. Authors - Native American First Nations Histories excellent data about many different tribes. Author proposes to add more tribes - as many as 200.
  • 80. -Native American Indian Tribes - Over 1,200 Articles On Native American Indians,
    Indian Country native american current events, news, stories issues of concern to TNB iroquois Six Nation iroquois Confederacy Exposes Federal State
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