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Tiêu đề Natives of North America
Chuyên ngành World History
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By 1450, there were dozens of tribal groups and alliances speaking diverse languages and following very different religious and social customs.. Because tribes were likely to move often

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Indian communities in the Southwest, Pacific Northwest,

and middle Mississippi Valley had vanished or dispersed,

abandoning sophisticated buildings and artifacts

Fac-tors that have been proposed to explain these declines

include climate change, warfare, and disease

By 1450, there were dozens of tribal groups and

alliances speaking diverse languages and following very

different religious and social customs There were some

commonalities: Most Indians were animists, believing in

the spiritual power of their natural surroundings They

devised elaborate rituals to placate these spirits, especially

those of animals they had killed In many areas human

burials were placed in elaborate and extensive earthen

mounds Most tribes respected shamans (healers) and

believed that a Great Spirit oversaw the natural world

Because tribes were likely to move often in search of better

land or more abundant game—or to avoid other hostile

tribes—property ownership in the European sense was all

but unknown Archaeologists have found abundant

evi-dence of trade routes that spanned the continent, bring-ing tribes together in the process of barter and exchange

In most North American tribes, women were in charge of agricultural production, while men hunted for game Maize (corn), first cultivated in Mexico, was by the time of contact a basic crop in much of North Amer-ica Squash and beans were also staples of most tribes’ diets While by no means environmentalists in any mod-ern sense, most North American tribes were well adapted

to their surroundings and were often helpful to inexpe-rienced Europeans For example, natives taught French explorers how to build lightweight birchbark canoes to travel where their clunky wooden ships were useless Oth-ers helped Europeans identify strange plants and animals, learning which were edible and which poisonous Most famously, Squanto, a Patuxet who had been kidnapped

by an English slave trader in 1614, returned to America

in time to teach the Pilgrims how to fish and grow corn, keeping them alive to hold a Thanksgiving in 1621 Warfare was a constant among various Indian groups both before and after European contact Early on, some tribal groups welcomed alliances with Europeans as a way

to overpower their traditional rivals, in part by acquiring the foreigners’ goods and technologies, especially their superior weapons But as the trickle of Europeans became

a flood, especially in British-claimed regions, some tribes forged alliances with traditional friends and even enemies

to counter European threats to Indian survival

For example, Algonquian chief Powhatan, head of

a strong confederacy, at first welcomed Jamestown set-tlers, even allowing his daughter, Pocahontas, to marry Englishman John Rolfe But in 1622, Powhatan’s

broth-er Opechancanough, now leadbroth-er of the Powhatan Confederacy, launched a surprise attack on settlers, killing more than three hundred of them and capturing women and children Ultimately, the Virginians rallied, using trickery and even poison to reclaim their hold-ings In this early war, as in later conflicts, tribes were responding to growing white populations Whites were

no longer perceived simply as traders who would soon move on; they had become settlers using—and claiming

as their own—traditional tribal lands

Disease did even more damage than European land grabs and weapons of war Because Indians were geneti-cally very similar, and because they had been isolated

in the New World for many centuries, they were at the mercy of pathogens carried by the invaders The worst

of these was smallpox, with measles and influenza also sowing death These diseases killed Europeans, too, but ravaged the Indian population Long before germs were known to cause disease, Europeans praised God for

 Natives of North America

Algonquian village on the Pamlico River estuary, showing Native

structures, agriculture, and spiritual life

Ngày đăng: 29/10/2022, 22:23

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