The American Indian Reader: HistoryIndian Historian Press, 1974 |
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paid us when we were starving because our food stores had been destroyed , by giving us four hundred bushels of our own corn for that whole country . The kinds and varieties of diseases brought to us by these foreigners destroyed whole ...
paid us when we were starving because our food stores had been destroyed , by giving us four hundred bushels of our own corn for that whole country . The kinds and varieties of diseases brought to us by these foreigners destroyed whole ...
Página 117
... destroyed . When a Hopi village resists the invaders , it is destroyed . 1541. Religion of the Indians in northern Mexico is for- bidden by the Spanish . Acoma Pueblo is attacked by Coronado . The Tigua resist Spanish domination and ...
... destroyed . When a Hopi village resists the invaders , it is destroyed . 1541. Religion of the Indians in northern Mexico is for- bidden by the Spanish . Acoma Pueblo is attacked by Coronado . The Tigua resist Spanish domination and ...
Página 123
1696. Onondaga and its stores of corn are destroyed by Frontenac . Oneida Castle is also destroyed by the French ... destroy Awatovi and kill the Christianized Indians . They oppose the treaty . Governor Cubero moves to punish the Hopi ...
1696. Onondaga and its stores of corn are destroyed by Frontenac . Oneida Castle is also destroyed by the French ... destroy Awatovi and kill the Christianized Indians . They oppose the treaty . Governor Cubero moves to punish the Hopi ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
acres administration agreement allotments American Fur Company American Indian annuities Apache attacked authorized bands battle Blood Law California ceded cession Cherokee Nation Cheyenne Chickasaws chiefs Chippewa Choctaws claims Commissioner of Indian Congress continued Creek culture Dawes Act defeated Delawares dians Dutch economy English established Europeans federal fee simple forced Fort Sully granted Hopi hundred Indian Affairs Indian land Indian nations Indian tribes individual reserves Interior invaders Iroquois Kansas killed known later leaders living massacred ment Mexico Miami million acres Mississippi Missouri Missouri river native Native Americans Navajo negotiations Nez Perce Office Ohio Oklahoma paid peace Potawatomi President promised Pueblo removal river Secretary Seminole Senate Seneca settlement settlers signed Sioux Sisseton Sitting Bull slaves society sold Spanish stipulated surrender Tarahumaras Tawagonshi Territory thousand tion tract trade treaty tribal troops United States Government Wampanoag western Wyandot Yanktonai Yaqui
Referências a este livro
Civil Rights: A Current Guide to the People, Organizations, and Events Joan Martin Burke Visualização de excertos - 1974 |
The Meskwaki and Anthropologists: Action Anthropology Reconsidered Judith M. Daubenmier Pré-visualização limitada - 2008 |