The American Indian ReaderJeannette Henry Indian Historian Press, 1974 - 149 páginas |
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Página vii
... human story has largely been lost . It exists only in the annals remaining to some tribes in the form of song and observance . Other evidences of ancient native history have been painstakingly put together by anthro- pologists from ...
... human story has largely been lost . It exists only in the annals remaining to some tribes in the form of song and observance . Other evidences of ancient native history have been painstakingly put together by anthro- pologists from ...
Página 19
... human moderation ? " I don't see any signs of human moderation in the scalping activities of the Europeans , introduced by the Dutch . Our people took over this outrageous practice from the Anglos , and indeed in many re- spects some of ...
... human moderation ? " I don't see any signs of human moderation in the scalping activities of the Europeans , introduced by the Dutch . Our people took over this outrageous practice from the Anglos , and indeed in many re- spects some of ...
Página 27
... human values , and those natives with a totally different way of life and an entirely dif- ferent economy . Unfamiliar as they were with the European economic sys- tems and European ideas of government , the natives were at first ...
... human values , and those natives with a totally different way of life and an entirely dif- ferent economy . Unfamiliar as they were with the European economic sys- tems and European ideas of government , the natives were at first ...
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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