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Wabanaki Confederacy

The Wabanaki Confederacy (Wabenaki, Wobanaki, translated to "People of the Dawn" or "Easterner"; also: Wabanakia, "Dawnland"[1]) is a North American First Nations and Native American confederation of five principal Eastern Algonquian nations: the Abenaki of St. Francis, Mi'kmaq, Maleceet, Passamaquoddy (Peskotomahkati) and Penobscot.

Wabanaki Confederacy
Wabana'ki Mawuhkacik
1680s–1862, 1993-Present
Wampum belt
Seal
CapitalPanawamskek, Odanak, Sipayik, Lakeland Ridges, and Eelsetkook
Recognised regional languagesAbenaki
Wolastoqiyik-Passamaquoddy
Mi'kmawi'simk
English
French
Religion
Traditional belief systems,
including Midewiwin and Glooscap narratives;
Christianity, mainly Jesuits
Constituent countries
GovernmentTribal Confederation
History 
• Established
1680s
• Disestablished
1862, 1993-Present
• Re-established
1993
Today part ofCanada
United States

There were more tribes, along with many bands, that were once part of the Confederation. Native tribes such as the Norridgewock, Alemousiski, Pennacook, Sokoki, and Canibas, through massacres, tribal consolidation, and ethnic label shifting were absorbed into the five larger national identities.[2]: 117 

Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy, the Wabanaki, are located in and named for the area which they call Wabanakik ("Dawnland"), roughly the area that became the French colony of Acadia.[3][4] The territory boundaries encompass present-day Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, in the United States, and New Brunswick, mainland Nova Scotia, Cape Breton Island, Prince Edward Island and some of Quebec south of the St. Lawrence River, Anticosti, and Newfoundland in Canada.

Name and etymology edit

The word Wabanaki is derived from the Algonquian root word "wab", combined with the word for "land", being "aki." "Wab" is a root that is used for the following concepts:[5]

Algonquin word English meaning
Wabi He sees/sight
Waban East
Wában Sunlight
Wabish White
Bidaban (Bid-waban) Dawn
Wasseia The light

Waban-aki can be translated into a number of ways but is most often translated into "Dawnland."

The political union of the Wabanaki Confederacy was known by many names, but it is remembered as "Wabanaki", which shares a common etymological origin with the name of the "Abenaki" people. All Abenaki are Wabanaki, but not all Wabanaki are Abenaki.

The name of the political union during the time it existed had gone by other names both shared and unique to its members. The Mi'kmaq, Passamaquoddy, and Wolastoqey called it Buduswagan which translates into "convention council." The Passamaquoddy also had their own unique name being Tolakutinaya which translates into "be related to one another." Finally, the Penobscot would interchangeably call it either Bezegowak or Gizangowak which can be translated into "those united into one" and "completely united" respectively.[6]

Early contact period (1497–1680s) edit

 
1627 illustration by Mattheüs Merian of local people hunting using fire, canoes and bows and harvesting corn on Pesamkuk (Mount Desert Island).[7]

Small-scale confederacies in and around what would become the Wabanaki Confederacy were common at the time of post-Viking European contact. The earliest known confederacy was the Mawooshen Confederacy located within the historic Eastern Penobscot cultural region. Its capital, Kadesquit, located around modern Bangor, Maine, would play a significant role as a political hub—for the future Wabanaki Confederacy, for example.[8]

In 1500, Portuguese explorer Gaspar Corte-Real reached Wabanaki lands. He captured and enslaved at least 57 people from modern-day Newfoundland and Nova Scotia, selling them in Europe to help finance his trip.[9][10] The rich fishing waters full of cod in and around the Gulf of Saint Lawrence attracted many Europeans to this area. By 1504 French Bretons were fishing off the coast of Nova Scotia. Norman fishermen began to arrive around 1507, and they too would start kidnapping people from the surrounding land. This would hurt relations with some tribes. But the fishermen also started slowly introducing European trade goods to the Wabanaki, returning to Europe with North American trade goods.[10]

After the establishment of the Treaty of Tordesillas by which Catholic Europe established spheres of influence for exploration, Portuguese explorers commonly believed that Newfoundland and Wabanaki lands were on the Portuguese side of the Inter caetera, entitling them to the land. Portuguese explorer João Álvares Fagundes attempted to establish the first European colony in Wabanaki lands in 1525. He brought families totaling almost 200 people, mostly from the Azores, and founded a fishing settlement in Cape Breton, within Mi'kmaq territory. The settlement lasted at least until 1570, as fishing ships brought news of them back to Europe. The fate of the settlement is unknown, but the people would have interacted with the local Mi'kmaq.[11]

 
This Spanish chart of the Saint Lawrence River showing Wabanaki lands at the bottom, from ca. 1541, contains a legend in front of the "isla de Orliens" that says: "Here many French died of hunger"; possibly alluding to Cartier's second settlement in 1535–1536

Throughout the 1500s, Wabanaki people encountered many European fishermen along with explorers looking for the Northwest Passage. They were at risk of being captured and enslaved. For instance, Portuguese explorer Estevan Gomez reached Wabanaki lands in 1525, kidnapping a few dozen people and taking them back to Spain, where he was forced to release them. The Crown did not arrange their passage back.[11]

Italian explorer, Giovanni da Verrazano also reached Wabanaki lands. He was documented about 1525 as capturing a native boy to bring back to France, whom he was sailing for.[12] Around 1534 French explorer Jacques Cartier would explore the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and traded with Mi'kmaq people living in Chaleur Bay. He encountered people now known as St. Lawrence Iroquoians on the Gaspé Bay. These are now believed to have been independent of the Five Nations of Iroquois that developed the Iroquois League further south. By the early 1600s, the St. Lawrence Iroquoian villages were abandoned. Historians now believe they may have been defeated by the Mohawk in competition over hunting. They may also have been defeated by Algonquins from further east in the St. Lawrence Valley.[13]

Cartier traded with the Mi'kmaq, and returned to France with furs of North American animals such as beaver, which became high-demand items. Cartier brought back numerous goods from the First Nations from his three trips to the St. Lawrence, but the furs had the greatest demand. French colonists went to the area to work in what became the North American fur trade.[14]

More Europeans entered Wabanaki lands over the coming decades, where they started as traders to meet the growing fur demand in Europe. The French established permanent trading operations with the Wabanaki around 1581 to obtain furs. Henry III of France granted a fur monopoly to French merchants in 1588.[15] This would lead to the desire for the French to establish permanent trade posts in and around Wabanaki lands for furs. French fur traders like François Gravé Du Pont would often travel to Wabanaki lands to obtain furs, establishing the French fur trading site of Tadoussac in 1599. During one of his trips back in 1603 he would bring Samuel de Champlain with him, and he would lead to a new era of Wabanaki/French relationships.

When Champlain established contact during an expedition to the Mawooshen in Pesamkuk (present-day Mount Desert Island, Maine) in 1604, he noted that the people had quite a few European goods. Champlain had a positive encounter on Pemetic, meeting with sakom (title for community leaders) Asticou in his and his peoples' summer village. [16] Asticou was a sakom with regional power over the eastern door of Mawooshen. He was subsidiary to sakom Bashaba, who led the entire Mawooshen Confederacy.[16] Champlain went upriver to the Passamaquoddy, where he established another post at present-day Saint Croix Island, Maine. The French colonial region known as Acadia developed on existing tribal territory. The ethnic French of Acadia and the peoples of Wabanaki coexisted in the same territory with independent, yet allied governments.

Champlain continued to establish settlements throughout Wabanaki territory, including Saint John (1604) and Quebec City (1608), among others. The trade and military relations between the French and the local Algonquin tribes, including the Mawooshen and later Wabanaki, lasted until the end of the French and Indian/Seven Years' War.[17] Asticou approved the founding of a Jesuit mission in 1613 in the present-day location on Somes Sound, Maine.

The following year the mission village was destroyed by Captain Samuel Argall during a resupply visit to nearby English fishing outposts.[18] French and English colonists would long compete for territory in North America.[16] In the same year, Captain Thomas Hunt kidnapped 27 people from present-day Massachusetts to sell as slaves in Spain. The famous Tisquantum was among the captives.

English colonists established contacts with the Mawooshen in 1605. Captain George Weymouth met with them in a large village on the Kennebec River. He took five people as captives to take back to England, where they were questioned about settlements by Sir Ferdinando Gorges. Sakom Tahánedo was the only one of those captives known to have returned home. He accompanied settlers of the short-lived Popham Colony (1607–1608), who hoped to establish good relations with the local peoples by returning Tahánedo, but local tribes were uneasy about the English colony.[19]: 83–84  [20]

In 2020 journalist Avery Yale Kamila wrote that the account of the Weymouth voyage has culinary significance because it "is the first time a European recorded the Native American use of nut milks and nut butters."[21][22]

 
Samuel de Champlain fighting on July 30, 1609, alongside the Western Abenaki in a successful battle against the Iroquois at Lake Champlain

Champlain forged strong French relations with Algonquin tribes up until his death in 1635. Somewhere in the area near Ticonderoga and Crown Point, New York (historians dispute the site), Champlain and his party encountered a group of Iroquois (likely mostly Mohawk, the easternmost nation). In a battle that began the next day, 250 Iroquois advanced on Champlain's position, and one of his guides pointed out the three chiefs. In his account of the battle, Champlain recounts firing his arquebus and killing two of them with a single shot, after which one of his men killed the third. The Iroquois turned and fled. This action set the tone for poor French-Iroquois relations for the rest of the century, with conflicts arising over territory and the beaver trade.[23]

The next year the Battle of Sorel started on 19 June 1610. Champlain had convinced some tribes to fight in the war, amongst them was Wendat, Algonquin and Innu peoples, with some French regulars. They fought against the Mohawk people at present-day Sorel-Tracy, Quebec. Champlain's forces were armed with the arquebus. After engaging their opponent, they slaughtered or captured nearly all of the Mohawk. The battle ended major hostilities with the Mohawk for twenty years.[23]

In and around this time, more French arrived as traders in Nova Scotia. The French migrants formed settlements such as Port-Royal. At many of these settlements, the French traded weapons and other European goods to the local Mi'kmaq. The influx of European goods changed the social and economic landscape, as local tribes became more dependent on European goods. This new economic reality harmed their existing kinship ties among clans and reduced the reciprocal exchange that had supported the local economy. Subsistence hunting shifted into a competition for animals like beaver and for access to European settlements. Population movements, and intraband and interband disputes were affected.[2]: 124 

Allied with the Wolastoquiyik (Maleseet) and Passamaquoddy, the Mi'kmaq fought with their Western Mawooshen (Western Abenaki/Penobscot) neighbors for goods as trading relations broke down. This power imbalance resulted in war starting around 1607. In 1615 the Mi'kmaq and their allies killed the Mawooshen Grand Chief Bashabas in his village. War was costly for the Mi'kmaq and their allies, but especially for their southern Abenaki/Penobscot adversaries. Many Abenaki villages faced great losses from the war. The war was then followed by a pandemic known as "The Great Dying" (1616-1619), which killed around 70-95% of the local Algonquin population left after the war.[24][8]

Not long after this widespread local depopulation, Pilgrim settlers from England arrived in November 1620. Algonquin peoples throughout what would become New England began to see Pilgrim settlers settling in their ancestral lands. Southern Abenaki people such as the Alemousiski would soon come into permanent contact with English settlers moving into Massachusetts, as well as their lands in southern Maine under the colonizing efforts of people directed by Ferdinando Gorges and John Mason, respectively.[20] Pannaway Plantation near modern-day Kittery, Maine would both be founded in 1623. Originally founded as fishing and lumber villages, over the decades they developed larger economies and became major population centers in the fledgling economy.

By the 1640s, internal conflicts within the region started to make Iroquois advances harder to combat for what would become the Wabanaki peoples, but also the Algonquian (tribe west of Quebec City), the Innu, and French to manage separately. Aided by French Jesuits, this led to the formation of a large Algonquian league against the Iroquois, who were making significant territorial land gains around the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence River region. By the 1660s, tribes of Western Abenaki peoples as far south as Massachusetts had joined the league. This defensive alliance would not only prove to be successful, but it helped repair the relationship among the Eastern Algonquians, promoting greater political cooperation in the coming decades.[2]: 124 

This growing tension with two large and organized political adversaries, the Iroquois and especially English colonists, over the next 20 years would lead to an Algonquian uprising during King Philip's War (1675-1676), followed by the First Abenaki War (1675-1678). Soon after the many Algonquian tribes fought together in an effort to strengthen both defensive and diplomatic power, a push to make a formal political union would take place leading to the development of the Wabanaki Confederacy.[25]

Formation of the Wabanaki Confederacy (1680s) edit

The First Abenaki War saw native peoples throughout the Eastern Algonquian lands face a common and powerful enemy, encroaching English colonists. The fighting led to large-scale depopulation of English colonial settlements north of the Saco River in the district of Maine, while Wabanaki people south of the river like the Armouchiquois, would be forced from their ancestral lands. The political situation was complicated, when the Massachusetts Bay Colony was forced to relinquish control of Maine to the heirs of Ferdinando Gorges in 1676.[26] This required them to find the heirs to buy back the land making up Maine, and then to issue grants for people to settle once again.[27] This conflict as a whole was not without significant losses for the soon-to-be Wabanaki peoples, and it became clear that the tribes would have to work together. The First Abenaki War ended with the Treaty of Casco, which forced all the tribes to recognize the property rights of English colonists in southern Maine. In return, English colonists recognized "Wabanaki" sovereignty by committing themselves to pay Madockawando, as a "grandchief" of the Wabanaki alliance, a symbolic annual fee of "a peck of corn for every English Family." They also recognized the Saco River as the border.[28]

 
Symbol of the Wabanaki Union of Tribes, still in use. It was originally embroidered onto the ceremonial clothing of sakoms.

The Caughnawaga Council was a large neutral political gathering in the Mohawk territory that occurred every three years for tribes and tribal confederacies within and around the Great Lakes, East Coast, and Saint Lawrence River. At one of these councils in the 1680s, the Eastern Algonquians came together to form their own confederation with the aid of an Ottawa "sakom." The Mawooshen Confederacy, of which Madockawando was part, was put in a situation where it would be absorbed into a larger confederacy that incorporated the tribes into each other's internal politics and would start to hold their own councils as a new political union.[2]: 125–126  In this new union, the tribes would see each other as brothers, as family.[29] The union helped challenge Iroquois hostilities along the Saint Lawrence River over land and resources which was becoming a bigger problem for almost all the Eastern Algonquians to manage separately, but also provided political organization and might to push back collectively against growing English colonial expansionism, as well as mitigating large losses in the recent three-year war with them.[2]

The political union incorporated many political elements from other local confederacies like the Iroquois and Huron, the role of wampum council conduct being a major example. This political unit allowed for the safe passage of people through each of their territories (including camping and subsisting on the land), safer trade networks from the western agricultural centers to the eastern gathering economies (copper/pelts) through non-aggression pacts and sharing natural resources from their respected habitats, freedom to move to each and any of the other's villages along with organizing inter-tribal marriages, and a large-scale defensive alliance to fend off attacks in their now shared territory. Madockawando for instance would later move from Penobscot lands to Maliseet lands, living in their political hub of Meductic until his death.[2] These events would lead to the formal creation of what is now called the Wabanaki Confederacy.

The Passamaquoddy wampum record or Wapapi Akonutomakonol[30] tells about the event that took place at the Caughnawaga Council that led to the formation of the Wabanaki Confederacy.

Silently they sat for seven days. Everyday, no one spoke. That was called, "The Wigwam is Silent." Every councilor had to think about what he was going to say when they made the laws. All of them thought about how the fighting could be stopped. Next they opened up the wigwam. It was now called "Every One of Them Talks." And during that time they began their council....When all had finished talking, they decided to make a great fence; and in addition they put in the center a great wigwam within the fence; and also they made a whip and placed it with their father. Then whoever disobeyed him would be whipped. Whichever of his children was within the fence - all of them had to obey him. And he always had to kindle their great fire, so that it would not burn out. This is where the Wampum Laws originated. That fence was the confederacy agreement....There would be no arguing with one another again. They had to live like brothers and sisters who had the same parent....And their parent, he was the great chief at Caughnawaga. And the fence and the whip were the Wampum Laws. Whoever disobeyed them, the tribes together had to watch him.[2]: 125–126 

Governance edit

The Wabanaki Confederacy were governed by a council of elected sakoms, tribal leaders who were frequently also the governors of the drainage basin their village was built on. Sakoms themselves were more of respected listeners and debaters than simply rulers.[2]: 123–124 

Wabanaki politics was fundamentally rooted on reaching a consensus on issues, often after much debate. Sakoms frequently used stylized metaphorical speech at council fires, trying to win over others sakoms. Sakoms who were skilled at debate often became quite influential in the Confederacy, often being older men who were called nebáulinowak or "riddle men."[29]: 499 

"They have reproached me a hundred times because we fear our Captains, while they laugh at and make sport of theirs. All the authority of their chief is in his tongue's end; for he is powerful in so far as he is eloquent; and even if he kills himself talking and haranguing he will not be obeyed unless he please the [Indians]."[31]: A-13 

Wabanaki sakoms held regular conventions at their various "council fires" (seats of government) whenever there was a need to call each other together. In a council fire, they would sit in a large rectangle with all members facing each other. Each sakom member would have a chance to speak and be listened to, with the understanding that they would do the same for the others. Each tribe a sakom was part of also had a "kinship" status, being that they are brothers some members were older and younger.[29][2]: 122–127  The lack of a single centralized capital complemented the Wabanaki government style, as sakoms were able to shift their political influence to any part of the nation that needed it. This could mean bringing leadership near or away from conflict zones. When a formal internal agreement was reached, not one but often at least five representatives speaking on behalf of their respective tribe and nation as a whole would set off to negotiate.[31]: 167–172 

 
Colorized photo of 1915 reproductions of Wabanaki wampum belts that would have been used for political matters.

Probably influenced by diplomatic exchanges with Huron allies and Iroquois enemies (especially since the 1640s), the Wabanaki began using wampum belts in their diplomacy in the course of the 17th century, when envoys took such belts to send messages to allied tribes in the confederacy. Wampum belts called gelusewa'ngan, meaning "speech", played an important role in maintaining Wabanaki political institutions.[29]: 507 [32][29] One of the last keepers of the "Wampum Record" and one of the last Wabanaki/Passamaquoddy delegates to go to Caughnawaga was Sepiel Selmo. Keepers of the wampum record were called putuwosuwin which involved a mix of oral history with understanding the context behind the placement of wampum on the belts.[2]: 116 

Wampum shells arranged on strings in such a manner, that certain combinations suggested certain sentences or certain ideas to the narrator, who, of course, knew his record by heart and was merely aided by the association of the shell combinations in his mind with incidents of the tale or record which he was rendering.[2]: 116–117 

What was not recorded through wampum was remembered in a long chain of oral record-keeping which village elders were in charge of, with multiple elders being able to double check each other. In the 1726 treaty following Dummer's War, the Wabanaki had to challenge a claim that land was sold to English settlers, of which not a single elder had a memory of. After much challenge with New England Lt. Governor William Dummer, Wabanaki leadership was very careful and took their time to make sure there was as little misunderstanding of the terms of the land and peace as possible. The terms were worked out little by little each day, from August 1 through 5th. When an impasse was found, leadership would withdraw to talk about the matter thoroughly among themselves before reconvening to debate once more, with all representatives debating on the same page, with their most well thought-out arguments.[31]: 167–172 

The Wabanaki never had a formal "grandchief" or single leader of the whole confederacy, and thus never had a single seat of government. Though Madockawando was treated as such in the Treaty of Casco, and his descendants such as Wabanaki Lieutenant-Governor John Neptune would maintain an elevated status in the confederacy, both officially had the same amount of power as any other sakom.[19]: 255–257  This would continue throughout the entire history of the Wabanaki, as the confederacy remained decentralized so as to never give more power to any of the member tribes. This meant that all major decisions had to be thoroughly debated by sakoms at council fires, which created a strong political culture empowering the best debaters.[29]

The four/fourteen tribes were not completely independent from each other. Not only was it possible for sanctions to be placed on each other for creating problems, but also when a sakom died, newly elected sakoms would be confirmed by allied Wabanaki tribes who would visit following a year of mourning in the village.[29]: 503  An event to appoint a new sakom, known as a Nská'wehadin or "assembly", could last several weeks.[2]: 128  Tribes had a lot of autonomy, but they built a culture which normalized being involved in each other's political affairs to help maintain unity and cooperation.[29]: 498  This event would continue until 1861 when the last Nská'wehadin was held in Old Town, Maine, shortly before the end of the confederacy.[29]: 504  Occasionally some sakoms were known to ignore the will of the confederacy, most often the case for tribes on the border of European powers who had the most to lose during peace after war. Gray Lock, who was among the most successful wartime Wabanaki sakoms, refused to make peace after the 1722-1726 Dummer's War, given that his Vermont lands were being settled by English colonists. He would hold a successful guerrilla war for the following two decades, never being caught, and successfully deterring settlers entering his lands.[33]

Kinship metaphors like "Brother", "Father", or "Uncle" in their original linguistic context were much more complex than when they were when translated into English or French. Such terms were used to understand the status and role of a diplomatic relationship. For instance, for the other tribes in the Wabanaki the Penobscot were called the ksés'i'zena or "our elder brother". The Passamaquoddy, Maliseet, and Mi'kmaq in this order of "age" were called ndo'kani'mi'zena or "our younger brother".[29] The Maliseet referred to the Penobscot and Passamaquoddy as ksés'i'zena and the Mi'kmaq as ndo'kani'mi'zena. Concepts like this were also found in other confederacies like the Iroquois. In the Wabanaki context, such terms indicated concepts like the Penobscot looking out for the well-being of the younger brothers, while younger brothers would support and respect the wisdom of an older brother. The idea of being related helped establish unity and cooperation in Wabanaki culture, using family as a metaphor to overcome factionalism and to quell internal conflicts like a family would. The age rank was based on the tribes proximity to the Caughnawaga Council, with the Penobscots being the closest. Before the massacre of the Norridgewock and the slow abandonment of their settlements and integration into their neighbor tribes, they were once seen as an older brother to the Penobscot.[34]

This system was not seen as something indicating superiority per se, but rather a way to perceive a relationship in a manner that reflected the cultural norms of the Wabanaki. When the Wabanaki called the French Canadian governor and King of France "our father", it was a relationship built upon a sense of respect and protective care that reflected a Wabanaki father-son relationship. This was not well understood by diplomats from France and England who did not live with the peoples, seeing such terms as acknowledgment of subservience. Miscommunication over these terms was one of the biggest challenges in Wabanaki and European diplomacy. The culture and government style of Wabanaki would strongly push for a clear and mutual understanding of political matters, both internally and externally.[35]

The Wabanaki saw and called the Ottawa "our father" for both their role as a leader in the Caughnawaga Council and in being a tribe that helped found Wabanaki and issued binding judgments that help maintain order.[2]: 126  This did not mean the Wabanaki ever saw themselves as subservient to the Ottawa in any way, this was the same with the French. The Ottawa were largely seen as a form of third party political oversight.[2]: 126 [30]

Military edit

 
Miꞌkmaꞌki: Divided into seven districts. Not shown is Taqamgug/Tagamuk, the eighth district that includes the entire island of Newfoundland.
 
Map of the campaigns during King William's War.

Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy were the:

Nations in the Confederacy also allied with the Innu of Nitassinan, the Algonquin people and with the Iroquoian-speaking Wyandot people. The homeland of the Wabanaki Confederacy stretches from Newfoundland, Canada, to Massachusetts, United States. Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy participated in these seven major wars.[citation needed]

During this period, their population was radically decimated due to many decades of warfare, but also because of famines and devastating epidemics of infectious disease.[19] The number of European settlers increased from about 300 in 1650 to about 6,650 in 1750. European diseases such as smallpox and measles were introduced.[36]

British military campaign against New France edit

The Mi'kmaq were among the first tribes to establish trade with European settlers and helped to establish a barter system along the coast.[37]: 145  Settlers and natives communicated in a language that mixed French and Mikmawisimk.[37]: 24  The Miꞌkmaq traded beaver, otter, marten, seal, moose, and deer furs with European settlers.[37]: 13  The French missionary Chrestien Le Clercq complained that "they ridicule and laugh at the most sumptuous and magnificent of our buildings".[37]: 18 

In 1711 the Acadians joined the Wabanaki Confederacy, when Fort Anne was besieged.[37]: 135  The British proceeded to raid the coastal settlements, demanding an oath of allegiance from the Acadians.[37]: 145  When British settlers encroached on the territory of the Abenaki, Penobscot, and the Passamaquoddy, these First Nations joined the Maliseet and the Miꞌkmaq in the Wabanaki Confederacy. In 1715 the Miꞌkmaq attacked fishing vessels off Sable Island. The Miꞌkmaq declared "the Lands are [ours] and [we] can make War and peace when [we] please".[38] The Wabanaki Confederacy did not fight under the leadership of a commander, but nevertheless implemented a strategy that was aimed to clear their land of intruders. Between 1722 and 1724 the Penobscot attacked Fort St. George four times, the Wabanakis attacked British colonial settlements along Kennebec River, while western Maine was attacked by the Pigwacket and the Ammoscocongon. The Wabanaki Confederacy destroyed the Brunswick settlement as well as other British colonial settlements on the banks of the Androscoggin River.[39]

 
Deportation of the Acadians, Grand-Pré.

Prior to the Expulsion of the Acadians (1755–1764), the Acadians living in Nova Scotia largely refused to swear allegiance to the British Crown.[40] When the Acadians in 1755 again refused to swear allegiance to the Crown, about 6,000 were deported to British North America, France and Louisiana. Quebec was taken by the British in 1759 and the French government effectively lost all influence in North America.[41]

British rule edit

The French were defeated by the British in 1763. The British colonial authorities marginalised Indigenous people as a matter of policy, because the Mi'kmaq had supported the French. 13,000 Acadian settlers were evicted by the British and the land was occupied by settlers from New England, Britain and other European countries, including Ireland and Germany.[36]

After 1783 and the end of the American Revolutionary War, Black Loyalists, freedmen from the British North American colonies, were resettled by the British in this historical territory. They had promised enslaved people freedom if they left their Patriot masters and joined the British. Three thousand freedmen were evacuated to Nova Scotia by British ships from the colonies after the war.[42]

Oppressive policies instituted by successive colonial and federal administrations against the Acadians, Black Canadians and Mi'kmaq people tended to force these peoples together as allies of necessity. The colonial government declared the Wabanaki Confederacy forcibly disbanded in 1862. However the five Wabanaki nations still exist, continued to meet, and the Confederacy was formally re-established in 1993.[citation needed]

Contemporary revival edit

The Wabanaki Confederacy gathering was revived in 1993. The first reconstituted confederacy conference in contemporary time was developed and proposed by Claude Aubin and Beaver Paul and hosted by the Mi'kmaq community of Listuguj under the leadership of Chief Brenda Gideon Miller. The sacred Council Fire was lit again, and embers from the fire have been kept burning continually since then.[43] The revival of the Wabanaki Confederacy brought together the Passamaquoddy Nation, Penobscot Nation, Maliseet Nation, and the Miꞌkmaq Nation. Following the 2010 Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), the member nations began to re-assert their treaty rights, and the Wabanaki leadership emphasized the continuing role of the Confederacy in protecting natural capital.[44]

There were meetings amongst allies,[45] a "Water Convergence Ceremony" in May 2013,[46] with Algonquin grandmothers in August 2013 supported by Kairos Canada,[47][48] and with other Indigenous groups.

Alma Brooks represented the Confederacy at the June 2014 United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.[49] She discussed the Wabanaki/Wolostoq position on the Energy East pipeline.[50] Opposition to its construction has been a catalyst for organizing:

"On May 30 [2015], residents of Saint John will join others in Atlantic Canada, including Indigenous people from the Wolastoqiyik (Maliseet), Passamaquoddy and Mi'kmaq, to march to the end of the proposed pipeline and draw a line in the sand." This was widely publicized.[51]

2015 Grandmothers' Declaration edit

These and other preparatory meetings set an agenda for the August 19–22, 2015, meeting[52] which produced the promised Grandmothers' Declaration[53] "adopted unanimously at N'dakinna (Shelburne, Vermont) on August 21, 2015". The Declaration included mention of:

  • Revitalization and maintenance of Indigenous languages
  • Article 25 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) on land, food, and water
  • A commitment to "establish decolonized maps"
  • The Wingspread Statement on the Precautionary Principles
  • Obligation of governments to "obtain free, prior, and informed consent" before "further infringement"
  • A commitment to "strive to unite the Indigenous Peoples; from coast to coast", e.g. against Tar Sands.
  • Protecting food, "seeds, waters, and lands, from chemical and genetic contamination"
  • Recognizes and confirms the unique decision-making structures of the Wabanaki Peoples in accordance with Article 18 of the UNDRIP Indigenous decision-making institutions:
    • "Our vision is to construct a Lodge, which will serve as a living constitution and decision-making structure for the Wabanaki Confederacy."
  • Recognizes the Western Abenaki living in Vermont and the United States as a "People" and member nation
  • Peace and friendship with "the Seven Nations of Iroquois"

Position on ecological and health issues edit

On October 15, 2015, Alma Brooks spoke to the New Brunswick Hydrofracturing Commission, applying the Declaration to current provincial industrial practices:[54]

  • She criticized the "industry of hydro-fracturing for natural gas in our territory" because "our people have not been adequately consulted ... have been abused and punished for taking a stand," and cited traditional knowledge of floods, quakes and salt lakes in New Brunswick;
  • Criticized Irving Forestry Companies for having "clear cut our forests [and] spraying poisonous carcinogenic herbicides such as glyphosate all over 'our land', to kill hardwood trees, and other green vegetation," harming human and animal health;
  • Noted "Streams, brooks, and creeks are drying up; causing the dwindling of Atlantic salmon and trout. Places where our people gather medicines, hunt deer, and moose are being contaminated with poison. We were not warned about the use of these dangerous herbicides, but since then cancer rates have been on the rise in Maliseet Communities; especially breast cancer in women and younger people are dying from cancer."
  • Open pit mining "for tungsten and molybdenum [which] require tailing ponds; this one designated to be the largest in the world [which] definitely will seep out into the environment. A spill or leak from the Sisson Brook open-pit mine will permanently contaminate the Nashwaak River; which is a tributary of the Wolastok (St. John River) and surrounding waterways. This is the only place left clean enough for the survival of the Atlantic salmon."
  • "Oil pipelines and "refineries ... bent on contaminating and destroying the very last inch of (Wəlastokok) Maliseet territory."
  • Rivers, lakes, streams, and lands.. contaminated "to the point that we are unable to gather our annual supply of fiddleheads [an edible fern], and medicines."
  • The "duty to consult with aboriginal people ... has become a meaningless process,"..."therefore governments and/or companies do not have our consent to proceed with hydro-fracturing, open-pit mining, or the building of pipelines for gas and oil bitumen."

2016 edit

The Passamaquoddy will host the 2016 Wabanaki Confederacy Conference.[citation needed]

Ceremony at The Pines edit

Since the 1990s, members of The Penobscot nation and other members of the Wabanaki Confederacy gather at The Pines on Father Rasle Road in Madison at the former Nanrantsouak village to remember and honor ancestors massacred by the British on August 22, 1724. A ceremony takes place and afterward a traditional Wabanaki meal of roasted corn, salmon, baked beans or moose stew is eaten. The tradition was begun by Barry Dana during an overnight sacred run. The ceremony began as a private Wabanaki remembrance but now the public is welcome to educate about this history.[55]

Culture edit

Basket art edit

Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy are recognized for their fine art basket making. Well-known Wabanaki basket makers Molly Neptune Parker, Clara Neptune Keezer, and Fred Tomah have been recognized for their art.[56] Parker's grandchild Geo Soctomah Neptune is also a nationally recognized basket artist[57] who is two-spirit and was featured in Vogue magazine in 2022 for their style and earring collection.[58] Jeremy Frey received the Best in Class award in the Basketry category at the 2021 Santa Fe Indian Market.[59]

Cuisine edit

Wabanaki cuisine, like other Indigenous cuisine, is based on what can be grown and hunted locally. Corn, beans, squash, fresh-water fish, salt-water fish, moose, and white tailed deer are common foods.[60] Maple syrup, wild blueberries, ground cherries, ground nuts, and sunchokes are also incorporated into many dishes. Wabanaki people traditionally made milks, butters, and infant formula from walnuts, cornmeal, and sunflower seeds for centuries before colonizers arrived.[61][62]

Wabanaki dishes include roasted parched sweet corn, hickorynut and hull corn salad, roasted groundnuts, cranberry sauce, grilled whitefish, Abenaki rose cornmeal pudding,[63] pemmican made from ground fruits, nuts, and berries,[64] Three Sisters soup,[65] dandelion greens, fiddlehead salad, creamy sorrel and fiddlehead soup,[66] clams with sunchokes,[67] m8wikisoak stew, hazelnut cakes, salmon burgers, and maple syrup pie.[68]

In Indigenous languages edit

Language "Easterner(s)"
literally "Dawn Person(s)"
"Dawn Land"
(nominative)
"Dawn Land"
(locative)
"Dawn Land Person"
"Dawn Land People"
or the "Wabanaki Confederacy"
Naskapi Waapinuuhch
Massachusett language Wôpanâ(ak)
Quiripi language Wampano(ak) Wampanoki
Miꞌkmaq Wapnaꞌk(ik) Wapnaꞌk Wapnaꞌkik Wapnaꞌki Wapnaꞌkiyik
Maliseet-Passamaquoddy Waponu(wok) Waponahk Waponahkik Waponahkew sing.: Waponahkiyik
plur.: Waponahkewiyik
Abenaki-Penobscot Wôbanu(ok) Wôbanak Wôbanakik Wôbanaki Wôbanakiak
Algonquin Wàbano(wak) Wàbanaki Wàbanakìng Wàbanakì Wàbanakìk
Ojibwe Waabano(wag) Waabanaki Waabanakiing Waabanakii Waabanakiig/Waabanakiiyag
Odawa Waabno(wag) Waabnaki Waabnakiing Waabnakii Waabnakiig/Waabnakiiyag
Potawatomi Wabno(weg) Wabneki Wabnekig Wabneki Wabnekiyeg

Maps edit

Maps showing the approximate locations of areas occupied by members of the Wabanaki Confederacy (from north to south):

In popular culture edit

The Wabanaki Confederacy is featured in the video game Secret World: Legends (formerly The Secret World) [69] via several NPCs who inform the player of the alternate history of the Confederacy and its relations with different groups, offer quests, provide items via Apothecaries, and are usually residing in locations that depict Wabanaki Confederacy culture.

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Walker, Willard (December 1, 1998). "The Wabanaki Confederacy". Maine History Journal. Voume 37: 110–139.
  3. ^ "New Brunswick: Tensions rise as anti-fracking protests dig in". rabble.ca. June 25, 2013. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
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  23. ^ a b "THE GREAT RIVER AT THE WHITE MAN'S COMING", White Men Came to the St. Lawrence, MQUP, pp. 11–33, doi:10.2307/j.ctt1w6t8cx.4, ISBN 978-0-7735-9416-6, retrieved March 19, 2021
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Further reading edit

  • McBride, Bunny (2001). Women of the Dawn.
  • Mead, Alice (1996). Giants of the Dawnland: Eight Ancient Wabanaki Legends.
  • Prins, Harald E. L. (2002). "The Crooked Path of Dummer's Treaty: Anglo-Wabanaki Diplomacy and the Quest for Aboriginal Rights". Papers of the Thirty-Third Algonquian Conference. H.C. Wolfart, ed. Winnipeg: U Manitoba Press. pp. 360–378.
  • Speck, Frank G. "The Eastern Algonkian Wabanaki Confederacy". American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 17, No. 3 (July–September 1915), pp. 492–508
  • Walker, Willard. "The Wabanaki Confederacy". Maine History 37 (3) (1998): 100–139.

External links edit

  • Indian Treaties
  • Native Languages of the Americas: Wabanaki Confederacy
  • "Wabanaki People—A Story of Cultural Continuity" June 24, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, timeline curriculum by Abbe Museum
  • , Wabanaki Confederacy website
  • Miingignoti-Keteaoag, a partnership for the way of life of the Wabanaki Nations ()

wabanaki, confederacy, wabenaki, wobanaki, translated, people, dawn, easterner, also, wabanakia, dawnland, north, american, first, nations, native, american, confederation, five, principal, eastern, algonquian, nations, abenaki, francis, kmaq, maleceet, passam. The Wabanaki Confederacy Wabenaki Wobanaki translated to People of the Dawn or Easterner also Wabanakia Dawnland 1 is a North American First Nations and Native American confederation of five principal Eastern Algonquian nations the Abenaki of St Francis Mi kmaq Maleceet Passamaquoddy Peskotomahkati and Penobscot Wabanaki ConfederacyWabana ki Mawuhkacik1680s 1862 1993 PresentWampum belt SealCapitalPanawamskek Odanak Sipayik Lakeland Ridges and EelsetkookRecognised regional languagesAbenaki Wolastoqiyik Passamaquoddy Mi kmawi simk English FrenchReligionTraditional belief systems including Midewiwin and Glooscap narratives Christianity mainly JesuitsConstituent countriesMi kma ki Wolastokuk Peskotomuhkatihkuk Panawahpskewahki NdakinnaGovernmentTribal ConfederationHistory Established1680s Disestablished1862 1993 Present Re established1993Today part ofCanadaUnited StatesThere were more tribes along with many bands that were once part of the Confederation Native tribes such as the Norridgewock Alemousiski Pennacook Sokoki and Canibas through massacres tribal consolidation and ethnic label shifting were absorbed into the five larger national identities 2 117 Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy the Wabanaki are located in and named for the area which they call Wabanakik Dawnland roughly the area that became the French colony of Acadia 3 4 The territory boundaries encompass present day Maine New Hampshire and Vermont in the United States and New Brunswick mainland Nova Scotia Cape Breton Island Prince Edward Island and some of Quebec south of the St Lawrence River Anticosti and Newfoundland in Canada Contents 1 Name and etymology 2 Early contact period 1497 1680s 3 Formation of the Wabanaki Confederacy 1680s 4 Governance 5 Military 6 British military campaign against New France 7 British rule 8 Contemporary revival 8 1 2015 Grandmothers Declaration 8 2 Position on ecological and health issues 8 3 2016 8 4 Ceremony at The Pines 9 Culture 9 1 Basket art 9 2 Cuisine 10 In Indigenous languages 11 Maps 12 In popular culture 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksName and etymology editThe word Wabanaki is derived from the Algonquian root word wab combined with the word for land being aki Wab is a root that is used for the following concepts 5 Algonquin word English meaningWabi He sees sightWaban EastWaban SunlightWabish WhiteBidaban Bid waban DawnWasseia The lightWaban aki can be translated into a number of ways but is most often translated into Dawnland The political union of the Wabanaki Confederacy was known by many names but it is remembered as Wabanaki which shares a common etymological origin with the name of the Abenaki people All Abenaki are Wabanaki but not all Wabanaki are Abenaki The name of the political union during the time it existed had gone by other names both shared and unique to its members The Mi kmaq Passamaquoddy and Wolastoqey called it Buduswagan which translates into convention council The Passamaquoddy also had their own unique name being Tolakutinaya which translates into be related to one another Finally the Penobscot would interchangeably call it either Bezegowak or Gizangowak which can be translated into those united into one and completely united respectively 6 Early contact period 1497 1680s edit nbsp 1627 illustration by Mattheus Merian of local people hunting using fire canoes and bows and harvesting corn on Pesamkuk Mount Desert Island 7 Small scale confederacies in and around what would become the Wabanaki Confederacy were common at the time of post Viking European contact The earliest known confederacy was the Mawooshen Confederacy located within the historic Eastern Penobscot cultural region Its capital Kadesquit located around modern Bangor Maine would play a significant role as a political hub for the future Wabanaki Confederacy for example 8 In 1500 Portuguese explorer Gaspar Corte Real reached Wabanaki lands He captured and enslaved at least 57 people from modern day Newfoundland and Nova Scotia selling them in Europe to help finance his trip 9 10 The rich fishing waters full of cod in and around the Gulf of Saint Lawrence attracted many Europeans to this area By 1504 French Bretons were fishing off the coast of Nova Scotia Norman fishermen began to arrive around 1507 and they too would start kidnapping people from the surrounding land This would hurt relations with some tribes But the fishermen also started slowly introducing European trade goods to the Wabanaki returning to Europe with North American trade goods 10 After the establishment of the Treaty of Tordesillas by which Catholic Europe established spheres of influence for exploration Portuguese explorers commonly believed that Newfoundland and Wabanaki lands were on the Portuguese side of the Inter caetera entitling them to the land Portuguese explorer Joao Alvares Fagundes attempted to establish the first European colony in Wabanaki lands in 1525 He brought families totaling almost 200 people mostly from the Azores and founded a fishing settlement in Cape Breton within Mi kmaq territory The settlement lasted at least until 1570 as fishing ships brought news of them back to Europe The fate of the settlement is unknown but the people would have interacted with the local Mi kmaq 11 nbsp This Spanish chart of the Saint Lawrence River showing Wabanaki lands at the bottom from ca 1541 contains a legend in front of the isla de Orliens that says Here many French died of hunger possibly alluding to Cartier s second settlement in 1535 1536Throughout the 1500s Wabanaki people encountered many European fishermen along with explorers looking for the Northwest Passage They were at risk of being captured and enslaved For instance Portuguese explorer Estevan Gomez reached Wabanaki lands in 1525 kidnapping a few dozen people and taking them back to Spain where he was forced to release them The Crown did not arrange their passage back 11 Italian explorer Giovanni da Verrazano also reached Wabanaki lands He was documented about 1525 as capturing a native boy to bring back to France whom he was sailing for 12 Around 1534 French explorer Jacques Cartier would explore the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and traded with Mi kmaq people living in Chaleur Bay He encountered people now known as St Lawrence Iroquoians on the Gaspe Bay These are now believed to have been independent of the Five Nations of Iroquois that developed the Iroquois League further south By the early 1600s the St Lawrence Iroquoian villages were abandoned Historians now believe they may have been defeated by the Mohawk in competition over hunting They may also have been defeated by Algonquins from further east in the St Lawrence Valley 13 Cartier traded with the Mi kmaq and returned to France with furs of North American animals such as beaver which became high demand items Cartier brought back numerous goods from the First Nations from his three trips to the St Lawrence but the furs had the greatest demand French colonists went to the area to work in what became the North American fur trade 14 More Europeans entered Wabanaki lands over the coming decades where they started as traders to meet the growing fur demand in Europe The French established permanent trading operations with the Wabanaki around 1581 to obtain furs Henry III of France granted a fur monopoly to French merchants in 1588 15 This would lead to the desire for the French to establish permanent trade posts in and around Wabanaki lands for furs French fur traders like Francois Grave Du Pont would often travel to Wabanaki lands to obtain furs establishing the French fur trading site of Tadoussac in 1599 During one of his trips back in 1603 he would bring Samuel de Champlain with him and he would lead to a new era of Wabanaki French relationships When Champlain established contact during an expedition to the Mawooshen in Pesamkuk present day Mount Desert Island Maine in 1604 he noted that the people had quite a few European goods Champlain had a positive encounter on Pemetic meeting with sakom title for community leaders Asticou in his and his peoples summer village 16 Asticou was a sakom with regional power over the eastern door of Mawooshen He was subsidiary to sakom Bashaba who led the entire Mawooshen Confederacy 16 Champlain went upriver to the Passamaquoddy where he established another post at present day Saint Croix Island Maine The French colonial region known as Acadia developed on existing tribal territory The ethnic French of Acadia and the peoples of Wabanaki coexisted in the same territory with independent yet allied governments Champlain continued to establish settlements throughout Wabanaki territory including Saint John 1604 and Quebec City 1608 among others The trade and military relations between the French and the local Algonquin tribes including the Mawooshen and later Wabanaki lasted until the end of the French and Indian Seven Years War 17 Asticou approved the founding of a Jesuit mission in 1613 in the present day location on Somes Sound Maine The following year the mission village was destroyed by Captain Samuel Argall during a resupply visit to nearby English fishing outposts 18 French and English colonists would long compete for territory in North America 16 In the same year Captain Thomas Hunt kidnapped 27 people from present day Massachusetts to sell as slaves in Spain The famous Tisquantum was among the captives English colonists established contacts with the Mawooshen in 1605 Captain George Weymouth met with them in a large village on the Kennebec River He took five people as captives to take back to England where they were questioned about settlements by Sir Ferdinando Gorges Sakom Tahanedo was the only one of those captives known to have returned home He accompanied settlers of the short lived Popham Colony 1607 1608 who hoped to establish good relations with the local peoples by returning Tahanedo but local tribes were uneasy about the English colony 19 83 84 20 In 2020 journalist Avery Yale Kamila wrote that the account of the Weymouth voyage has culinary significance because it is the first time a European recorded the Native American use of nut milks and nut butters 21 22 nbsp Samuel de Champlain fighting on July 30 1609 alongside the Western Abenaki in a successful battle against the Iroquois at Lake ChamplainChamplain forged strong French relations with Algonquin tribes up until his death in 1635 Somewhere in the area near Ticonderoga and Crown Point New York historians dispute the site Champlain and his party encountered a group of Iroquois likely mostly Mohawk the easternmost nation In a battle that began the next day 250 Iroquois advanced on Champlain s position and one of his guides pointed out the three chiefs In his account of the battle Champlain recounts firing his arquebus and killing two of them with a single shot after which one of his men killed the third The Iroquois turned and fled This action set the tone for poor French Iroquois relations for the rest of the century with conflicts arising over territory and the beaver trade 23 The next year the Battle of Sorel started on 19 June 1610 Champlain had convinced some tribes to fight in the war amongst them was Wendat Algonquin and Innu peoples with some French regulars They fought against the Mohawk people at present day Sorel Tracy Quebec Champlain s forces were armed with the arquebus After engaging their opponent they slaughtered or captured nearly all of the Mohawk The battle ended major hostilities with the Mohawk for twenty years 23 In and around this time more French arrived as traders in Nova Scotia The French migrants formed settlements such as Port Royal At many of these settlements the French traded weapons and other European goods to the local Mi kmaq The influx of European goods changed the social and economic landscape as local tribes became more dependent on European goods This new economic reality harmed their existing kinship ties among clans and reduced the reciprocal exchange that had supported the local economy Subsistence hunting shifted into a competition for animals like beaver and for access to European settlements Population movements and intraband and interband disputes were affected 2 124 Allied with the Wolastoquiyik Maleseet and Passamaquoddy the Mi kmaq fought with their Western Mawooshen Western Abenaki Penobscot neighbors for goods as trading relations broke down This power imbalance resulted in war starting around 1607 In 1615 the Mi kmaq and their allies killed the Mawooshen Grand Chief Bashabas in his village War was costly for the Mi kmaq and their allies but especially for their southern Abenaki Penobscot adversaries Many Abenaki villages faced great losses from the war The war was then followed by a pandemic known as The Great Dying 1616 1619 which killed around 70 95 of the local Algonquin population left after the war 24 8 Not long after this widespread local depopulation Pilgrim settlers from England arrived in November 1620 Algonquin peoples throughout what would become New England began to see Pilgrim settlers settling in their ancestral lands Southern Abenaki people such as the Alemousiski would soon come into permanent contact with English settlers moving into Massachusetts as well as their lands in southern Maine under the colonizing efforts of people directed by Ferdinando Gorges and John Mason respectively 20 Pannaway Plantation near modern day Kittery Maine would both be founded in 1623 Originally founded as fishing and lumber villages over the decades they developed larger economies and became major population centers in the fledgling economy By the 1640s internal conflicts within the region started to make Iroquois advances harder to combat for what would become the Wabanaki peoples but also the Algonquian tribe west of Quebec City the Innu and French to manage separately Aided by French Jesuits this led to the formation of a large Algonquian league against the Iroquois who were making significant territorial land gains around the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence River region By the 1660s tribes of Western Abenaki peoples as far south as Massachusetts had joined the league This defensive alliance would not only prove to be successful but it helped repair the relationship among the Eastern Algonquians promoting greater political cooperation in the coming decades 2 124 This growing tension with two large and organized political adversaries the Iroquois and especially English colonists over the next 20 years would lead to an Algonquian uprising during King Philip s War 1675 1676 followed by the First Abenaki War 1675 1678 Soon after the many Algonquian tribes fought together in an effort to strengthen both defensive and diplomatic power a push to make a formal political union would take place leading to the development of the Wabanaki Confederacy 25 Formation of the Wabanaki Confederacy 1680s editThe First Abenaki War saw native peoples throughout the Eastern Algonquian lands face a common and powerful enemy encroaching English colonists The fighting led to large scale depopulation of English colonial settlements north of the Saco River in the district of Maine while Wabanaki people south of the river like the Armouchiquois would be forced from their ancestral lands The political situation was complicated when the Massachusetts Bay Colony was forced to relinquish control of Maine to the heirs of Ferdinando Gorges in 1676 26 This required them to find the heirs to buy back the land making up Maine and then to issue grants for people to settle once again 27 This conflict as a whole was not without significant losses for the soon to be Wabanaki peoples and it became clear that the tribes would have to work together The First Abenaki War ended with the Treaty of Casco which forced all the tribes to recognize the property rights of English colonists in southern Maine In return English colonists recognized Wabanaki sovereignty by committing themselves to pay Madockawando as a grandchief of the Wabanaki alliance a symbolic annual fee of a peck of corn for every English Family They also recognized the Saco River as the border 28 nbsp Symbol of the Wabanaki Union of Tribes still in use It was originally embroidered onto the ceremonial clothing of sakoms The Caughnawaga Council was a large neutral political gathering in the Mohawk territory that occurred every three years for tribes and tribal confederacies within and around the Great Lakes East Coast and Saint Lawrence River At one of these councils in the 1680s the Eastern Algonquians came together to form their own confederation with the aid of an Ottawa sakom The Mawooshen Confederacy of which Madockawando was part was put in a situation where it would be absorbed into a larger confederacy that incorporated the tribes into each other s internal politics and would start to hold their own councils as a new political union 2 125 126 In this new union the tribes would see each other as brothers as family 29 The union helped challenge Iroquois hostilities along the Saint Lawrence River over land and resources which was becoming a bigger problem for almost all the Eastern Algonquians to manage separately but also provided political organization and might to push back collectively against growing English colonial expansionism as well as mitigating large losses in the recent three year war with them 2 The political union incorporated many political elements from other local confederacies like the Iroquois and Huron the role of wampum council conduct being a major example This political unit allowed for the safe passage of people through each of their territories including camping and subsisting on the land safer trade networks from the western agricultural centers to the eastern gathering economies copper pelts through non aggression pacts and sharing natural resources from their respected habitats freedom to move to each and any of the other s villages along with organizing inter tribal marriages and a large scale defensive alliance to fend off attacks in their now shared territory Madockawando for instance would later move from Penobscot lands to Maliseet lands living in their political hub of Meductic until his death 2 These events would lead to the formal creation of what is now called the Wabanaki Confederacy The Passamaquoddy wampum record or Wapapi Akonutomakonol 30 tells about the event that took place at the Caughnawaga Council that led to the formation of the Wabanaki Confederacy Silently they sat for seven days Everyday no one spoke That was called The Wigwam is Silent Every councilor had to think about what he was going to say when they made the laws All of them thought about how the fighting could be stopped Next they opened up the wigwam It was now called Every One of Them Talks And during that time they began their council When all had finished talking they decided to make a great fence and in addition they put in the center a great wigwam within the fence and also they made a whip and placed it with their father Then whoever disobeyed him would be whipped Whichever of his children was within the fence all of them had to obey him And he always had to kindle their great fire so that it would not burn out This is where the Wampum Laws originated That fence was the confederacy agreement There would be no arguing with one another again They had to live like brothers and sisters who had the same parent And their parent he was the great chief at Caughnawaga And the fence and the whip were the Wampum Laws Whoever disobeyed them the tribes together had to watch him 2 125 126 Governance editThe Wabanaki Confederacy were governed by a council of elected sakoms tribal leaders who were frequently also the governors of the drainage basin their village was built on Sakoms themselves were more of respected listeners and debaters than simply rulers 2 123 124 Wabanaki politics was fundamentally rooted on reaching a consensus on issues often after much debate Sakoms frequently used stylized metaphorical speech at council fires trying to win over others sakoms Sakoms who were skilled at debate often became quite influential in the Confederacy often being older men who were called nebaulinowak or riddle men 29 499 They have reproached me a hundred times because we fear our Captains while they laugh at and make sport of theirs All the authority of their chief is in his tongue s end for he is powerful in so far as he is eloquent and even if he kills himself talking and haranguing he will not be obeyed unless he please the Indians 31 A 13 Wabanaki sakoms held regular conventions at their various council fires seats of government whenever there was a need to call each other together In a council fire they would sit in a large rectangle with all members facing each other Each sakom member would have a chance to speak and be listened to with the understanding that they would do the same for the others Each tribe a sakom was part of also had a kinship status being that they are brothers some members were older and younger 29 2 122 127 The lack of a single centralized capital complemented the Wabanaki government style as sakoms were able to shift their political influence to any part of the nation that needed it This could mean bringing leadership near or away from conflict zones When a formal internal agreement was reached not one but often at least five representatives speaking on behalf of their respective tribe and nation as a whole would set off to negotiate 31 167 172 nbsp Colorized photo of 1915 reproductions of Wabanaki wampum belts that would have been used for political matters Probably influenced by diplomatic exchanges with Huron allies and Iroquois enemies especially since the 1640s the Wabanaki began using wampum belts in their diplomacy in the course of the 17th century when envoys took such belts to send messages to allied tribes in the confederacy Wampum belts called gelusewa ngan meaning speech played an important role in maintaining Wabanaki political institutions 29 507 32 29 One of the last keepers of the Wampum Record and one of the last Wabanaki Passamaquoddy delegates to go to Caughnawaga was Sepiel Selmo Keepers of the wampum record were called putuwosuwin which involved a mix of oral history with understanding the context behind the placement of wampum on the belts 2 116 Wampum shells arranged on strings in such a manner that certain combinations suggested certain sentences or certain ideas to the narrator who of course knew his record by heart and was merely aided by the association of the shell combinations in his mind with incidents of the tale or record which he was rendering 2 116 117 What was not recorded through wampum was remembered in a long chain of oral record keeping which village elders were in charge of with multiple elders being able to double check each other In the 1726 treaty following Dummer s War the Wabanaki had to challenge a claim that land was sold to English settlers of which not a single elder had a memory of After much challenge with New England Lt Governor William Dummer Wabanaki leadership was very careful and took their time to make sure there was as little misunderstanding of the terms of the land and peace as possible The terms were worked out little by little each day from August 1 through 5th When an impasse was found leadership would withdraw to talk about the matter thoroughly among themselves before reconvening to debate once more with all representatives debating on the same page with their most well thought out arguments 31 167 172 The Wabanaki never had a formal grandchief or single leader of the whole confederacy and thus never had a single seat of government Though Madockawando was treated as such in the Treaty of Casco and his descendants such as Wabanaki Lieutenant Governor John Neptune would maintain an elevated status in the confederacy both officially had the same amount of power as any other sakom 19 255 257 This would continue throughout the entire history of the Wabanaki as the confederacy remained decentralized so as to never give more power to any of the member tribes This meant that all major decisions had to be thoroughly debated by sakoms at council fires which created a strong political culture empowering the best debaters 29 The four fourteen tribes were not completely independent from each other Not only was it possible for sanctions to be placed on each other for creating problems but also when a sakom died newly elected sakoms would be confirmed by allied Wabanaki tribes who would visit following a year of mourning in the village 29 503 An event to appoint a new sakom known as a Nska wehadin or assembly could last several weeks 2 128 Tribes had a lot of autonomy but they built a culture which normalized being involved in each other s political affairs to help maintain unity and cooperation 29 498 This event would continue until 1861 when the last Nska wehadin was held in Old Town Maine shortly before the end of the confederacy 29 504 Occasionally some sakoms were known to ignore the will of the confederacy most often the case for tribes on the border of European powers who had the most to lose during peace after war Gray Lock who was among the most successful wartime Wabanaki sakoms refused to make peace after the 1722 1726 Dummer s War given that his Vermont lands were being settled by English colonists He would hold a successful guerrilla war for the following two decades never being caught and successfully deterring settlers entering his lands 33 Kinship metaphors like Brother Father or Uncle in their original linguistic context were much more complex than when they were when translated into English or French Such terms were used to understand the status and role of a diplomatic relationship For instance for the other tribes in the Wabanaki the Penobscot were called the kses i zena or our elder brother The Passamaquoddy Maliseet and Mi kmaq in this order of age were called ndo kani mi zena or our younger brother 29 The Maliseet referred to the Penobscot and Passamaquoddy as kses i zena and the Mi kmaq as ndo kani mi zena Concepts like this were also found in other confederacies like the Iroquois In the Wabanaki context such terms indicated concepts like the Penobscot looking out for the well being of the younger brothers while younger brothers would support and respect the wisdom of an older brother The idea of being related helped establish unity and cooperation in Wabanaki culture using family as a metaphor to overcome factionalism and to quell internal conflicts like a family would The age rank was based on the tribes proximity to the Caughnawaga Council with the Penobscots being the closest Before the massacre of the Norridgewock and the slow abandonment of their settlements and integration into their neighbor tribes they were once seen as an older brother to the Penobscot 34 This system was not seen as something indicating superiority per se but rather a way to perceive a relationship in a manner that reflected the cultural norms of the Wabanaki When the Wabanaki called the French Canadian governor and King of France our father it was a relationship built upon a sense of respect and protective care that reflected a Wabanaki father son relationship This was not well understood by diplomats from France and England who did not live with the peoples seeing such terms as acknowledgment of subservience Miscommunication over these terms was one of the biggest challenges in Wabanaki and European diplomacy The culture and government style of Wabanaki would strongly push for a clear and mutual understanding of political matters both internally and externally 35 The Wabanaki saw and called the Ottawa our father for both their role as a leader in the Caughnawaga Council and in being a tribe that helped found Wabanaki and issued binding judgments that help maintain order 2 126 This did not mean the Wabanaki ever saw themselves as subservient to the Ottawa in any way this was the same with the French The Ottawa were largely seen as a form of third party political oversight 2 126 30 Military edit nbsp Miꞌkmaꞌki Divided into seven districts Not shown is Taqamgug Tagamuk the eighth district that includes the entire island of Newfoundland nbsp Map of the campaigns during King William s War Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy were the Eastern Abenaki or Panuwapskek Penobscot Western Abenaki Mikmaq Miꞌkmaq L nu Peskotomuhkati Passamaquoddy Wolastoqew Wolastoq Maliseet or Malicite Nations in the Confederacy also allied with the Innu of Nitassinan the Algonquin people and with the Iroquoian speaking Wyandot people The homeland of the Wabanaki Confederacy stretches from Newfoundland Canada to Massachusetts United States Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy participated in these seven major wars citation needed King Phillip s War 1675 1678 King William s War 1688 1697 Queen Anne s War 1702 1713 Dummer s War 1722 1725 King George s War 1744 1748 Father Le Loutre s War 1749 1755 French and Indian War 1754 1763 During this period their population was radically decimated due to many decades of warfare but also because of famines and devastating epidemics of infectious disease 19 The number of European settlers increased from about 300 in 1650 to about 6 650 in 1750 European diseases such as smallpox and measles were introduced 36 British military campaign against New France editThe Mi kmaq were among the first tribes to establish trade with European settlers and helped to establish a barter system along the coast 37 145 Settlers and natives communicated in a language that mixed French and Mikmawisimk 37 24 The Miꞌkmaq traded beaver otter marten seal moose and deer furs with European settlers 37 13 The French missionary Chrestien Le Clercq complained that they ridicule and laugh at the most sumptuous and magnificent of our buildings 37 18 In 1711 the Acadians joined the Wabanaki Confederacy when Fort Anne was besieged 37 135 The British proceeded to raid the coastal settlements demanding an oath of allegiance from the Acadians 37 145 When British settlers encroached on the territory of the Abenaki Penobscot and the Passamaquoddy these First Nations joined the Maliseet and the Miꞌkmaq in the Wabanaki Confederacy In 1715 the Miꞌkmaq attacked fishing vessels off Sable Island The Miꞌkmaq declared the Lands are ours and we can make War and peace when we please 38 The Wabanaki Confederacy did not fight under the leadership of a commander but nevertheless implemented a strategy that was aimed to clear their land of intruders Between 1722 and 1724 the Penobscot attacked Fort St George four times the Wabanakis attacked British colonial settlements along Kennebec River while western Maine was attacked by the Pigwacket and the Ammoscocongon The Wabanaki Confederacy destroyed the Brunswick settlement as well as other British colonial settlements on the banks of the Androscoggin River 39 nbsp Deportation of the Acadians Grand Pre Prior to the Expulsion of the Acadians 1755 1764 the Acadians living in Nova Scotia largely refused to swear allegiance to the British Crown 40 When the Acadians in 1755 again refused to swear allegiance to the Crown about 6 000 were deported to British North America France and Louisiana Quebec was taken by the British in 1759 and the French government effectively lost all influence in North America 41 British rule editThe French were defeated by the British in 1763 The British colonial authorities marginalised Indigenous people as a matter of policy because the Mi kmaq had supported the French 13 000 Acadian settlers were evicted by the British and the land was occupied by settlers from New England Britain and other European countries including Ireland and Germany 36 After 1783 and the end of the American Revolutionary War Black Loyalists freedmen from the British North American colonies were resettled by the British in this historical territory They had promised enslaved people freedom if they left their Patriot masters and joined the British Three thousand freedmen were evacuated to Nova Scotia by British ships from the colonies after the war 42 Oppressive policies instituted by successive colonial and federal administrations against the Acadians Black Canadians and Mi kmaq people tended to force these peoples together as allies of necessity The colonial government declared the Wabanaki Confederacy forcibly disbanded in 1862 However the five Wabanaki nations still exist continued to meet and the Confederacy was formally re established in 1993 citation needed Contemporary revival editThe Wabanaki Confederacy gathering was revived in 1993 The first reconstituted confederacy conference in contemporary time was developed and proposed by Claude Aubin and Beaver Paul and hosted by the Mi kmaq community of Listuguj under the leadership of Chief Brenda Gideon Miller The sacred Council Fire was lit again and embers from the fire have been kept burning continually since then 43 The revival of the Wabanaki Confederacy brought together the Passamaquoddy Nation Penobscot Nation Maliseet Nation and the Miꞌkmaq Nation Following the 2010 Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples UNDRIP the member nations began to re assert their treaty rights and the Wabanaki leadership emphasized the continuing role of the Confederacy in protecting natural capital 44 There were meetings amongst allies 45 a Water Convergence Ceremony in May 2013 46 with Algonquin grandmothers in August 2013 supported by Kairos Canada 47 48 and with other Indigenous groups Alma Brooks represented the Confederacy at the June 2014 United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues 49 She discussed the Wabanaki Wolostoq position on the Energy East pipeline 50 Opposition to its construction has been a catalyst for organizing On May 30 2015 residents of Saint John will join others in Atlantic Canada including Indigenous people from the Wolastoqiyik Maliseet Passamaquoddy and Mi kmaq to march to the end of the proposed pipeline and draw a line in the sand This was widely publicized 51 2015 Grandmothers Declaration edit These and other preparatory meetings set an agenda for the August 19 22 2015 meeting 52 which produced the promised Grandmothers Declaration 53 adopted unanimously at N dakinna Shelburne Vermont on August 21 2015 The Declaration included mention of Revitalization and maintenance of Indigenous languages Article 25 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples UNDRIP on land food and water A commitment to establish decolonized maps The Wingspread Statement on the Precautionary Principles Obligation of governments to obtain free prior and informed consent before further infringement A commitment to strive to unite the Indigenous Peoples from coast to coast e g against Tar Sands Protecting food seeds waters and lands from chemical and genetic contamination Recognizes and confirms the unique decision making structures of the Wabanaki Peoples in accordance with Article 18 of the UNDRIP Indigenous decision making institutions Our vision is to construct a Lodge which will serve as a living constitution and decision making structure for the Wabanaki Confederacy Recognizes the Western Abenaki living in Vermont and the United States as a People and member nation Peace and friendship with the Seven Nations of Iroquois Position on ecological and health issues edit On October 15 2015 Alma Brooks spoke to the New Brunswick Hydrofracturing Commission applying the Declaration to current provincial industrial practices 54 She criticized the industry of hydro fracturing for natural gas in our territory because our people have not been adequately consulted have been abused and punished for taking a stand and cited traditional knowledge of floods quakes and salt lakes in New Brunswick Criticized Irving Forestry Companies for having clear cut our forests and spraying poisonous carcinogenic herbicides such as glyphosate all over our land to kill hardwood trees and other green vegetation harming human and animal health Noted Streams brooks and creeks are drying up causing the dwindling of Atlantic salmon and trout Places where our people gather medicines hunt deer and moose are being contaminated with poison We were not warned about the use of these dangerous herbicides but since then cancer rates have been on the rise in Maliseet Communities especially breast cancer in women and younger people are dying from cancer Open pit mining for tungsten and molybdenum which require tailing ponds this one designated to be the largest in the world which definitely will seep out into the environment A spill or leak from the Sisson Brook open pit mine will permanently contaminate the Nashwaak River which is a tributary of the Wolastok St John River and surrounding waterways This is the only place left clean enough for the survival of the Atlantic salmon Oil pipelines and refineries bent on contaminating and destroying the very last inch of Welastokok Maliseet territory Rivers lakes streams and lands contaminated to the point that we are unable to gather our annual supply of fiddleheads an edible fern and medicines The duty to consult with aboriginal people has become a meaningless process therefore governments and or companies do not have our consent to proceed with hydro fracturing open pit mining or the building of pipelines for gas and oil bitumen 2016 edit The Passamaquoddy will host the 2016 Wabanaki Confederacy Conference citation needed Ceremony at The Pines edit Since the 1990s members of The Penobscot nation and other members of the Wabanaki Confederacy gather at The Pines on Father Rasle Road in Madison at the former Nanrantsouak village to remember and honor ancestors massacred by the British on August 22 1724 A ceremony takes place and afterward a traditional Wabanaki meal of roasted corn salmon baked beans or moose stew is eaten The tradition was begun by Barry Dana during an overnight sacred run The ceremony began as a private Wabanaki remembrance but now the public is welcome to educate about this history 55 Culture editBasket art edit Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy are recognized for their fine art basket making Well known Wabanaki basket makers Molly Neptune Parker Clara Neptune Keezer and Fred Tomah have been recognized for their art 56 Parker s grandchild Geo Soctomah Neptune is also a nationally recognized basket artist 57 who is two spirit and was featured in Vogue magazine in 2022 for their style and earring collection 58 Jeremy Frey received the Best in Class award in the Basketry category at the 2021 Santa Fe Indian Market 59 Cuisine edit Wabanaki cuisine like other Indigenous cuisine is based on what can be grown and hunted locally Corn beans squash fresh water fish salt water fish moose and white tailed deer are common foods 60 Maple syrup wild blueberries ground cherries ground nuts and sunchokes are also incorporated into many dishes Wabanaki people traditionally made milks butters and infant formula from walnuts cornmeal and sunflower seeds for centuries before colonizers arrived 61 62 Wabanaki dishes include roasted parched sweet corn hickorynut and hull corn salad roasted groundnuts cranberry sauce grilled whitefish Abenaki rose cornmeal pudding 63 pemmican made from ground fruits nuts and berries 64 Three Sisters soup 65 dandelion greens fiddlehead salad creamy sorrel and fiddlehead soup 66 clams with sunchokes 67 m8wikisoak stew hazelnut cakes salmon burgers and maple syrup pie 68 In Indigenous languages editLanguage Easterner s literally Dawn Person s Dawn Land nominative Dawn Land locative Dawn Land Person Dawn Land People or the Wabanaki Confederacy Naskapi WaapinuuhchMassachusett language Wopana ak Quiripi language Wampano ak WampanokiMiꞌkmaq Wapnaꞌk ik Wapnaꞌk Wapnaꞌkik Wapnaꞌki WapnaꞌkiyikMaliseet Passamaquoddy Waponu wok Waponahk Waponahkik Waponahkew sing Waponahkiyikplur WaponahkewiyikAbenaki Penobscot Wobanu ok Wobanak Wobanakik Wobanaki WobanakiakAlgonquin Wabano wak Wabanaki Wabanaking Wabanaki WabanakikOjibwe Waabano wag Waabanaki Waabanakiing Waabanakii Waabanakiig WaabanakiiyagOdawa Waabno wag Waabnaki Waabnakiing Waabnakii Waabnakiig WaabnakiiyagPotawatomi Wabno weg Wabneki Wabnekig Wabneki WabnekiyegMaps editMaps showing the approximate locations of areas occupied by members of the Wabanaki Confederacy from north to south nbsp Mi kmaq nbsp Maliseet Passamaquoddy nbsp Eastern Abenaki Penobscot Kennebec Arosaguntacook Pigwacket Pequawket nbsp Western Abenaki Arsigantegok Missisquoi Cowasuck Sokoki Pennacook In popular culture editThe Wabanaki Confederacy is featured in the video game Secret World Legends formerly The Secret World 69 via several NPCs who inform the player of the alternate history of the Confederacy and its relations with different groups offer quests provide items via Apothecaries and are usually residing in locations that depict Wabanaki Confederacy culture References edit Bilodeau Christopher J May 1 2013 Understanding Ritual in Colonial Wabanakia French Colonial History 14 1 32 doi 10 14321 frencolohist 14 2013 0001 JSTOR 10 14321 frencolohist 14 2013 0001 Retrieved November 22 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Walker Willard December 1 1998 The Wabanaki Confederacy Maine History Journal Voume 37 110 139 New Brunswick Tensions rise as anti fracking protests dig in rabble ca June 25 2013 Retrieved March 4 2021 Maliceet Woslatoqey Mohawk Nation News mohawknationnews com June 25 2013 Retrieved March 4 2021 Transactions 1898 Prins Harald 2002 The Crooked Path of Dummer s Treaty Anglo Wabanaki Diplomacy and the Quest for Aboriginal Rights Winnipeg University of Manitoba Winnipeg University of Manitoba p 363 Then amp Now www vamonde com Retrieved August 15 2020 a b Davistown Museum www davistownmuseum org Retrieved August 15 2020 Pasqualigo Pietro Letter On the arrival of two ships in Lisbon Portugal from the expedition of Gaspar Corte Real to the north Atlantic Ocean PDF National Humanities Center Retrieved February 5 2024 a b Seed Tony June 26 2020 Discovery of New Found Land and Cape Breton Who was Caboto and what was his claim on Canada Nova Scotia Advocate Retrieved March 25 2021 a b AH On the erstwhile Portuguese colony in 16th century Cape Breton A Bit More Detail December 16 2015 Retrieved March 25 2021 Giovanni da Verrazzano The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved March 25 2021 Dictionary of Canadian Biography Volume I 1000 TO 1700 Toronto University of Toronto Press 1966 Pp xxiii 755 15 00 The American Historical Review January 1967 doi 10 1086 ahr 72 2 745 ISSN 1937 5239 Innis Harold A 1999 The fur trade in Canada an introduction to Canadian economic history Arthur J Ray Toronto Ont University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 8130 9 OCLC 431556971 Diary of the Embassy from King George of Bohemia to King Louis XI of France From a contemporary Manuscript literally translated from the original Slavonic Notes and Queries s4 VII 167 227 March 11 1871 doi 10 1093 nq s4 vii 167 227d ISSN 1471 6941 a b c ASTICOU S ISLAND DOMAIN WABANAKI PEOPLES AT MOUNT DESERT ISLAND 1500 2000 PDF National Park Service U S Department of the Interior Petersen James Blustain Malinda Bradley James 2004 Mawooshen Revisited Two Native American Contact Period Sites on the Central Maine Coast Archaeology of Eastern North America Eastern States Archeological Federation 32 1 71 JSTOR 40914474 Hornsby Stephen J 1999 Cultural Land Use Survey of Acadia National Park National Park Service 23 a b c Prins Harald December 2007 Asticou s Island Domain Wabanaki Peoples at Mount Desert Island 1500 2000 National Park Service Boston Massachusetts a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Gratwick Harry April 10 2010 Hidden History of Maine Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 61423 134 9 Kamila Avery Yale November 8 2020 Americans have been enjoying nut milk and nut butter for at least 4 centuries Portland Press Herald Retrieved January 6 2021 Wabanaki Enjoying Nut Milk and Butter for Centuries Atowi Retrieved January 6 2021 a b THE GREAT RIVER AT THE WHITE MAN S COMING White Men Came to the St Lawrence MQUP pp 11 33 doi 10 2307 j ctt1w6t8cx 4 ISBN 978 0 7735 9416 6 retrieved March 19 2021 Wabanaki Timeline The Great Dying archive abbemuseum org Abbe Museum Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved August 15 2020 Prins Harald Storm Clouds Over Wabanakiak GenealogyFirst ca Retrieved August 13 2020 The Revised Statutes of the State of Maine PDF Maine State Legislature xiii Marshall H E 1919 The story of the United States Hodder amp Stoughton OCLC 701142434 Ellis George William 2001 King Philip s war Digital Scanning OCLC 1097126985 a b c d e f g h i j Speck Frank 1915 The Eastern Algonkian Wabanaki Confederacy American Anthropologist 17 3 492 508 doi 10 1525 aa 1915 17 3 02a00040 a b Prins Harald E L Leavitt Robert M Francis David A 1994 Wapapi Akonutomakonol The Wampum Records Wabanaki Traditional Laws American Indian Quarterly 18 1 107 doi 10 2307 1185746 ISSN 0095 182X JSTOR 1185746 a b c The Wabanakis of Maine and the Maritimes Bath Maine American Friends Service Committee 1989 Oral History June 3 2010 Biography Gray Lock Volume III 1741 1770 Dictionary of Canadian Biography www biographi ca Retrieved August 20 2020 Bourque Bruce 2004 Twelve Thousand Years American Indians in Maine University of Nebraska Press p 238 The Wabanaki www wabanaki com Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 20 2020 a b Bonvillain Nancy 2016 Native Nations Cultures and Histories of Native North America Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 115 ISBN 9781442251465 a b c d e f Faragher John Mack 2015 A Great and Noble Scheme The Tragic Story of the Expulsion of the French Acadians from Their American Homeland W W Norton ISBN 9780393242430 Conrad Margaret 2012 A Concise History of Canada Cambridge University Press p 67 ISBN 9780521761932 Saxine Ian 2019 Properties of Empire Indians Colonists and Land Speculators on the New England Frontier NYU Press p 81 ISBN 9781479832125 Plank Geoffrey 2020 Atlantic Wars From the Fifteenth Century to the Age of Revolution Oxford University Press p 96 ISBN 9780190860455 Harris Peter 2006 Income Tax in Common Law Jurisdictions Volume 1 From the Origins to 1820 Cambridge University Press p 264 ISBN 9781139461207 Remembering Black Loyalists Black Loyalist Communities in Nova Scotia November 11 2007 Archived from the original on November 11 2007 Retrieved April 4 2022 Toensing Gale Courey Sacred fire lights the Wabanaki Confederacy Indian Country Today June 27 2008 ICT Media Network Wabanaki tribes cheer UN declaration that defends their rights Bangor Daily News BDN Maine Bangordailynews com December 19 2010 Retrieved June 27 2016 Ally Maine Wabanaki REACH Archived from the original on October 25 2015 Retrieved June 27 2016 Wabanaki Water Convergence ceremony Kairos Nationtalk ca May 31 2013 Retrieved June 27 2016 Kairos Times October 2013 Kairoscanada org October 15 2013 Retrieved June 27 2016 Letter from Algonquin Grandmothers attending Wabanaki Confederacy Conference Nationtalk ca October 11 2013 Retrieved June 27 2016 Warden Rachel June 6 2014 Indigenous women unite at UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues Rabble ca Retrieved June 27 2016 Energy East pipeline poses enormous threat to environment Advocates for renewable energy hold parallel summit NB Media Co op October 14 2013 Retrieved June 27 2016 The stories of Energy East in New Brunswick Ricochet Ricochet media Retrieved June 27 2016 WABANAKI CONFEDERACY CONFERENCE PDF Abenakitribe org August 2015 Archived from the original PDF on March 5 2016 Retrieved June 27 2016 Wabanaki Confederacy Conference Statement 2015 Willinolanspeaks com Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved June 27 2016 via Wayback Machine Alma Brooks Statements to New Brunswick Hydrofracturing Commission Oct 2015 Willinolanspeaks com October 18 2013 Retrieved June 27 2016 Ohm Rachel August 21 2016 Wabanaki gather in Madison to remember ancestors killed in 1724 massacre Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel Retrieved August 3 2022 Innovation and Resilience Across Three Generations of Wabanaki Basket Making Art Museum Retrieved August 23 2022 Keyes Bob February 3 2021 Passamaquoddy artist Geo Neptune wins national fellowship Press Herald Retrieved August 23 2022 Earrings Helped Shape This Indigenous Artist s Two Spirit Identity Vogue June 1 2022 Retrieved August 23 2022 Burnham Emily August 24 2021 Wabanaki basket maker Jeremy Frey takes top honors at prestigious Native art show Bangor Daily News Retrieved August 23 2022 Food Sovereignty Traditional Foods www wabanaki com Archived from the original on July 3 2022 Retrieved August 26 2022 Kamila Avery Yale November 8 2020 Vegan Kitchen Americans have been enjoying nut milk and nut butter for at least 4 centuries Press Herald Retrieved August 28 2022 Wabanaki Enjoying Nut Milk and Butter for Centuries Atowi November 8 2020 Retrieved August 28 2022 4th Annual Native American Dinner Celebrating the Wabanaki Harvest Zingerman s Roadhouse August 9 2011 Retrieved August 26 2022 Brogle Melissa February 21 2020 The Abenaki People Indigenous Foods and Resources The Great Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve GBNERR Retrieved August 26 2022 Abenaki Three Sisters Soup Middlebury Food Co op Retrieved August 26 2022 Paul Mihku Wabanaki Foods in Maine Schools PDF Maine Department of Education Child Nutrition I C T Staff Chef Freddie Bitsoie Recommends a Cross Cultural Celebration of Native Regional Winter Recipes Ict News Retrieved August 26 2022 Indigenous Foods and Recipes Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective March 2 2018 Retrieved August 28 2022 Wabanaki TSW Database www tswdb com Retrieved February 3 2023 Further reading editMcBride Bunny 2001 Women of the Dawn Mead Alice 1996 Giants of the Dawnland Eight Ancient Wabanaki Legends Prins Harald E L 2002 The Crooked Path of Dummer s Treaty Anglo Wabanaki Diplomacy and the Quest for Aboriginal Rights Papers of the Thirty Third Algonquian Conference H C Wolfart ed Winnipeg U Manitoba Press pp 360 378 Speck Frank G The Eastern Algonkian Wabanaki Confederacy American Anthropologist New Series Vol 17 No 3 July September 1915 pp 492 508 Walker Willard The Wabanaki Confederacy Maine History 37 3 1998 100 139 External links editIndian Treaties Native Languages of the Americas Wabanaki Confederacy Wabanaki People A Story of Cultural Continuity Archived June 24 2016 at the Wayback Machine timeline curriculum by Abbe Museum Dr Harald E L Prins Storm Clouds over Wabanakiak Confederacy Diplomacy Until Dummer s Treaty 1727 Wabanaki Confederacy website Miingignoti Keteaoag a partnership for the way of life of the Wabanaki Nations mirror Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wabanaki Confederacy amp oldid 1203864779, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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