1 / 19

Iroquois, Mingo, and Wyandot

Iroquois, Mingo, and Wyandot. Chapter 1, Section 4. Historic Indians. By 1650  Historic Indian groups came to Ohio Lived after written history Did not have their own written languages, however Europeans who met them did.

Télécharger la présentation

Iroquois, Mingo, and Wyandot

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Iroquois, Mingo, and Wyandot Chapter 1, Section 4

  2. Historic Indians • By 1650  Historic Indian groups came to Ohio • Lived after written history • Did not have their own written languages, however Europeans who met them did. • Written records from Europeans tell us a great deal about these Native Americans.

  3. Native American Legends • Stories, songs, and legends can also tell us much about early Native Americans • Legends stories passed down over time • Used to explain how everything in the world came to be • Used to tell a tribe’s history

  4. Native American Legends • Tribe  a group that shares the same language and has the same leaders • Legends often told how tribes first came to be • Legends provide clues about how the people saw their world • Tell much about a tribe’s history and culture

  5. Cultures and Conflict • Tribes used natural resources to survive, and to make goods for trade • Traded with each other for the resources they didn’t have • Sometimes fought each other for control of land and resources

  6. Cultures and Conflict • By early 1600s, Europeans began to settle in parts of North America • Settlements grew and spread into Native American territory --- conflict

  7. Cultures and Conflict • Europeans and Native Americans traded. • Native Americans traded animal skins and furs for European goods such as cloth, glass, and metal tools and weapons. • As fur trade increased, so did the demand for furs. • Led to conflicts between Native Americans over hunting lands

  8. The Iroquois • 1650  came to Ohio from the Northeast • powerful – fought and drove out other tribes who lived around Lake Erie and along Ohio’s rivers

  9. The Iroquois • Mostly wanted to hunt and trap animals in Ohio – did NOT want to settle there • Fished, hunted deer, beavers, foxes, and mink • Became a major source of furs for European traders • Gathered nuts and fruits, grew corn, beans, and squash

  10. The Iroquois • Lived in villages and built large wooden homes called longhouses • Wooden poles = frame; sheets of bark = cover • Small fires kept burning inside • Several families lived in one longhouse  clan • Clans were led by women and often named after animals • Put their crest at their longhouse entrance

  11. The Iroquois • Each family slept on a platform • Weapons, tools, and baskets stored underneath • Pots, food, skins stored on shelves above the platform

  12. The Mingo • Related to the Iroquois; spoke an Iroquois language and had similar customs; also known as the Seneca • mid-1770s  moved to Ohio from the east • Lived along the riverbanks of the Scioto and Sandusky Rivers in longhouses. • Communities develops near present-day Columbus

  13. The Mingo • The tribe was formed by members of the Iroquois and other tribes. • Some were hunters who had left the Iroquois • Others were members of tribes who had been defeated by the Iroquois

  14. The Mingo • At first, lived peacefully with the Iroquois • Treated as equals by the Iroquois • Members of the Mingo tribe were not allowed to serve as Iroquois leaders • Began to act more like their own tribe over time • 1750  conflicts with the Iroquois and European settlers pushed the Mingo tribe into eastern Ohio

  15. The Wyandot • 1650  Iroquois attacked tribes near Ontario to gain hunting land • Wyandot formed from tribes fleeing the Iroquois • mid-1700s  moved into northern Ohio from Canada • Settled mainly in villages along the Sandusky River and the Huron River

  16. The Wyandot • Their language is related to the Iroquois language • Lived in longhouses • Women leaders chose the Wyandot chiefs • Fierce warriors • Strongly resisted European settlements near where they lived

More Related