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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.

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Iroquois, Mingo, and Wyandot

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  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

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