US History timeline & concept chart: 10th-16th centuries pre-colonial Native Americans to early North American colonization (Spanish, French, Dutch): Difference between revisions
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== Post-Columbian Eastern Native American tribes overview == | |||
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! '''PERIOD / TIMELINE''' | |||
! '''Major Events, Concepts & Themes''' | |||
! cell style="width:60%"|'''Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events''' | |||
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* 1450-1660 Iroquois League<br><br> | |||
* 1680s Wabanaki Confederacy | |||
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=== Iroquois League or Confederacy === | |||
* preceded European presence in North America | |||
* originally located south of the Great Lakes | |||
* empowered by and expanded via European fur trade and weapons | |||
=== post-Columbian exchange changes === | |||
* trade, especially fur trade | |||
* technological and economic exchange changed intra-tribal power dynamics, including: | |||
* iron tools and weapons, guns, horses | |||
** colonial and European trade and currencies/ value systems | |||
* tribal leverage of colonial contacts for competition & expansion | |||
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'''BIG IDEAS''' | |||
[[File:Early Localization Native Americans NY.svg|thumb|Map of the New York tribes before European arrival: Iroquoian tribes Algonquian tribes]] | |||
* Northeastern Native American tribal alliances | |||
** '''Iroquois''' tribes | |||
*** located west and south of the St. Lawrence River | |||
*** generally aligned with the British | |||
** '''Algonquin''' tribes | |||
[[File:Algonquian langs.png|thumb|Pre-contact distribution of Algonquian languages]] | |||
*** generally aligned with the French | |||
*** located east and north of the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes | |||
'''DETAILS''' | |||
* '''Iroquois League''', established c. 1450 (prior to Columbus), lasted to 1660 | |||
** confederacy of Iroquois speaking tribes: Mohawk, Onondaga, Oneida, Cayuga, Seneca | |||
** the most powerful of Indian alliances | |||
** ''Iroquois'' = French name given to the tribes | |||
** to the Iroquois, their name was "Haudenosaunee" for "People of the Longhouse" | |||
** the League was known to the English as '''Five Nations''' | |||
*** later Six Nations after Tuscarora joined in 1722) | |||
** NOTE: “nation” or “clans” = better descriptor than “tribes” but collections of tribes who share certain commonalities, viz location, language, leadership, conquest, adoption | |||
** the League negotiated w/ English, maintained independence | |||
** opposed to the Algonquian, which were aligned w/ French, but some Iroquois settled in French held territory and aligned w/ them | |||
*** was also opposed to the Iroquois-speaking '''Huron''' tribes | |||
** to control the Beaver trade, the Iroquois League sought: | |||
*** to control the St. Lawrence River system & lower Great Lakes | |||
*** to control the Ohio Valley | |||
** Iroquois succeeded in controlling Ohio valley by 1670 | |||
*** and pushed other tribes further west, such as the Lakotas and the Shawnee | |||
** Iroquois expansion also included western Maryland and Virginia | |||
* '''Wabanaki Confederacy''', 1680s | |||
** alliance of four main and ten other Algonquian tribes in '''Acadia''' | |||
*** Acadia =New France province in modern Maine | |||
** organized to oppose New England encroachment on lands above settled boundary on the Kennebec River in modern Maine | |||
** '''Wabanaki'' means " "People of the Dawn" or "Easterner" | |||
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== Age of Exploration and Columbian Exchange == | == Age of Exploration and Columbian Exchange == | ||
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** historians see “City upon a Hill” as a statement of “American exceptionalism” | ** historians see “City upon a Hill” as a statement of “American exceptionalism” | ||
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Revision as of 14:11, 17 October 2021
1621US History timeline & concept chart: early North American colonization
article under construction
Objective:
Main page
Previous timelines:
- n/a
Next timelines:
- US History timeline & concept chart: American colonies 17th & mid-18th centuries
- US History timeline & concept chart: French-Indian War to the American Revolution
- US History timeline & concept chart: U.S. History Decade-by-decade timeline, 1890s-1900
See also:
- << to do
Pre-Columbian indigenous peoples overview[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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PERIOD / TIMELINE
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linguistic and cultural areas[edit | edit source]tribal alliances[edit | edit source]culture[edit | edit source]architecture[edit | edit source]
land use[edit | edit source]
|
BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
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Post-Columbian indigenous peoples overview[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
---|---|---|
PERIOD / TIMELINE
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linguistic and cultural areas[edit | edit source]tribal alliances[edit | edit source]culture[edit | edit source]architecture[edit | edit source]
land use[edit | edit source]
|
BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
|
Post-Columbian Eastern Native American tribes overview[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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Iroquois League or Confederacy[edit | edit source]
post-Columbian exchange changes[edit | edit source]
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
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Age of Exploration and Columbian Exchange[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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political and economic background[edit | edit source]
European motives[edit | edit source]
British John Cabot expedition 1497[edit | edit source]
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
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Protestant Reformation & religious conflict[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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Martin Luther & Protestant Reformation[edit | edit source]Religious conflict & persecution as push factor on migration to colonial America[edit | edit source]Rhode Island & religious freedom[edit | edit source]Quakers[edit | edit source] |
BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
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Spanish colonization in North America[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events | |
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Encomienda[edit | edit source]
New Laws[edit | edit source]
Pueblo Revolt[edit | edit source]
Asiento[edit | edit source]
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
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French North American colonization[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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New France[edit | edit source]
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
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Dutch North American colonization[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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subsection 1[edit | edit source]
subsection 2[edit | edit source]
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
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British North American colonization[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events | ||
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Push / Pull factors[edit | edit source]
Joint Stock Company[edit | edit source]
Headright System[edit | edit source]
Indentured servants[edit | edit source]House of Burgesses[edit | edit source]
Separatists (religious)[edit | edit source]
John Winthrop & "city upon a hill"[edit | edit source]
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
“IN THE NAME OF GOD, AMEN. We… Do by these Presents, solemnly and mutually, in the Presence of God and one another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil Body Politick, for our better Ordering and Preservation, and Furtherance of the Ends aforesaid: And by Virtue hereof do enact, constitute, and frame, such just and equal Laws, Ordinances, Acts, Constitutions, and Officers, from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the general Good of the Colony; unto which we promise all due Submission and Obedience …”
click EXPAAND for Bradford's account of the cicada outbreak of 1633: "It is to be observed that, the spring before this sickness, there was a numerous company of Flies which were like for bigness unto wasps or Bumble-Bees; they came out of little holes in the ground, and did eat up the green things, and made such a constant yelling noise as made the woods ring of them, and ready to deafen the hearers; they were not any seen or heard by the English in this country before this time; but the Indians told them that sickness would follow, and so it did, very hot, in the months of June, July, and August of that summer."
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Slavery origins in Americas[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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transatlantic slave trade[edit | edit source]
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BIG IDEAS DETAILS
click EXPAND for more on Olaudah Equiano and his memoirs:
To the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Commons of the Parliament of Great Britain. My Lords and Gentlemen, Permit me, with the greatest deference and respect, to lay at your feet the following genuine Narrative; the chief design of which is to excite in your august assemblies a sense of compassion for the miseries which the Slave-Trade has entailed on my unfortunate countrymen.
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