Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDustin Brown Modified over 9 years ago
1
Generalizations about Indians and Empires Where Europeans settled in large numbers, built farms and towns, established mining operations, etc., they soon established control. In the interior of the Americas, away from areas of dense European settlement, Indians remained more independent, into the 20 th century in some places
2
L.G. Moses & Margaret Connell Szasz, “’My Father, have pity on me!’ Indian Revitalization Movements of the Late-Nineteenth Century,” in Religion in the West, ed. F.M. Szasz (Manhattan, KA: Sunflower Univ. Press, 1984) In the Spirit of Crazy Horse (PBS documentary; YouTube) Karl Jacoby, Shadows at Dawn http://brown.edu/Research/Aravaipa/peoples.html http://brown.edu/Research/Aravaipa/peoples.html Pekka Hämäläinen, “The Rise and Fall of Plains Indian Horse Cultures,” Journal of American History 90 (Dec. 2003), 833-62
3
Middle Ground Relations French colonization efforts, 1500s-1600s Wars with the Iroquois, 1609- 1701 Inability to use force to control Indian peoples
4
Defining the Middle Ground Places where neither side could determine the relationship (militarily, economically, politically) For pragmatic reasons, negotiated a third culture, a common world neither wholly Indian nor European Each side was forced to adapt, but also had some room to adapt on its own terms Indians and Europeans were not exotic or alien to each other Sometimes was violent The middle ground declined when European-Americans became dominant economically and militarily
6
The “Pays d’en Haut” or Upper Country
7
Examples of the Middle Ground Fur trade “Coureur de bois” & “Voyageurs” Military relations Inter-marriage “country” marriages; “á la façon du pays” Métis Missions Onontio
8
Ties Between Metropolitan Centers and Frontiers
9
Impact on Indians Rising standards of living (e.g., new opportunities for Indian women) Connection to military alliances Technological dependence, over time Environmental degradation Decline of fur-bearing game and food game in the 1700s, east of the Mississippi Disease
10
Decline of the Middle Ground British conquest of New France (1760) Proclamation Line (1763) Economic decline for Indians in eastern North America, 1750-1820 Social problems in Indian communities “shatter zones” American Revolution Joseph Brant, Molly Brant, & General William Johnson Impact of the Revolution & Independence The War of 1812 Policies in the U.S. and BNA (Canada): reservations & removal
12
Conclusions Successful adaptation, resistance for centuries by many Indians The material basis of Indian decline was environmental (disease, loss of resources), economic (decline of fur trade, greater manufacturing power of European-Americans), and political-military In North America, they became wards, victims, only after loss of power (no longer could determine the course of their own adaptation)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.