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Published byRafe Carter Modified over 9 years ago
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Native-Newcomer Relations, to 1701
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Native-Newcomer Relations The Iroquois Confederacy after 1653 The Seven Nations of Canada The Ojibwa in southern Ontario The Great Peace of Montreal, 1701
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Iroquois Confederacy after 1653 Iroquois territory after the Iroquois Wars Iroquois society after the Iroquois Wars Religious factionalism Iroquois-French peace and war Waning Iroquois power
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“Iroquois versus Iroquois” Religious factionalism in the 1660s Purposes for accepting religion Iroquois people most likely to accept religion Factionalism in Iroquois villages Christian Iroquois villages in Canada Kateri Tekakwitha
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Iroquois-French Peace and War 1653: French-Iroquois Peace 1660: Adam Dollard des Ormeaux 1665: French-Iroquois Peace 1687: French offensive into southern Ontario 1689: Iroquois offensive at Lachine
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Seven Nations of Canada Jeune Lorette Kahnawake (Caughnawaga) Kanesatake (Lake of Two Mountains) Akwesasne (St. Regis) Odanak (St. Francis) Becancoeur Oswegatchie
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Native Mission Villages Economy Culture Language Mixed Ancestry/Marriage Schooling Law French subjects or French allies?
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The Ojibwa in southern Ontario Note: Historians have conflicting explanations for the movement of Ojibwa people into southern Ontario after 1680s/1690s.
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Great Peace of Montreal, 1701 August 4, 1701 39 Native nations and the French 1400 Native people gathered at Montreal Terms of the Great Peace
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