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Papers [181-198] of 527 :: [Page 11 of 30]
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Paper # 16746 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
George Caitlin Stories, 2002.
Comparing two books telling the story of George Caitlin, an American writer and painter, in two completely different ways -"Paintbrush & Peacepipe: The Story of George Catlin", by Anne Rockwell and "George Catlin and the Old Frontier", by Harold McCracken
2,795 words (approx. 11.2 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 83.95
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Abstract
This paper shows that even though the two books tell the same life story of Caitlin, each one differs most significantly in tone and style according to the vastly different audiences to which each is directed. Rockwell's book was intended for children - less pages and more illustration, whereas McCracken's book presents itself as a very authoritive piece on Caitlin's life in an artbook format.

From the Paper
"The first book, Paintbrush and Peacepipe, 86 small pages in length, with 8 brief chapters and 15 illustrations, is written for children. By comparison, the second book, George Catlin and the Old Frontier, with its 209 oversized pages might seem a vastly superior presentation of George Catlin's biography. The artbook format of McCracken's work, with its 36 color and 118 black and white illustrations, is far more authoritative and detailed in its representation of the scope of Catlin's art. Yet, Paintbrush & Peacepipe, in it's minimalist manner is a highly educational and effective piece of work."
Paper # 16738 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Joaquin Murieta, 2002.
An analysis of the book "The Life and Adventures of Joaquin Murieta, the Celebrated California Bandit," by John Rollin Ridge.
1,779 words (approx. 7.1 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 57.95
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Abstract
A discussion and analysis of "The Life and Adventures of Joanquin Murieta, the Celebrated California Bandit", written by Native American Cherokee, John Rollin Ridge, in 1854. The paper discusses the uniqueness of the novel, not only because it was the first book published by a Native American author, but also because it provides a clear picture of what life was like for the "foreigners" during the California Gold Rush. The paper analyzes the book which tells the story of a Mexican-American, Joaquin Murieta, who turns to crime and banditry after being treated badly by the local Californian community.

From the Paper
"Stylistically, the book is certainly full of flowery and romantic language, which was the common writing style at the time. Ridge paints a vivid portrait of Murieta, and life at the time in the gold fields of California. It was a violent time. It was a time when the oppressed needed heroes and Joaquin fit the bill perfectly. While Ridge's account can never be called a true history, it is certainly filled with the day-to-day life in the mining camps at the time. If Joaquin Murieta ever existed, he certainly existed in the mind of John Rollin Ridge, whose novel brought him vividly to life. While the novel may have its problems, it is an interesting look at California's past, and a worthwhile read for anyone interested in learning more about folklore, and how it gets started."
Paper # 9501 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Native American Religious System, 2002.
An insight into the Native American religious system. The paper discusses six bases of religion and shows how religion has influenced the people and societies who support it.
1,220 words (approx. 4.9 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 41.95
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Abstract
Since the beginning of time religion has played an important part in people's lives. How people worship can be as varied as the lands they live in. The Native American Indians are a group that have many beliefs and rituals. This paper discusses how their religion is based on spirits and the belief of a higher power and that the ceremonies they perform can range from ones concerning harvest and giving thanks to Ghost Dances and Death rituals.

From the Paper
"The Indians believe in Spirits and the supernatural. The Hopi Indians describe Spirits as a being that "may have greater than human powers (Geertz)." They feel these powers can be evil or be able to accomplished great things. They believe kachinas are powerful because they can make it rain. A kachina is a powerful supernatural being, or one who possesses the being during a religious ceremony. The Hopi also believe that there are those who are invisible and help them with knowledge. They consider these spirits to have superhuman strength. Some such spirits which perform many feats in their tales are the Old Spider Woman and her grandsons, and the Sun god. The Hopi ask each being to help them in their lives using their own special gifts (Geertz)."
Paper # 9186 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Leslie Silko's "Ceremony", 2002.
This paper examines the struggle of the American Indian to fit into a society that does not accept strangers.
955 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 33.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses several of the themes presented in Leslie Silk's novel, "Ceremony." This paper looks at the main character, Tayo's journey to self-acceptance of his roots through a journey he takes through the world of the white man and its many vices. The paper uses different examples from the story that follow the journey through to its conclusion. These include Tayo's contact with the white doctor, his feelings of invisibility and his search for spirituality. The paper continues this theme through Tayo's use of alcohol and how it serves as a symbol for both his thirst of learning about his culture and his continued abuse by the white man. It is through this journey that Tayo eventually returns to the medicine man and eventually inner peace and acceptance.

From the Paper
"Tayo insists that he is invisible in the onset of the novel. He cannot speak because an invisible man has no tongue. The white doctor forces Tayo to feel. The doctor's voice lures Tao into the doctor's sense of reality. Tayo feels that he is part of the fog and "like brittle red clay, slipping away with the wind, a little more each day" (Silko, 27). Consequently, Tayo felt hallow internally. He didn't fit in mentally and wished to ease his internal pain by physically escaping into nothingness. Tao's desire for non-existence is symbolic in the novel's theme of self-discovery."
Paper # 8578 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee", 2002.
An analysis of the historical writing of Dee Brown's "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee".
580 words (approx. 2.3 pages), 1 source, APA, $ 20.95
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Abstract
This paper describes the historical genocide and displacement of the Native Americans through Dee Brown's book "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee". It traces the history of the Dakotas and Sioux Tribe during and after the conquest of the West by the American military.

From the Paper
"Dee Brown's "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" is a fully documented account of the genocide and displacement by the United States government and military of an entire race of people, human beings, natives of the land that spanned from sea to shining sea. This unthinkable inhumane act was done in the name of Manifest Destiny, a name Congress gave to this movement. Brown documents battles and defeats of the Navaho, Nez Perces, Cheyenne, Apache, Utes, the Sioux and other tribes against a relentless and dishonorable government."
Paper # 8528 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Religion and Belief in "Reservation Blues", 2002.
An analysis of the book "Reservation Blues" by Sherman Alexie, New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1995.
1,270 words (approx. 5.1 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 43.95
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Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to introduce and discuss the book "Reservation Blues," by Sherman Alexie. Specifically, it looks at the musical poem at the beginning of the chapter "My God Has Dark Skin," and how it relates to the beliefs and religion of the characters throughout the book.

From the Paper
"These words tell the story of how the Native American's had to give up their beliefs, and their religion for the white man's religion, in the name of "modernity" and "Christianity." The numerous Native American tribes each had a complex religious system, made up of folk tales, and a wide variety of gods and goddesses. Yet, when the white men came and took over the Indian lands, they tried to convert them to the "true" religion of Christianity, while they gave up their old ways and beliefs."
Paper # 7792 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Creation Story of the Apache, 2002.
This paper discusses the importance of the creation story in the lives of the Chiricahua Apache.
2,875 words (approx. 11.5 pages), 8 sources, APA, $ 85.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the history and folklore behind the creation story of the Chiricahua Apache. The creation story is presented to the reader, and is referenced throughout the paper. The history of the Apache is discussed, including where and how they lived, their connection to the land and how the creation story would influence their day-to-day decisions. According to this paper, their religion was central to all aspects of their lives, their behavior and means of survival. Their interaction with the white population, whether violent, or friendly, can all be traced back to their belief in their own creation story.

From the Paper
"By the beginning of the 17th century the Chiricahua Apache had achieved, from what can be determined from the archaeological record, a relatively settled way of life. They grew corn as well as other crops such as beans - although there were certainly still semi-nomadic groups. Their joint dependence on agriculture and nomadic food collection and herding may have been due to the sporadic nature of rainfall in the Southwest. Nomadicism is a rational response during a year in which there is not enough rainfall."
Paper # 7132 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"House Made of Dawn", 2002.
A discussion on the book "House Made of Dawn" by N. Scott Momaday, a story about a Native American man that could never fit into the white man's world, and did not feel a connection with the Native American world any more.
1,010 words (approx. 4.0 pages), 0 sources, $ 35.95
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Abstract
The following paper discusses the themes of dawn and dusk in "House Made of Dawn" focusing on their symbolic and metaphorical meanings of new beginnings and endings. The paper briefly discusses the story, which tells of the differences between the races, and how difficult it is for Native Americans to fit into either world.

From the Paper
"We learn throughout the novel that he never could fit into the white man's world, but he does not feel a connection with the Native American world any more. He is going through his own personal "hell" of not belonging anywhere. We see his life in Los Angeles, after he finishes serving his time in prison for murdering the albino. We can see immediately this is not the place for him. He cannot find his place. He returns home only when he is beaten so badly, he almost dies. The story uses the imagery of New Mexico to paint pictures of the old ways, and even romanticize them. Dusk and dawn are important elements in the painting of pictures."
Paper # 6975 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Exterminate Them, 2002.
This paper presents a carefully prepared analysis of the book "Exterminate Them: Written Accounts of the Murder, Rape and Enslavement of Native Americans during the California Gold Rush", by Clifford E. Trafzer and Joel R. Hyer.
540 words (approx. 2.2 pages), 0 sources, $ 19.95
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Abstract
The writer of this paper uses this book to identify and analyze the book's subject matter, which is the treatment of Native Americans in California, from the time the white men arrived, until the state was firmly taken over by them. The paper also discusses the author's main aim which is to link the subject of torture and genocide when it comes to Native Americans. The final aspect that is addressed is whether or not the writer of this paper believed the author was successful in his attempt to convey his points.

From the Paper
"Throughout American history, students are taught about the Native American plight. Many times, people believe that the way it is presented is a sugar coated version of the real events. In "Exterminate Them: Written Accounts of the Murder, Rape and Enslavement of Native Americans during the California Gold Rush, By Clifford E. Trafzer and Joel R. Hyer, the reader gets a targeted realistic overview of what the author believes was a straight genocide approach in an attempt to rid the state of California of the Native Americans who were here long before white man entered the nation".
Paper # 6930 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Exterminate Them", 2002.
This paper presents a book review of "Exterminate Them: Written Accounts of the Murder, Rape, and Enslavement of Native Americans during the California Gold Rush." by Clifford E. Trafzer and Joel R. Hyer. Forward by Edward Castillo.
700 words (approx. 2.8 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 24.95
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Abstract
The following book review examines the true treatment of Native Americans in California at that time of the California Gold Rush. It is a testament to the fact that folklore and tales can be embellished for many years with little accuracy. The book details and documents provable facts that should alert any future white person that it can happen, and did happen in the United States.

From the Paper
"Throughout history, authors have used their works to convey emotion or a principle or moral that they felt strongly about. One of the best illustrations of this type of literary work is in, 'Exterminate Them' : Written Accounts of the Murder, Rape, and Slavery of Native Americans During the California Gold Rush, 1848-1868 ,by Clifford E. Trafzer (Editor), and Joel R. Hyer (Editor). In this work, the authors detail many of the horrors that were faced by the Native American, while the white man moved through the state of California, and industrialized it and changed it to their liking."
Paper # 1805 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Continental Divide, 2000.
A look at the history and nature of the Continental Divide, and the threats it faces today.
1,492 words (approx. 6.0 pages), 4 sources, $ 49.95
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Abstract
This paper presents an examination of the wilderness area of the Continental Divide Trail and takes at look at its history, modern threats to its ecological systems, and efforts that are being made to preserve it.

From the Paper
"The Continental Divide Trail is controversial because its construction has touched on issues that were present back in the days of the Old West: it impedes on the territories of some Native American tribes, it has the potential to exploit or destroy delicate ecosystems and animal species that live along the trail, and it paves a path over virgin terrain for white yuppies to exploit previously uninhabited lands. As we will see in this paper, these current events are directly related to the historic settlement of the Old West. "
Paper # 104202 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Native Americans, 2003.
Examines that Native American's struggle to retain their culture and lands against the forces of the early white settlers.
820 words (approx. 3.3 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 29.95
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Abstract
This paper describes the history of the lack of tolerance for the Indians from the time that Hernando De Soto set foot in Cherokee country to the expulsion of Native Americans to Oklahoma.The author points out that the early white settlers justified their harsh stance by believing that the Indians obstructed the progress of the whites who could use the land much more efficiently and that it was the God-given right of the settlers to obtain this land. The paper reports that, in 1835, the Treaty of New Echota forced Indians at bayonet point and shackled in chains to be transferred to Oklahoma. The paper concludes that thousands of Indians died due to disease, absence of shelter and lack of food on this journey called the "Trail of Tears".

From the Paper
"The Federal Government received their plea, and in 1832, the Supreme Court reviewed the case of Worcester vs. Georgia. Chief Justice John Marshall ruled on behalf of the Cherokee Indians and stated that the Federal Government was responsible for the Indians rather than the state of Georgia. This ruling appeared to be a triumph for the Native Americans; however, it was short lived. For example, Jackson stated that John Marshall has made his decision and that it was up to him to enforce it."
Paper # 103793 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Native Americans and Mental Health, 2008.
This paper explores the problem of mental health issues, especially substance abuse, among Native Americans.
1,330 words (approx. 5.3 pages), 11 sources, APA, $ 44.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that Native Americans disproportionately have a greater occurrence of mental health and substance use disorders than the population as a whole. The author relates that the U.S. government's policy of expansion, containment and non-sanctioned genocide in the 1880s has manifested itself in the Native-American population as poverty, alienation from mainstream public services and education, increased risk for medical and psychological conditions and a fractured sense of tribal and family cohesiveness. The paper points out that alcohol dependence combined with major depression or post-traumatic stress disorder are the most prevalent co-occurring disorders. The author reports that the evolving standard treatment method for Native-American clients is integrated mental health and addiction services using motivational interviewing, which is especially compatible with Native-American values.

From the Paper
"Because Native Americans have a long, rich cultural heritage strikingly different from the mainstream of America, and because Native America is segmented into hundreds of tribes, many of which with their own unique cultural systems, providing adequate mental health and chemical dependency services in a culturally sensitive manner is difficult. This very issue serves as a barrier to treatment and outcomes, especially for individuals living off reservations where local community support and tribal customs are not present. Even on reservations, community support is inadequate as funding for mental health services through the Indian Health Services entitlement is woefully under-funded."
Paper # 102125 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
California Natives, 2008.
This paper looks at American anthropology from a Native-American perspective through studying the book "The Way We Lived: California Indian Stories, Songs and Reminiscences" by Malcolm Margolin.
1,357 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 45.95
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Abstract
In this article, the writer discusses that, in the work "The Way We Lived: California Indian Stories, Songs and Reminiscences", the editor brings together a disparate range of customs and rites particular to the many different tribes which occupied the land unmolested until the late 18th century. The writer notes that in its examination of the inner-workings of a forgotten people, 'The Way We Lived' gives psychological and ideological concreteness to a canon that is layered with practices tied to the land and its resources. In doing this, the book also proves that the deprivation to this people of the land and its resources was a vehicle to the culture's disappearance. The writer concludes that Margolin brings the book to a close by proving that its feasibility was assured by the culture's perseverance today, as attended to by its living descendants.

From the Paper
"This book appears to have been written to meet a number of purposes. Among them, it is evident the Margolis hoped to show that the colonial domination of the California Indian tribes was not accomplished because of superior cultural sophistication, though this is a notion which some European historians have attempted to purvey. Instead, it works from the position that anthropology should not only be the pursuit of the white man but of natives as well, making as a compassing goal the removal of an implicit racial prejudice from the discipline. The book's contents are organized by eleven distinctive sections, a vehicle which the editor utilized in order to shape the experience of absorbing its non-linear description of once prevalent cultures such as the tribal habitations of the Yurok and Miwok Indians. By traversing the range of central topics in the saga of tribes, from roving guests of nature's bounty to oppressed and devastated in number, Margolin touches upon the numerous strata of the Indian way of life. Moving deftly through lifestyle details such as early rites of passage, love and loss thereof, and spiritual empowerment, the book's divisions give a framework to the reader's adoption of an entirely new foundation for anthropological study of Native America."
Paper # 102115 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Native American Exploitation, 2008.
A summary of opposing views of the New World as voiced by Christopher Columbus and Bartoleme de Las Casas.
1,381 words (approx. 5.5 pages), 9 sources, APA, $ 46.95
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Abstract
This paper brings together the works of Christopher Columbus and Bartoleme de Las Casas in relation to their impressions of the New World.
The paper relates that extracts from their letters illustrate how the two Spaniards offer similar conceptions of the new people while differing considerably on the appropriate treatment offered to them. In essence, however, both author their letters with European colonialism as the informing basis for their respective intimations, prefiguring the ultimate destruction of the native people and culture

From the Paper
"When Columbus touched the shores of the Americas, believing his discovery to be the West Indies that he had initially sought, a New World was said to have been uncovered. For the Europeans, this title was rife with connotation regarding its entitlement to conquer and claim the vast and unexplored territory. This would be true in spite of the concurrent discovery that, in fact, the New World had long been populated by the native tribes that are described as plentiful in accounts of the frontier. For the leader of the first voyage to America, Christopher Columbus, and a man regarded as perhaps the first staunch advocate for Native American rights, Bartoleme de Las Casas, the presence of these populations challenges European assumptions regarding ownership and subjugation. In their respective letters, the 1493 "A Letter to Luis Santangel" and 1542's "Brief Account of the Devastation of the Indies," the two Spaniards offer similar conceptions of the new people encountered in the New World while differing considerably on the appropriate treatment offered thereto.
Both concur on the dominant presence of the tribes found in the Americas. Las Casas, in fact, describes them as being so numerous as to perhaps account for a more densely populating presence than he had ever seen of a people in the Spanish homeland. For Columbus, this plenteousness is distinguished, however, by the apparently malleable spirits of the natives. He remarks that on the Atlantic coast of the continent, "I found very many islands filled with people innumerable, and of them all I have taken possession for their highness, by proclamation made and with the royal standard unfurled, and no opposition was offered to me" (Columbus, 1) Here, the European perspective on ownership is immediately demonstrated, offering a great deal of insight into the disposition which Columbus helped to foster in the New World. The eventual destruction of the native cultures which he describes here is made inevitable in Europe's very first glimpse of America.
The clash of cultures, it can be seen, will be immediate. The conventional wisdom denotes that the native tribes which inhabited the land before Columbus' arrival had no sense of ownership, either over land or people. In the conception articulated above, Columbus regards the submissiveness of these cultures to his dominance as an indication of their willingness to be conquered and possessed. This is a clear failure on the part of the author to apprehend the social manifestation of the cultural distinctions between prior inhabitants and new arrivals to the New World. A more studied understanding of their behavior might instead reveal that the tribes, which would earn the misappellation 'Indians,' did not recognize their newfound status as subjects to the king of Spain."
Paper # 102098 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Communitarian Living in Cherokee and Colonial Communities, 2008.
An analysis of the Colonists' influence on the Cherokee population.
1,781 words (approx. 7.1 pages), 2 sources, APA, $ 57.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at the influences and opportunities that the colonists brought to the New World and discusses the differences between their values and those of the Native Americans. Ultimately, the difference in the communitarian tendencies attributed to both cultures would be definable in terms of gender equality. The author argues that the general push of European culture toward the patriarchal capitalism which would soon come to define American life, could be felt in the distinct change, and eventual devastation, of the Cherokee culture.

From the Paper
"The European arrival to the New World brought about a total recalibration of global order. The opportunities of economic growth, governmental innovation and geographical expansion prefigured the development of a distinct culture. Indeed, the colonists who brought with them many vestiges of the monarchical European lifestyle would come into contact with a theretofore unprecedented landscape and a people, in the Native Americans, of whom there existed no prior knowledge. In Theda Perdue's Cherokee Women: Gender and Culture Change 1700-1835 and Helena Wall's Fierce Communion, we can begin to see how the land and the two cultures in question coincided to produce a unique condition of communitarian living for the colonists while simultaneously dismantling such a condition for the Cherokee.
A major point of distinction between the Cherokee and colonialist civilizations is the emphasis which each placed on its respective social value system as a means to subsistence. For the Cherokees, this system would be founded on a distribution of responsibilities designed to bring equanimity to the survivability of the collective. This communitarian approach to subsistence would be countered by the far more individualistic culture of the colonists, whose conceptualization of individual ownership, land dominance and market competition together created a powerful capitalist entity. This entity would be perhaps the most incurrent cause of the eventual demise of a pure Cherokee culture, first through the intended process of acculturation and thereafter through the aggressive tactics of economic and military dominance that would appear to be naturally produced by the thrust of capitalism. Thus, we can see that the sharp contrast between Cherokee communitarian tendencies and colonial ambitions for expansion of the competitive playing field would be an ultimate catalyst to the impasse between the two divergent cultures."
Paper # 102034 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Indian School", 2003.
This paper examines the book "Indian School" by Michael Cooper.
1,391 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 0 sources, $ 46.95
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Abstract
The paper examines "Indian School" by Michael Cooper where he chronicles the history of the schools organized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The paper looks at how Cooper profiles some of its students and their hardships in the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania. The paper discusses how the Native-Americans were forced to ignore their Indian culture and conform to the white man's ways. The author concludes that he will use this as an example of why it is important to incorporate all cultures in education.

From the Paper
"In 1879, relations between the United States government and the Native Americans were very poor. The Native Americans were being forced into reservations by the expanding European-American population. Also just three years earlier, Lt. Colonel Custer and 250 soldiers were killed at the Little Bighorn River. When Captain Richard Henry Pratt came to the Rosebud Reservation asking for Sioux children, the Native Americans were very apprehensive. Captain Pratt spoke with forty warriors and chiefs and he convinced them that their ignorance of the white man's ways were actually hurting their civilization. He said the United States government would provide boarding and education for their children at no cost. After talking it over the Chiefs decided that it would be best if the children did get an education so that they would be better able to help their people negotiate with the white man. That winter hundreds of frightened Sioux children were taken by train from their homes near North Dakota to Pennsylvania, one thousand miles away."
Paper # 100306 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Lenni-Lenape Tribe, 1998.
A brief history of Lenni Lenape Indian tribe.
2,666 words (approx. 10.7 pages), 10 sources, MLA, $ 80.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at the Lenni-Lenape tribe. It includes their spiritual and intellectual beliefs and a description of the environment in which they lived. Also described briefly is the history of their contact with the English, Spanish and other invaders, beginning with a look the Spaniard Pedro Mendez in 1570 and continuing through to a look at the Englishmen under Governor William Berkley in 1644. The paper also discusses the Lenni-Lenapes of modern day from the 1920's.

From the Paper
"Two outstanding leaders met and stopped a war between the English colonists under John Smith and the Lenape Indians under Chief Powhatan. As part of the treaty, Chief Powhatan was crowned King of the Delaware territory, in 1609, through the diplomacy of John Smith. Unfortunately, John Smith was recalled to England in 1609 after a dispute with the London Company's managers. The result of his recall was full-scale war between the English and the Lenape. The war lasted until 1613 when Pocahontas married an English colonist named John Rolfe and Chief Powhatan grudgingly called a truce between his people and the English."
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Papers [181-198] of 527 :: [Page 11 of 30]
Go to page : <— 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 —>