During the seventeenth century English colonist John Smith wrote of his presence in the New World in the Generall Historie of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Isles. Before voyaging to the New World Smith and other colonists came to Virginia with the expectation Virginia was an Edenic paradise full of abundance and natural resources. They thought Virginia was similar to the biblical image of the Garden of Eden. Once the colonists landed in Virginia the reality was that Virginia was a wild, untamed, and uncivilized place and needed to be controlled by Englishmen. Events like the attack on Cape Henry, the Starving Times, and the Massacre of 1622 all contributed to the colonists’ changing views of Virginia and the native people, which ...
Works in Early American History have failed to comprehend adequately the complexity of the interraci...
These two papers discuss some of the continuities in the history of Native societies of New England ...
Series title also at head of t.-p.Observations by Master George Percy, 1607.--A true relation, by Ca...
Decisive leader, prolific writer, astute American visionary, Captain John Smith was the crucial foun...
In May 1607, 105 Englishmen arrived at what would become the first viable English colony in North Am...
John Smith (1580-1631) made one voyage to the coast of Massachusetts and Maine in 1614, and attempte...
The first permanent English settlers in America arrived in the seventeenth century at Jamestown, Vir...
Excerpt As numerous historians and geographers have pointed out, there are countless parallels betwe...
With reproductions of original title-pages: head-pieces, initials, etc.Preface.--Introduction, inclu...
On March 22, 1622, Native Americans under the Powhatan war-leader Opechancanough launched surprise a...
Feminized Farmers: Native American Views of English Colonists in the Virginia Chesapeake 1607-1623 ...
John Smith (1580-1631) made one voyage to the coast of Massachusetts and Maine in 1614, and attempte...
In his New World narratives, Captain John Smith presents himself as the playwright of the the Virg...
My dissertation explores tributary relationships between Algonquin, Siouan, and Iroquoian Indians an...
Le développement de l’Etat moderne a accru la volonté de contrôle sur l'individu, alors que la décou...
Works in Early American History have failed to comprehend adequately the complexity of the interraci...
These two papers discuss some of the continuities in the history of Native societies of New England ...
Series title also at head of t.-p.Observations by Master George Percy, 1607.--A true relation, by Ca...
Decisive leader, prolific writer, astute American visionary, Captain John Smith was the crucial foun...
In May 1607, 105 Englishmen arrived at what would become the first viable English colony in North Am...
John Smith (1580-1631) made one voyage to the coast of Massachusetts and Maine in 1614, and attempte...
The first permanent English settlers in America arrived in the seventeenth century at Jamestown, Vir...
Excerpt As numerous historians and geographers have pointed out, there are countless parallels betwe...
With reproductions of original title-pages: head-pieces, initials, etc.Preface.--Introduction, inclu...
On March 22, 1622, Native Americans under the Powhatan war-leader Opechancanough launched surprise a...
Feminized Farmers: Native American Views of English Colonists in the Virginia Chesapeake 1607-1623 ...
John Smith (1580-1631) made one voyage to the coast of Massachusetts and Maine in 1614, and attempte...
In his New World narratives, Captain John Smith presents himself as the playwright of the the Virg...
My dissertation explores tributary relationships between Algonquin, Siouan, and Iroquoian Indians an...
Le développement de l’Etat moderne a accru la volonté de contrôle sur l'individu, alors que la décou...
Works in Early American History have failed to comprehend adequately the complexity of the interraci...
These two papers discuss some of the continuities in the history of Native societies of New England ...
Series title also at head of t.-p.Observations by Master George Percy, 1607.--A true relation, by Ca...