This entry is based upon ethnographic materials that reconstruct the Huron society prior to cultural changes as a result of outside influence. Reconstruction is made possible from accounts written by European traders and Jesuit missionaries during early contacts with the Huron. This entry focuses on the Bear (Attignawantan) and Cord (Attigneenongnahac) subtribes around the time of 1634, which were located between Lake Simcoe and the Georgian Bay in what is now Ontario, Canada. These two subtribes are the largest and oldest of the four Huron subtribes (the other two being the Tahontaenrat and Arendahronon). At the focal time of 1634, the village was the primary unit of daily life, encompassing social, economic, and religious importance. The ...
Reports a study in summer 1958 of cultural changes resulting from establishment of a radar base in t...
The ‘Parsons site,’ a large Huron-Wendat village site near York University’s Keele campus located by...
People have lived along the Huron River since the mid-1600s. Tribes of Erie, Chippewa, Monsey, and ...
The Ojibwa are comprised of “numerous communities ranging mainly from southern and northwestern Onta...
This research involves the analysis of the faunal remains from three Huron village sites and two Hur...
The Huron Confederacy was one of the many indigenous cultures of North America, which was profoundly...
Between 1780 and 1810 the Mississauga, a member of the Algonquin speaking family of native groups in...
The Kaska are native to the Canadian regions of northwestern British Columbia, southern Yukon, and s...
Frigout Arlette. Elisabeth Tooker, Ethnography of the Huron Indians, 1615-1649. In: L'Homme, 1966, t...
Mauzé Marie. E. Tooker, Ethnographie des Hurons, 1615-1649. In: L'Homme, 1991, tome 31 n°119. p. 149
The author was asked to review the historical connection of Aboriginal people to the land that lies ...
This study examines the role of ceremonial monuments within tribal social and territorial organizati...
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
The Algonkian speaking peoples of Georgian Bay occupied the shoreline and island environment of east...
Within the context of the Upper Great Lakes region, this thesis analyzes Algonkian-British relations...
Reports a study in summer 1958 of cultural changes resulting from establishment of a radar base in t...
The ‘Parsons site,’ a large Huron-Wendat village site near York University’s Keele campus located by...
People have lived along the Huron River since the mid-1600s. Tribes of Erie, Chippewa, Monsey, and ...
The Ojibwa are comprised of “numerous communities ranging mainly from southern and northwestern Onta...
This research involves the analysis of the faunal remains from three Huron village sites and two Hur...
The Huron Confederacy was one of the many indigenous cultures of North America, which was profoundly...
Between 1780 and 1810 the Mississauga, a member of the Algonquin speaking family of native groups in...
The Kaska are native to the Canadian regions of northwestern British Columbia, southern Yukon, and s...
Frigout Arlette. Elisabeth Tooker, Ethnography of the Huron Indians, 1615-1649. In: L'Homme, 1966, t...
Mauzé Marie. E. Tooker, Ethnographie des Hurons, 1615-1649. In: L'Homme, 1991, tome 31 n°119. p. 149
The author was asked to review the historical connection of Aboriginal people to the land that lies ...
This study examines the role of ceremonial monuments within tribal social and territorial organizati...
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
The Algonkian speaking peoples of Georgian Bay occupied the shoreline and island environment of east...
Within the context of the Upper Great Lakes region, this thesis analyzes Algonkian-British relations...
Reports a study in summer 1958 of cultural changes resulting from establishment of a radar base in t...
The ‘Parsons site,’ a large Huron-Wendat village site near York University’s Keele campus located by...
People have lived along the Huron River since the mid-1600s. Tribes of Erie, Chippewa, Monsey, and ...