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9780806130033

The Great Law and the Longhouse

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780806130033

  • ISBN10:

    0806130032

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1998-03-01
  • Publisher: Univ of Oklahoma Pr
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List Price: $75.00

Summary

This masterful summary represents a major synthesis of the history and culture of the Six Nations from the mid-sixteenth century to the Canandaigua treaty of 1794. William N. Fenton, the dean of Iroquoian studies, has used primary sources extensively, in both French and English, to create a very readable narrative and an invaluable reference for all future scholars of Iroquois polity. The Great Law, a living tradition among the conservative Iroquois, is sustained by celebrating the condolence ceremony when they mourn a dead chief and install his successor for life on good behavior. This ritual act, reaching back to the dawn of history, maintains the League of the Iroquois, the legendary form of government that gave way over time to the Iroquois Confederacy. Fenton verifies historical accounts from his own long experience of Iroquois society, so that his political ethnography extends into the twentieth century as he considers in detail the relationship between customs and events. His main argument is the remarkable continuity of Iroquois political tradition in the face of military defeat, depopulation, territorial loss, and acculturation to European technology. Fenton's style of writing combines Iroquois and American English in a way that no one else has been able to do. His analysis and comparison of multiple versions of the same myth is a valuable contribution in itself, while his distillation of previous cultural and historical studies will be of special interest to historians of anthropology as well as those concerned with the American Indian.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
ix(2)
List of Tables
xi(2)
Preface xiii(4)
Acknowledgments xvii(2)
Note on Pronunciation xix(2)
List of Abbreviations xxi
INTRODUCTION The Five Nations and Their Traditional History 3(16)
PART ONE The Cultural Foundations of the Iroquois League 19(116)
1 Culture Patterns
19(15)
2 "This Island, the World on the Turtle's Back"
34(17)
3 Early Versions of the League Legend
51(15)
4 Ethnologists Discover the League Legend
66(19)
5 Chief Gibson's Account
85(13)
6 Themes and Elements of the League Legend
98(6)
7 The Good Message of Handsome Lake
104(16)
8 Problems in Iroquois Political History
120(15)
PART TWO Concerning the League 135(108)
9 The Historical Paradigm of the Condolence Council
135(6)
10 Installing Cayuga Chiefs in 1945
141(22)
11 Installing Onondaga Chiefs in 1951
163(17)
12 The Requickening Paradigm
180(11)
13 The Roll Call of the Founders
191(12)
14 Structural Models of Iroquois Leadership
203(21)
15 Bylaws of the League
215(9)
16 Wampum, the Magnet That Drew Furs from the Forest
224(19)
PART THREE A League for War and Peace in the Seventeenth Century 243(120)
17 From Champlain to Denonville, 1603-1687
243(16)
18 From Total War to the Grand Settlement, 1688-1701
259(10)
19 Accommodation by Trade and Treaty
269(8)
20 Voices of the Five Nations
277(19)
21 The English Takeover, 1664-1700
296(34)
22 The Grand Settlement at Montreal, 1701
330(19)
23 The English Renew the Chain, 1701
349(14)
PART FOUR Balancing Onontio and the English Crown, 1702-1759 363(154)
24 Kings in the Court of Queen Anne
363(19)
25 Tuscarora, the Sixth Nation
382(16)
26 The Council Brand Passes to Pennsylvania
398(18)
27 The Treaty at Lancaster, 1744
416(18)
28 New Treaties, Precarious Balance
434(14)
29 The Chain Is Broken
448(17)
30 The Albany Congress Mends the Chain
465(16)
31 Johnson Remakes the Confederacy
481(15)
32 Iroquois Policy Vacillates as Power Shifts
496(21)
PART FIVE Balancing Crown and Colonies, 1760-1777 517(84)
33 The Six Nations Fenced In
517(16)
34 The Big Giveaway at Fort Stanwix, 1768
533(15)
35 One Who Walked Where the Earth Is Narrow: The Reverend Samuel Kirkland
548(16)
36 Dark Clouds over Onondaga
564(18)
37 The Struggle for Neutrality
582(19)
PART SIX The Federal Treaty Period, 1777-1794 601(108)
38 Bitter Medicine at Fort Stanwix, 1784
601(21)
39 Prelude to Canandaigua
622(19)
40 The Tortuous Road to Canandaigua
641(19)
41 Pickering Kindles a Fire at "Kanandaigua"
660(18)
42 The Council Fire Grows Warm
678(13)
43 The Treaty Concludes
691(18)
CONCLUSION The Later Evolution of the League and Confederacy 709(16)
APPENDIX A: Summary of Elements of the Condolence Council 725(8)
APPENDIX B: The Songs 733(5)
APPENDIX C: Condolence Ceremonies Involving Sir William Johnson 738(5)
Bibliography 743(22)
Index 765

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