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‘The Storyteller’ by L.F. Tantillo depicting Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy) people.

Surviving a Hostile New World: The Iroquois Confederacy's Struggle Against Disease, Starvation, Enslavement and Warfare

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The founding of the Iroquois Confederacy of Five Nations came about in a campaign to bring peace to the warring, yet related tribes of the region around New York and the eastern Great Lakes.

In 1722, these Native American people absorbed the Tuscarora tribe who were displaced from North Carolina and Virginia, their numbers greatly reduced by violence, enslavement of their people, and theft of their territory. The Iroquois then became the Six Nations.

The five original tribes were, from west to east, the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida and the Mohawk.

The People of the Longhouse

They did not call themselves the Iroquois Confederacy or Confederation in historic times. They referred to themselves as the Haudenosaunee, which means “people of the longhouse.” They lived in longhouses measuring between 50 and 150 feet long (15 to 45 meters) that held up to 50 extended family members.

The Iroquois imagined their confederacy as an extended, symbolic longhouse that reached 300 miles (482 km) in length. The Seneca guarded the symbolic western door and the Mohawk guarded the east, according to the website Countries and Their Cultures’ article on the Iroquois Confederacy.

The Iroquois called themselves the  Haudenosaunee, or People of the Longhouse. A traditional longhouse, which had apartment-like divisions in it for nuclear families. (The Commons)

The Iroquois called themselves the  Haudenosaunee, or People of the Longhouse. A traditional longhouse, which had apartment-like divisions in it for nuclear families. (The Commons)

Deganawidah, or The Peacemaker, a Huron, inspired the famous Onondaga hero Hiawatha to lead his people in peace, civil authority, righteousness, and the great law, according to Britannica online.

Meeting of Hiawatha and Deganawida by Sanford Plummer. (Public Domain )

Meeting of Hiawatha and Deganawida by Sanford Plummer. ( Public Domain)

The Founding of the Iroquois Confederacy

The exact time frame when Deganawidah founded the Iroquois Confederacy is unknown, but Iroquois people say it was between 1350 and 1600. The five tribes shared similar positive values and lived in harmony. Countries and Their Cultures states: “When the first white explorers arrived in the early seventeenth century, they found the settled, agricultural society of the Iroquois a contrast to the nomadic culture of the neighboring Algonquians.”

The encyclopedia Britannica says the Iroquois people joined together to repel invaders. Iroquois law was set by a supreme council of village and clan chiefs. Each tribe had a vote, and all must agree before a decision was implemented. “Under the Great Law of Peace (Gayanesshagowa), the joint jurisdiction of 50 peace chiefs, known as sachems, or hodiyahnehsonh, embraced all civil affairs at the intertribal level,” Britannica says.

Five tribes, One Iroquois Language Family

The five tribes, who are in one language family, banded together to end their own infighting but also to defend against neighboring Algonquian tribes to the north and south and any others in the area. Ending their own infighting made them less vulnerable to attacks and war raids by outsiders.

The Iroquois did not share linguistic or cultural roots with the Algonquian people, so it is assumed the Iroquois came from elsewhere.

Engraving based on a drawing by Champlain of his 1609 voyage. It depicts a battle between Iroquois and Algonquian tribes near Lake Champlain. (Public Domain )

Engraving based on a drawing by Champlain of his 1609 voyage. It depicts a battle between Iroquois and Algonquian tribes near Lake Champlain. ( Public Domain )

They did share language roots with the Cherokee of the American Southeast, but it is unknown whether the Cherokee went south at one time, or the Iroquois went north. The tribes don’t know just exactly how this geographical rift between the related Iroquois and Cherokee came about.

Contact with Europeans

The French made contact and traded with tribes in Canada for about 50 years before encountering the Iroquois tribes.

Iroquois raids on other native tribes during this time helped them acquire the metal hoes, kettles, axes and knives of Europeans, which they found far superior to their own stone, shell, bone and wood implements.

Iroquois engaging in trade with Europeans, 1722. (Public Domain )

Iroquois engaging in trade with Europeans, 1722. ( Public Domain)

Wars between the French-allied tribes, some of whom were armed with firearms and metal armor, prompted the Iroquois to adopt guerrilla warfare because they were outgunned. Stealth, surprise, and ambush became the method of warfare for the Iroquois.

Decimation by Warfare and Disease

The Iroquois and other tribes lost people to warfare and also disease. Countries and Their Cultures states:

“Although it provided the Indians with better tools, European incursion into the territory was disastrous for the indigenous people. In the 1690s alone, the Iroquois lost between 1,600 and 2,000 people in fighting with other Indian tribes. In addition, European diseases such as smallpox, measles, influenza, lung infections, and even the common cold took a heavy toll on them since they had developed no immunity and knew no cures.”

The Iroquois sometimes captured people and adopted them into their tribes. The website says they tortured some other captives to death.

European Wars in North America

As the decades progressed, the Iroquois people contended with the French and Indian War and the American Revolution. The Iroquois nations could not agree on whom to ally themselves with, and so at times they went to war against each other again.

The wars reduced their population, of course, but now the tribes have built up to about 125,000 people, who live on seven Iroquois reservations in New York, one in Wisconsin, and two in Canada.

Iroquois dancers demonstrate their art at the New York State Fair in 2008. (Public Domain)

Iroquois dancers demonstrate their art at the New York State Fair in 2008. (Public Domain)

Retaining Iroquois Culture

The Iroquois, like many other Native American tribes and nations, are trying to retain their ways of life. They teach their language and culture in school and practice ancient ceremonies and basket weaving. The article on the site Countries and Their Cultures states:

“Material wealth is not characteristic of reservation Indians, but Tonawanda Seneca Chief Corbett Sundown, keeper of the Iroquois ‘spiritual fire,’ disputes the assessment that the people are poor. He told a National Geographic writer: ‘We're rich people without any money, that's all. You say we ought to set up industries and factories. Well, we just don't want them. How're you going to grow potatoes and sweet corn on concrete? You call that progress? To me “progress” is a dirty word’ (Arden Harvey, "The Fire that Never Dies," National Geographic [September 1987] p. 398).”

Iroquois food consisted of stuff gathered and hunted. Their crops were the traditional Three Sisters: corn, on the stalks of which bean vines grew, and squash that covered the ground and kept the weeds down.

The Iroquois Confederacy article on the website Countries and Their Cultures has sections on Iroquois culture, cuisine, festivals, death and burial, language, family, marriage, and education In addition, the article covers, arts, literature, religion, government, and employment and economic traditions.

This drawing is of wampum. Wampum were cylindrical beads made into strands or ornamentation on clothing. Beads were important culturally and economically and were even used as currency. (Public Domain)

This drawing is of wampum. Wampum were cylindrical beads made into strands or ornamentation on clothing. Beads were important culturally and economically and were even used as currency. (Public Domain)

Top image: ‘The Storyteller’ by L.F. Tantillo depicting Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy) people.  Source: redhookcentralschools

By Mark Miller

 
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Mark

Mark Miller has a Bachelor of Arts in journalism and is a former newspaper and magazine writer and copy editor who's long been interested in anthropology, mythology and ancient history. His hobbies are writing and drawing.

 
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