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Susquehannock Emuseum

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Additional Interesting Facts. Location ... beans, squash, cornbread, strawberries, blueberries, blackberries, nettles, spinach, and nuts. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Susquehannock Emuseum


1
Susquehannock E-museum
  • An online museum
  • by Caitlin and Zoë

Artifacts History Language Other Names
Location Food Clothing Shelter
Transportation
Traditions
Past and Present
cheese
Additional Interesting Facts
Click to play throughout the show!!!
Resources
2
Location
  • The location of the Susquehannock Indian
    tribe was the northern part of Chesapeake Bay.

Red spot indicates distribution of the
Susquehannock.
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3
Food
  • The Susquehanna were hunters and farmers.
    They ate deer, bear, rabbit, squirrel, corn,
    beans, squash, cornbread, strawberries,
    blueberries, blackberries, nettles, spinach, and
    nuts. The boys were allowed to join the men in
    hunting when they had killed a deer by themselves.

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4
Clothing
  • The Susquehannock men usually wore shirts,
    pants, leggings, robes and capes. The men wore
    feathers in their hair and wore jewelry all over
    their body. The women wore skirts and robes
    manily made out of deer skin. They wore moccasins
    on their feet.

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5
Shelter
  • The shelter of the Susquehannock was mainly
    the longhouse. They also might have lived in
    wigwams. Longhouses were made out of young trees
    bent in an ark to make a framework. This
    framework was covered in bark. Longhouses could
    be over 200 meters long and house up to 60
    people. A wigwam was a miniature version of a
    longhouse.

The front of a longhouse
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6
Artifacts
  • Below left an assortment of Susquehanna
    artifacts.
  • Below right Susquehanna points.
  • Below center Susquehannock beadwork.

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7
History
  • The Susquehannocks were mortal enemies with the
    Iroquois. In 1658, there was a war between the
    Iroquois and the Susquehannock. In 1661, there
    was a smallpox epidemic from which the tribe
    never fully recovered. In 1706, the Iroquois
    finally let 300 Susquehannock return to the
    Susquehanna valley, but under the watchful eye of
    the Iroquois. They became known as the Conestoga,
    from the name of their village. By 1763 there
    were only 20 Susquehannock left. Then 14
    Susquehannock were arrested and put in jail. A
    mob (known as the Paxton boys) went to the
    Conestoga village and killed the 6 Susquehannock
    they found there and burned the houses. Then they
    went to the jail, broke in, took the last
    Susquehannock on the face of the earth and beat
    them to death.

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8
Language
  • The Susquehannock language is the language
    of the Iroquois, which is reportedly similar to
    Huron. The language is extinct today, as so are
    the Susquehannock themselves. These are some
    words in their language.
  • One is Onskat
  • Two is Tiggene
  • Three is Axe
  • Four is Raiene
  • Five is Wisck
  • Man is Itaeaetsin
  • Woman is Achonhaeffti
  • Eat is Sischijro

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9
Other Names
  • Some other names for the Susquehannock were
    Andante, from the French. While the Dutch and the
    Swedes used the name Minqua. Captain John Smith
    called them the Sasquesahannocks and the
    Sasquesahanough. Variations of these were
    Andastaka, Andasto, Atrakwer, Gandatogué, Mengwe,
    Menquay, Mincku, and Minque. The English
    colonists in Virginia and Maryland called them
    the Susquehannock, but Pennsylvanians during the
    1700s preferred Conestoga derived from Kanastoge
    (place of the immersed pole), the name of their
    last village in Pennsylvania.

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10
Transportation
  • We are not exactly sure what the Susquehannock
    used for transportation, but we believe they used
    birch-bark canoes because they lived near water.
    A birch-bark canoe is a very long canoe made out
    of bark from a birch tree.

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11
Traditions
  • Since the Susquehannock are not alive today to
    tell us about their traditions, these are some
    Iroquois traditions because the Susquehannock
    were descended from the Iroquois. The
    Susquehannock loved lacrosse! Lacrosse is a game
    played with a ball and a stick with a net on the
    end. They also recorded their meetings with other
    tribes and white men on wampum belts.

A wampum belt (courtesy of Susanna)
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12
Past and Present
  • Since the Susquehannock are not alive today,
    there can be no present traditions.

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13
Additional Interesting Facts
  • The Susquehannock were mortal enemies with the
    Iroquois.
  • The Susquehannock also lived on the Susquehanna
    river.

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14
Resources
  • http//content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en-comm
    ons/thumb/c/ce/180px-Susquehannock_lang.png
    This site had an excellent picture of the
    distribution of the Susquehannock tribe.
  • http//www.dickshovel.com/susque.html This site
    had a lot of information on the history of the
    Susquehannock as well as a lot of other names.
  • http//www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/susqu
    ehanna/susquehannahist.htm This site has a long
    and detailed history of the Susquehanna tribe.
  • http//www.native-languages.org/languages.htmalph
    a This site has the languages for a whole bunch
    of native American tribes. This is where we got
    the words in the Susquehannock language.

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