The Wampanoags In The Seventeenth Century

About The Book

A vivid recovery of a vanished voice The Wampanoags In The Seventeenth Century reawakens the lives struggles and resilience of a people at the center of early American history.This ethnohistorical study by Catherine Marten traces Wampanoag history across the seventeenth century examining everyday life political structures spiritual practice and the fraught encounters between Native American culture and European colonists. Through careful historical anthropology and rich archival detail Marten reconstructs how indigenous peoples of New England navigated alliances trade disease and the seismic disruptions of colonial America interactions including the complex relationships between the Pilgrims and Wampanoags. Readers will find lucid analysis of social organization ceremonial life and the strategies Wampanoag leaders used to survive and adapt.Historically significant and deeply humane this work fills an essential gap in early American history and ethnohistorical study. Once out of print for decades Alpha Editions has restored and republished this landmark book for today s and future generations. This edition is more than a reprint it s a collector s item and a cultural treasure carefully prepared for historians casual readers and classic literature collectors alike.If you seek an authoritative compassionate account of seventeenth century Native Americans indigenous history books that blend scholarship and storytelling or a definitive study of Native American tribes in New England this restored volume is indispensable. Keywords: Wampanoag history seventeenth century Native Americans ethnohistorical study Catherine Marten author.
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