• When Europeans arrived in North America more than 500 years ago, they brought with them different cultural customs which soon spread across the land, causing great loss of life and disruption of indigenous lives and cultures. (envirocenter.org)
  • In Chapter 1 of his A People's History of the United States , Howard Zinn describes the Europeans' genocidal actions against the Natives they encountered. (bluecorncomics.com)
  • Only then did epidemics sweep through the remaining Indian populations, finishing the extermination the Europeans had begun intentionally. (bluecorncomics.com)
  • Learn about the spiritual and cultural traditions of Native Americans across the continent…investigate how and when each tribe came into contact with Europeans, and how their lives changed. (nationalgeographicbackissues.com)
  • Greg H. asks: Diseases from Europe wiped out most of the Indians, so why didn't the Europeans also get wiped out by diseases from America? (todayifoundout.com)
  • So why didn't 19 out of 20 Europeans die from Native American diseases? (todayifoundout.com)
  • Second, Europeans lived in more densely populated areas than Native Americans. (todayifoundout.com)
  • All of these things resulted in Europeans being regularly exposed to many more pathogens than Native Americans were. (todayifoundout.com)
  • The Europeans' immune systems simply developed to ward off the worst of some of the nastier diseases that incapacitated entire Native American populations. (todayifoundout.com)
  • Invading Europeans justifies their conquests by denying the evidence of American Indian civilisations. (google.tn)
  • This book presents an enthralling look at the depth and diversity of American history - before the Europeans and the deadly epidemics they brought with them decimated whole nations. (google.tn)
  • This unique book is, as its title suggests, the history of the United States but from the perspective of the 15 million indigenous people who were here many thousands of years (BCE) before white Europeans came to claim the land as their own. (blogspot.com)
  • In the colonial era, through the Revolutionary War, the foundation of America was oratorically clarified as an act of prudence-that is, God led people, specifically the white Europeans, to America to find a new and superior or incomparable societal order that would be the light unto all realms.2 In fact, many settlers also believed in creating a new nation filled with history and stories. (ipl.org)
  • Inclusion in G20 has put the Indian leaders alongside the world's richest G7 nations. (riazhaq.com)
  • An America whose wealthy communities become wealthier and more fortress-like as they become more closely linked to the world's business capitals than to the desolate ghettoes next door. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • Europe is, by convention, one of the world's seven continents. (absoluteastronomy.com)
  • Despite this, Bolivia continues to face many challenges, and remains one of the least-developed and poorest countries in Latin America. (masoncrest.com)
  • In Latin America the triumph of the Cuban revolution is still generating expectations, and thousands of young people join the ranks of the revolutionary parties and movements. (nodo50.org)
  • Taenia solium/Cysticercus cellulosae in Latin America and the Caribbean. (who.int)
  • These irritations for a long time kept a large portion of the Indians in a state of chronic hostility, and whole tribes utterly refused all overtures of the government to accept its protection and fostering care. (tufts.edu)
  • 52,065 were included in the five civilized t e Indians in a state of chronic hostility, and whole tribes utterly refused all overtures of the government to accept its protection and fostering care. (tufts.edu)
  • Called "Manifest Destiny," it was based on the belief that God intended the United States to extend its holdings and its power across the wide continent of North America over the native Indian tribes and other nations from the east coast to the west. (lgbtqnation.com)
  • There, from July 2016 and onwards into the winter, a rainbow coalition of Sioux, other Native American tribes, and non-Native American peoples gathered to stop the laying of an oil pipeline under Lake Oahe on the Missouri River half a mile north of Standing Rock in a location that not only transgressed traditionally sacred lands, but also threatened the Reservation's water supply in the event of a spill. (grahamhancock.com)
  • As well as being the year of the Standing Rock protests, 2016 marked the 140th anniversary of the battle of the Little Bighorn in which General George Armstrong Custer and the Seventh Cavalry were famously annihilated by a confederation of Native American tribes led by Chief Gall and Crazy Horse, both of the Lakota Sioux. (grahamhancock.com)
  • Some historians believe that the ancestors of the tribes making up the Abenaki confederacy first arrived in North America about three thousand years ago. (encyclopedia.com)
  • Walk with the indigenous people who settled North America -and with their descendants, whose more than 500 tribes range from the Arctic Circle across the Great Plains and to the Eastern Seaboard. (nationalgeographicbackissues.com)
  • A Sketch of the United States Government's Dealings with some of the Indian Tribes. (google.co.in)
  • 6444 Hunter (John D.) Manners and Customs of Several Indian Tribes located west of the Mississippi. (google.co.in)
  • 6449 Irving (John T.) Indian Sketches taken during an Expedition to the Pawnee and other Tribes of American Indians. (google.co.in)
  • Some have called what happened in California genocide-Josephy, in 500 Nations , hedged only slightly, saying that the history of the California tribes "was as close to genocide as any tribal people had faced, or would face, on the North American continent. (josephy.org)
  • Treaty violation, however, does not nullify their legality, and Native American tribes to this day still live under the laws and restrictions that have controlled their sovereignty for hundreds of years. (lu.se)
  • The publication of a text so carefully constructed with legally non-binding terms and saturated with use of the passive voice was, to many Native Americans, unsurprising in the context of dealings between Native American tribes and the Federal Government. (lu.se)
  • Legends, Traditions and Laws of the Iroquois, or Six Nations, and History of the Tuscarora Indians. (google.co.in)
  • A plaque was put up in 1961 informing anyone who wandered by that 'approximately 472' members of the 'Iroquois nation' are buried there. (counterfire.org)
  • The Iroquois (properly called the Haudenosaunee) are not actually a nation but a confederacy of nations (that Marx and Engels were familiar with) and, in any event, it has now been established that those buried there were actually Wyandot (Huron) people. (counterfire.org)
  • The art of teaching Iroquois Indians, at the sources of the first constitution. (fileane.com)
  • These Iroquois were thus the first Native Americans to build more comfortable and secure buildings than their tents' rallies. (fileane.com)
  • Six nations of the Iroquois group, decided to gather around an oral law, the Great Law that Lies, to end their incessant conflicts. (fileane.com)
  • The Iroquois people also called Haudenosaunee people are organized into family, clan, nation and confederation. (fileane.com)
  • The Invasion of America: Indians, Colonialism, and the Cant of Conquest. (wsu.edu)
  • Understanding the history and ongoing process of Settler-colonialism adds to our understanding of capitalism, while ignoring it perpetuates the erasure from history of Native peoples and their resistance to that process. (newpol.org)
  • Nineteenth-century America and the world of Samuel L. Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, come to life as children journey back in time with this history- and literature-laden activity book. (chicagoreviewpress.com)
  • In practice, however, a variety of terrace types were incorporated into landscape designs throughout eighteenth- and nineteenth-century America. (nga.gov)
  • Manifest Destiny is a term for the mentality common amid the nineteenth century time of American development that the United States could, as well as was bound to, extend across the nation. (ipl.org)
  • Not able to enslave the Indians, and not able to live with them, the English decided to exterminate them. (bluecorncomics.com)
  • A Narra- tive of the Mission of the United Brethren among the Delaware and Mohegan Indians, from 1740 to 1808, comprising all the Re- markable Incidents that took place at their Missionary Stations during that pe- riod, etc. (google.co.in)
  • or, The Eagle Comprising a History of the Indian Wars of the Mohawks. (google.co.in)
  • Politically, the dominant European City-State model permeated the continent, and indigenous people were essentially forced to sign treaties that constructed sovereign tribal nations that in many cases bore little relationship to the traditional social structure and alliances. (envirocenter.org)
  • Among Indigenous people, the common name for the continent of North America-and the one I will use accordingly-is Turtle Island. (newpol.org)
  • The UK-based risk advisory group's index tracks the risks of an attack, the intensity of violence as measured by casualties per incident, a country's history of extremist violence and threats made against it by groups such as al Qaeda. (riazhaq.com)
  • No other country's history contains such an eventful history as the United States. (ipl.org)
  • More than 60 percent of Bolivia's citizens are Native Americans, who historically have been dominated by the white and mestizo minority. (masoncrest.com)
  • However, with the 2006 election of the country's first indigenous president, Evo Morales, and the passage of a new constitution in 2009, Native Americans have gained greater rights and freedoms. (masoncrest.com)
  • The culture of Brazil is a fascinating blend of Native American, Portuguese, African, Japanese, and other influences.Over the past five decades, there have been many changes in Brazils society and economy. (masoncrest.com)
  • Joan of Arc, the teenager who helped defeat the English in her native France, became one of the greatest war heroes in French history. (lgbtqnation.com)
  • Native American Women: A Biographical Dictionary. (wsu.edu)
  • Inventing the American Primitive: Politics, Gender, and the Representation of Native American Literary Traditions, 1789-1936. (wsu.edu)
  • Huhndorf, Shari M. Going Native: Indians in the American Cultural Imagination . (wsu.edu)
  • Early Native American Writing: New Critical Essays. (wsu.edu)
  • New Voices in Native American Literary Criticism. (wsu.edu)
  • For a long while I'd been vaguely aware that there's something wrong with the collective noun "Sioux" for the confederation of Native North American peoples speaking the Dakota, Lakota and Nakota languages. (grahamhancock.com)
  • It's thought to be derived from a pejorative term meaning 'Little Serpents' in the language of another Native American people, the Ojibwe, and to have been bastardized into French, with the 'x' plural marker, as Nadouessioux . (grahamhancock.com)
  • This spirit of greed, and of taking the larger portion - by force or deception or both - is an unmissable presence looming over the sad history of Native American lands usurped by successive governments of the United States of America. (grahamhancock.com)
  • While the Native Americans were away from their New England territory, white settlers took over the land. (encyclopedia.com)
  • With the same prescience and eye for telling detail that distinguished his bestselling Balkan Ghosts , Robert Kaplan now explores his native country, the United States of America. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • For five years, from 1755 to 1760, the battles raged at Lake George, Crown Point, Fort Ticonderoga, and Quebec as France, Britain and the native peoples of North America fought to decide who would control the crucial highway of rivers and lakes between New York and the city of Montreal. (mountainlake.org)
  • This is the definitive, insightful reference on Native Americans -captivating and informative for all who appreciate history, diverse cultures, stunning images, and the artistry of maps. (nationalgeographicbackissues.com)
  • Newark Mayor Cory Booker discovers he is 47% African, 45% European, and 7% Asian or Native American. (debbieschlussel.com)
  • For example, African-American guests are often surprised at how much European blood they carry and their lack of significant Native American ancestry. (debbieschlussel.com)
  • It's the biggest myth in African-American genealogy: 'My great grandmother was a Cherokee princess,' " he says, adding, "The average slave and the average Native American didn't even see each other, which makes it very hard to mate. (debbieschlussel.com)
  • Native Americans, on the other hand, were largely hunters and gatherers, and even in some domestication cases, it's thought exposure was limited. (todayifoundout.com)
  • That same immunity protected them from diseases that Native Americans might have given them, or at least made it so the new diseases that they encountered were not as deadly. (todayifoundout.com)
  • It's believed that one Native American disease did slip on to the European ships and sailed onward to Europe doing some major damage in the process. (todayifoundout.com)
  • Native American platform mounds, such as the one described as a terrace by William Bartram in 1791, served as stages for the religious and ruling elite of the southeast before European contact. (nga.gov)
  • The book proceeds through the entire history of the U.S. to the present, discussing in detail our well-known historical events from the perspective of Native Americans. (blogspot.com)
  • Also, oddly, the last two chapters of the YA version are--about modern-day issues, including the conflicts and protests over oil pipelines going through Native American lands--are entirely absent from the adult version. (blogspot.com)
  • This state of mind powered western settlement, Native American evacuation and war with Mexico. (ipl.org)
  • A whole new generation of activists has learned the long history of the United States continually breaking treaties with the Indigenous Nations-stomping upon their self-determination any time the government and corporations demand access to Native lands to extract energy and raw materials. (newpol.org)
  • I will do my best to use actual Indigenous Nation names such as the Lakota/Dakota/Nakota (Oceti Sakowin) or Ojibwe (Anishinaabe) or the Dine (Navajo) but will also use the words "Indigenous," "Native," "Native American," "American Indian," and "Indian" when appropriate, such as in quotations. (newpol.org)
  • Through the use of several analytic methods and postcolonial theories, this thesis will analyse representations of language, place, and identity, and argue that they are constructed in the border between Native American and American consciousness. (lu.se)
  • Firstly, Tommy Pico's Nature Poem will be read alongside a selection of Native American poets. (lu.se)
  • Through a comparative analysis, the duality that characterises Pico's verse will be highlighted, and will place him in a tradition of indigenous poets who demonstrate that duality is a defining feature of Native American poetry. (lu.se)
  • Long Soldier's work demonstrates the complicated relationship between Native American poets and the English language, utilising linguistic and poetic methods to disrupt the hierarchical power of English in public discourse. (lu.se)
  • In academic writing about Native American literature, one will find a variety of nomenclature to describe America's indigenous. (lu.se)
  • The variety of terms and lack of consensus in Native American literary studies does highlight the reality that this nomenclature is a postcolonial issue. (lu.se)
  • However, the diversity of Native American poets is considered in the literature. (lu.se)
  • As the poet Heid E. Erdrich (Ojibwe) wrote, "there is no such thing as Native American poetry. (lu.se)
  • For continuity, in this thesis the term Native American will be used. (lu.se)
  • The history of Native Americans after the arrival of the pilgrims in 1620 is one of disenfranchisement, genocide, and forced migration. (lu.se)
  • In 2009, the United States Federal Government issued an "acknowledgement and apology," acknowledging a "long history of official depredations and ill-conceived policies" in its dealings with Native Americans (Congress.gov). (lu.se)
  • It is my hope that the history of World War II, rendered accessible to younger students in Richard Panchyk's readable account, will inspire another generation of Americans as we wage a new struggle against the enemies of freedom. (chicagoreviewpress.com)
  • The most recent battle in this struggle of centuries was joined in 2016 in North Dakota at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, and at the protest camp named Oceti Sakowin situated just beyond the reservation's present northern boundary. (grahamhancock.com)
  • Over 250 years ago an epic struggle for the fate of North America played out right here in our own backyards, we call it the French and Indian War. (mountainlake.org)
  • Often overshadowed by the American Revolution, the epic struggle known in the United States as the French and Indian War (1755-1760), determined which great European empire would control North America. (mountainlake.org)
  • But today I am thinking about the white men and women who engaged the Indians as equals , and the Indians on the other side who also pinned their hopes on a relationship of equals, and how they have struggled-and still struggle. (josephy.org)
  • Quebec's political history has been marked by the struggle to preserve its French and Catholic roots on a North American continent where the majority of the population is and has been English-speaking. (icomos.org)
  • Amy Greenberg's book, Manifest Destiny and American Territorial Expansion, provides documented evidence that settlers believed they were destined for expansion throughout the continent. (ipl.org)
  • In addition, settlers believed that the New World was the place to establish a Christian nation and expand throughout the vast region. (ipl.org)
  • According to Pope Urban II, "Let us first avenge ourselves on them [the Jews] and exterminate them from among the nations so that the name of Israel will no longer be remembered, or let them adopt our faith. (lgbtqnation.com)
  • wrote about needing to exterminate Indians. (blogspot.com)
  • this great continent could not have been kept as nothing but a game preserve for squalid savages. (counterfire.org)
  • It's important to note that all this happened before epidemics such as smallpox decimated the remaining Indians. (bluecorncomics.com)
  • Plague has caused large-scale epidemics, thereby changing the course of history in many nations. (medscape.com)
  • Researches concerning the Institutions and Monuments of the Ancient Inhabitants of America, with Descriptions and Views of some of the most Striking Scenes in the Cordilleras. (google.co.in)
  • Wrested from the American Indians who were its original inhabitants, Quebec became first a French, then a British colony, and finally a part of the Canadian confederation. (icomos.org)
  • As someone who emigrated to Canada from the UK, it took me several years to appreciate something very different about the history and reality of capitalism here. (counterfire.org)
  • Capitalism arrived in North America on ships and was established through the genocidal dispossession of the Indigenous nations that occupied this land. (counterfire.org)
  • The North and South Poles become exciting routes to learning about science, geography, and history. (chicagoreviewpress.com)
  • 3) "Geography was the primary factor in shaping the development of the British Colonies in North America. (papercamp.com)
  • Everywhere Kaplan travels from St. Louis, Missouri, to Portland, Oregon, from the forty-ninth parallel to the banks of the Rio Grande he finds an America ever more fragmented along lines of race, class, education, and geography. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • i That was just 150 miles north of Oceti Sakowin , proving the point of the protestors that no pipelines are safe or can be guaranteed foolproof against spills. (grahamhancock.com)
  • With its snowy mountain peaks, tropical rain forests, and grasslands, the nation holds vast mineral resources and great natural beauty. (masoncrest.com)
  • An America where the political boundaries between the states and between the U.S. and Canada and Mexico are becoming increasingly blurred, betokening a vast open zone for trade, commerce, and cultural interaction, the nexus of tomorrow's transnational world. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • The rivalry between the French and British for this vast continent had been simmering for a century when war finally erupted in western Pennsylvania, then spread to Europe and the rest of the world, in a global contest called the Seven Years War. (mountainlake.org)
  • The main features of this environment are a harsh climate, a vast territory, the relatively recent establishment of a North American civilization that is European in origin, the French fact, Catholicism and a particular pattern of human settlement. (icomos.org)
  • In the US, Martin Luther King - leader of the civil rights movement - is assassinated, and the demonstrations against the invasion of Vietnam further polarize North American society. (nodo50.org)
  • 6448 Indian Narratives: Containing a Correct and Interesting History of the Indian Wars, from the Landing of our Pilgrim Fathers, 1620, to General Wayne's Victory, 1794. (google.co.in)
  • A land of great beauty and contrasts, Chile features the snow-capped volcanic peaks of the Andes to the east, the extremely dry Atacama Desert to its north, and rainy, thick forests to the south. (masoncrest.com)
  • 1) Early encounters between American Indians and European colonists led to a variety of relationships among the different cultures. (papercamp.com)
  • In the North American English colonies, the pattern was set early as Columbus had set it in the islands of the Bahamas. (bluecorncomics.com)
  • Despite their admiration of the Pueblos, early anthropologists more often bolstered the image of the vanishing Indian than challenged it. (ratical.org)
  • Missionaries, from early French priests accompanying fur traders to the Whitmans and Spaldings at Walla Walla and Lapwai, had been active from the beginning of white settlement in converting Indians, but it was Grant who, in Josephy's eyes, caused the biggest breach in the separation of church and state in our history in giving over the administration and control of Indians to churches. (josephy.org)
  • It starts with early history of the full Americas and then zeroes in on the area that is now known as the United States. (blogspot.com)
  • However, there was one man on the British side who understood how to wage war the way the Indians did, Robert Rogers created a new type of warrior and new rules of warfare. (mountainlake.org)
  • The destruction of the Indians of the Americas was, far and away, the most massive act of genocide in the history of the world. (bluecorncomics.com)
  • Lakota, Cherokee, Navajo, Haida: these groups and many others are profiled in engaging entries and portrayed in magnificent images and maps that authentically evoke each tribe's history and character. (nationalgeographicbackissues.com)
  • The climate justice movement is coming to an understanding that treaties must be upheld and extended, as demanded by Indigenous Nations, based on their traditional territories. (newpol.org)
  • The doctrine of "Manifest Destiny" embraced a belief in U.S.-American Anglo-Saxon superiority. (lgbtqnation.com)
  • Manifest Destiny is a unique, yet mysterious fundamental series of events in American history. (ipl.org)
  • There were several diffrent way people used the word Manifest Destiny like the way John L. O'sullivan used it was he believed that " majority of Americans at the time believed was their mission from God: to expand to west and bring the United States government to unenlightened people. (ipl.org)
  • The expansion of the republic and movement west on this continent, in part, people justified by the overriding philosophical underpinnings since the American Revolution. (lgbtqnation.com)
  • This book is packed with information that kids will find fascinating-excerpts from actual wartime letters written to and by American and German troops, personal anecdotes from people who lived through the war in the United States, Germany, Britain, Russia, Hungary, and Japan, and gripping stories from Holocaust survivors-all adding a humanizing global perspective to the war. (chicagoreviewpress.com)
  • So," concedes Cody, "the Sioux name in the history books was given to us by the Wasi'chu , the white people. (grahamhancock.com)
  • It is difficult to comprehend the magnitude of the atrocities intentional, neglectful, or accidental perpetuated on Indian people by the conquering culture, and later by the very government that assumed responsibility for their protection. (bluecorncomics.com)
  • 3. Although large number of Indians estimated at 110 million have been the main beneficiaries of India's rapid economic expansion, their numbers are only about 10% of India's 1.1 billion people. (riazhaq.com)
  • Groups of people and animals moved around a lot in Europe and had interactions particularly through war and trade, resulting in the spread of disease across continents-and, eventually, some level of immunity for the survivors. (todayifoundout.com)
  • One of my book groups chose the adult version of this hot nonfiction title, but since it was not available through my library at the time, I requested the YA version, An Indigenous People's History of the United States for Young People by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz (adapted by Jean Mendoza and Debbie Reese). (blogspot.com)
  • Morne Diablotins is the highest mountain in Dominica, an island-nation in the Caribbean Lesser Antilles. (absoluteastronomy.com)
  • Never nostalgic or falsely optimistic, bracingly unafraid of change and its consequences, Kaplan paints a startling portrait of post-Cold War America a great nation entering the final, most uncertain phase of its history. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • Although Stephen Switzer (1718) made subtle distinctions between kinds of terraces (terrace walks, great terraces, middle terraces, etc.), those distinctions were not generally followed in American usage. (nga.gov)
  • They explored the continent, pioneered its waterways and mountain passes, cleared forests, irrigated deserts, and ranched its great plains. (google.tn)
  • The Great Law which Binds: it comprises 117 articles and defines the functions and prerogatives of the fifty chiefs or royaneh who sit on the Council of Nations, as well as the number of royaneh per nation. (fileane.com)
  • Nonetheless the noun "Sioux" does have a history and does carry baggage. (grahamhancock.com)
  • Many Indigenous theorists now consider "modes of relationship" a more useful concept than "modes of production" when talking about what Winona LaDuke, a citizen of the White Earth Ojibwe Nation, has called the co-evolution of Indigenous peoples and their environment and surroundings. (newpol.org)
  • The Abenaki are caught up in wars between European nations. (encyclopedia.com)
  • The Abenaki had no true friends among the European nations, but their relationship with the French was much better than with the British colonists. (encyclopedia.com)
  • The Franciscans under Father Serra, beginning in 1769, set up a string of 21 missions in California, and the good father is said to have converted over 5,000 Indians. (josephy.org)
  • He has been beatified for this work, but there is strong opposition to the final step of Sainthood from Indians and Indian advocates who argue that he and his missions were responsible for the enslavement, torture, and death of thousands of California Indians. (josephy.org)
  • The expensive and complicated machinery for the management of Indian affairs has been much in the way of the elevation of the race in the scale of civilization, and has produced much evil by creating irritation, jealousy, and universal lack of faith in the white race. (tufts.edu)
  • His starting point: the conviction that America is a country not in decline but in transition, slowly but inexorably shedding its identity as a monolithic nation-state and assuming a radically new one. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • The murder of a white trader, Indian-kidnaper, and troublemaker became an excuse to make war on the Pequots in 1636. (bluecorncomics.com)
  • A celebrity in his own time, Rogers was considered a hero by the colonials, an upstart by the British, and the "White Devil" his Indian enemies. (mountainlake.org)
  • And for showing a form of racial resentment: that many Blacks are disappointed when they learn how much White European blood they have (including Cory Booker, the New Jersey Mayor who recently cuddled up to Muslims and attacked the NYPD for conducting legitimate terrorism investigations that saved American lives). (debbieschlussel.com)
  • Most respondents were either Black/African American (26), White (25) or MENA (23). (cdc.gov)
  • 6) In what ways did the French and Indian War (1754-63) alter the political, economic and ideological relations between Britain and its American colonies? (papercamp.com)
  • History of the town of Arlington, Massachusetts, ormerly the second precinct in Cambridge, or District of Menotomy, afterward the town of West Cambridge. (tufts.edu)
  • The Sacred Hoop: Recovering the Feminine in American Indian Traditions. (wsu.edu)
  • As our nation proceeds with health care reform, we must identify those public health priorities that need to be addressed at the community level as well as those that can be addressed by individual patient care providers. (cdc.gov)
  • The French Republic , The French Republic , The French Republic , (commonly known as France , is a unitary semi-presidential republic in Western Europe with several overseas territories and islands located on other continents and in the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic oceans. (absoluteastronomy.com)
  • According to the reports of the Indian Bureau, the Indian population in 1891 was 249,273, nearly all of whom were partially or absolutely under the control of the national government. (tufts.edu)
  • 1) From 1600 to 1763, several European nations vied for control of the North American continent. (papercamp.com)
  • Drogas y control penal en los Andes : deseos, utop'ias y efectos perversos. (who.int)
  • With Notices of Indian Depredations in the Neighboring Country. (google.co.in)
  • True West: Authenticity and the American West. (wsu.edu)
  • Facing West: The Metaphysics of Indian-Hating and Empire-Building. (wsu.edu)
  • During the French and Indian War the Cherokee were sought after as allies by the British and Provincial Colonial Governments to help contest the frontiers against the French and their Indian allies. (wikipedia.org)
  • Fort Loudoun was built as an outpost of the British and their colony of South Carolina during the French and Indian War as part of an alliance treaty with the Cherokee in return for a field force of Cherokee warriors to help in the campaign against the French at Fort Duquesne. (wikipedia.org)
  • Analyze how the actions taken by BOTH American Indians and European colonist shaped those relationships in the following regions. (papercamp.com)
  • Enter the name of a place, like "Springfield" or "Athens", to find all locations matching the name, or enter a state ("Illinois") or country ("Canada") to find all places within that state or nation. (tufts.edu)
  • The experience of Quebec is similar to that of other nations in that the specific character of its culture has been determined by its history which has taken place in a particular environment. (icomos.org)
  • An NDN person in occupied America": Tommy Pico and Place. (lu.se)
  • It is 1968, Mexico will host the Olympic Games, and in July one of the most important student movements in its history emerges. (nodo50.org)
  • To test penicillin's effectiveness in treating syphilis and other STDs, researchers led by Dr. John Charles Cutler from the United States (funded by the Public Health Services, the Pan American Health Sanitary Bureau, and the National Institutes of Health) headed to Guatemala in 1946 and found prostitutes who had syphilis, getting them to then give it to unsuspecting Guatemalan soldiers, mental health patients, and prisoners. (todayifoundout.com)
  • At the various missions, Indians from the remotest points appeared. (tufts.edu)
  • Gerald Vizenor describes the word Indian as "a colonial enactment, not a loan word, [whose] dominance is sustained by the simulation that has superseded the real tribal names" (11). (lu.se)
  • World history is full of Christian terrorists so why don't we call them by their true name? (lgbtqnation.com)
  • This view requires learning to think in "plurals" -- imagining the multiple histories and cultural stories of human societies in every part of the world as parallel, equal developments intersecting without necessarily merging, and associating non-Western societies such as Zuni with the future of the planet instead of its past. (ratical.org)
  • Indian business leaders in partnership with India's planning commission have mounted unprecedented " India Everywhere " branding campaign at the World Economic Forum held in Davos, Switzerland each year. (riazhaq.com)
  • There are some arrogant Indians in cyberspace as well as the physical world who contemptuously dismiss any comparison of India and Pakistan . (riazhaq.com)
  • Today, professional dietetic associations can be found on every continent, and registered dietitians are involved in health promotion and treatment, and work alongside physicians. (who.int)
  • Brazil may be divided into the Brazilian Highlands, or plateau, in the south and the Amazon River Basin in the north. (infoplease.com)