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The Powhatan people (/ˌpaʊhəˈtæn, ˈhætən/) are Indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands who belong to member tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy, or Tsenacommacah. They are Algonquian peoples whose historic territories were in eastern Virginia.
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Eastern Virginia | |
Languages | |
Historically Powhatan, currently English | |
Religion | |
Indigenous religion, Christianity | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Pamlico, Nanticoke, Lenape, Massachusett, and other Algonquian peoples |

Their Powhatan language is an Eastern Algonquian language, also known as Virginia Algonquian. In 1607, an estimated 14,000 to 21,000 Powhatan people lived in eastern Virginia when English colonists established Jamestown.
The term Powhatan is also a title among the Powhatan people. English colonial historians often used this meaning of the term.
In the late 16th and early 17th centuries, a mamanatowick (paramount chief) named Wahunsenacawh forged a Paramount Chiefdom consisting of 30 tributary tribes through inheritance, marriage and war, whose territory included much of eastern Virginia. Their territory was called Tsenacommacah ("densely inhabited Land"). English colonists called Wahunsenacawh The Powhatan. Each of the tribes within the confederacy was led by a weroance (leader, commander), all of whom paid tribute to the Powhatan.
After Wahunsenacawh died in 1618, hostilities with colonists escalated under the chiefdom of his brother, Opchanacanough, who unsuccessfully tried to repel encroaching English colonists. His 1622 and 1644 attacks against the invaders failed, and the English almost eliminated the confederacy. By 1646, the Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom had been decimated, not just by warfare but from the infectious diseases, such as measles and smallpox newly introduced to North America by Europeans. The Native Americans did not have any immunity to these, which had been endemic to Europe and Asia for centuries. At least 75 percent of the Powhatan people died from these diseases in the 17th century alone.
By the mid-17th century, English colonist were desperate for labor to develop the land. Almost half of the European immigrants to Virginia arrived as indentured servants. As settlement continued, the colonists imported growing numbers of enslaved Africans for labor. By 1700, the colonies had about 6,000 enslaved Africans, one-twelfth of the population. Enslaved people would at times escape and join the surrounding Powhatan. Some white indentured servants were also known to have fled and joined the Indigenous peoples. African slaves and indentured European servants often worked and lived together, and while marriage was not always legal, some Native people lived, worked, and had children with them. After Bacon's Rebellion in 1676, the colony enslaved Indians for control. In 1691, the House of Burgesses abolished the enslavement of Native peoples; however, many Powhatans were held in servitude well into the 18th century.
English and Powhatan people often married, with the best-known being Pocahontas and John Rolfe. Their son was Thomas Rolfe, who has more than an estimated 100,000 descendants today. Many of the First Families of Virginia have both English and Virginia Algonquian ancestry.
Virginia state-recognized eight Native tribes with ancestral ties to the Powhatan Confederation. The Pamunkey and Mattaponi are the only two peoples who have retained reservation lands from the 17th century.
Today many descendants of the Powhatan Confederacy are enrolled in six federally recognized tribes in Virginia. They are:
- Chickahominy Indian Tribe
- Chickahominy Indian Tribe–Eastern Division
- Nansemond Indian Nation
- Pamunkey Indian Tribe
- Rappahannock Tribe, Inc.
- Upper Mattaponi Tribe.
Naming and terminology
The name "Powhatan" (also transcribed by Strachey as Paqwachowng), also spelled Powatan, is the name of the Native American village or town of Wahunsenacawh. The title Chief or King Powhatan, used by English colonists, is believed to have been derived from the name of this site. Although the specific site of his home village is unknown, in modern times the Powhatan Hill neighborhood in the East End portion of the modern-day city of Richmond, Virginia is thought by many to be in the general vicinity of the original village. Tree Hill Farm in Henrico County is also a possible site.
"Powhatan" was also the name used by the Natives to refer to the river where the town sat at the head of navigation. The English colonists chose to name it after their leader, King James I. The English colonists named many features in the early years of the Virginia Colony in honor of the king, as well as for his three children, Elizabeth, Henry, and Charles.
Although portions of Virginia's longest river upstream from Columbia were much later named for Queen Anne of Great Britain, in modern times, it is called the James River. It forms at the confluence of the Jackson and Cowpasture Rivers near the present-day town of Clifton Forge, flowing east to Hampton Roads. (The Rivanna River, a tributary of the James River, and Fluvanna County, were named after Queen Anne). The only water body in Virginia to retain a name related to the Powhatan people is Powhatan Creek, located in James City County near Williamsburg.
Powhatan County and its county seat at Powhatan, Virginia were honorific names established years later, in locations west of the area populated by the Powhatan peoples. The county was formed in March 1777.
Early history
Complex paramount chiefdom
Various tribes each held some individual powers locally, and each had a chief known as a weroance (male) or, more rarely, a weroansqua (female), meaning "commander".
As early as the era of John Smith, the individual tribes of this grouping were recognized by English colonists as falling under the greater authority of the centralized power led by the chiefdom of Powhatan (c. 1545 – c. 1618), whose proper name was Wahunsenacawh or (in 17th century English spelling) Wahunsunacock.
In 1607, when the first permanent English colonial settlement in North America was founded at Jamestown, he ruled primarily from Werowocomoco, which was located on the northern shore of the York River. This site of Werowocomoco was rediscovered in the early 21st century; it was central to the tribes of the Confederacy. The improvements discovered at the site during archaeological research have confirmed that Powhatan had a paramount chiefdom over the other tribes in the power hierarchy. Anthropologist Robert L. Carneiro in his The Chiefdom: Precursor of the State. The Transition to Statehood in the New World (1981), deeply explores the political structure of the chiefdom and confederacy.[citation needed]
Powhatan (and his several successors) ruled what is called a complex chiefdom, referred to by scholars as the Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom. Research work continues at Werowocomoco and elsewhere that deepens understanding of the Powhatan world.[citation needed]
Powhatan builds his chiefdom
Wahunsenacawh had inherited control over six tribes but dominated more than 30 by 1607 when the English settlers established their Virginia Colony at Jamestown. The original six tribes under Wahunsenacawh were: the Powhatan (proper), the Arrohateck, the Appamattuck, the Pamunkey, the Mattaponi, and the Chiskiack.
He added the Kecoughtan to his fold by 1598. Some other affiliated groups included the Rappahannock, Moraughtacund, Weyanoak, Paspahegh, Quiyoughcohannock, Warraskoyack, and Nansemond. Another closely related tribe of the same language group was the Chickahominy, but they managed to preserve their autonomy from the Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom. The Accawmacke, located on the Eastern Shore across the Chesapeake Bay, were nominally tributary to the Powhatan Chiefdom but enjoyed autonomy under their own Paramount Chief or "Emperor", Debedeavon (aka "The Laughing King"). Half a million Native Americans were living in the Allegheny Mountains around the year 1600. 30,000 of those 500,000 lived in the Chesapeake region under Powhatan’s rule, by 1677 only five percent of his population remained. The huge jump in deaths was caused by exposure and contact with Europeans.
In his Notes on the State of Virginia (1781–82), Thomas Jefferson estimated that the Powhatan Confederacy occupied about 8,000 square miles (20,000 km2) of territory, with a population of about 8,000 people, of whom 2400 were warriors. Later scholars estimated the total population of the paramountcy as 15,000.
English settlers in the land of the Powhatan
The Powhatan Confederacy was where English colonists established their first permanent settlement in North America. Conflicts began immediately between the Powhatan people and English colonists; the colonists fired shots as soon as they arrived (due to a bad experience they had with the Spanish before their arrival). Within two weeks of the arrival of English colonists at Jamestown, deaths had occurred.
The settlers had hoped for friendly relations and had planned to trade with the Virginia Indians for food. Captain Christopher Newport led the first colonial exploration party up the James River in 1607 when he met Parahunt, weroance of the Powhatan proper. English colonists initially mistook him for the paramount Powhatan (mamanatowick), his father Wahunsenacawh, who ruled the confederacy. Settlers coming into the region needed to befriend as many Native Americans as possible due to the unfamiliarity with the land. Not too long after settling down, they realized the huge potential for tobacco. To grow more and more tobacco, they had to impede on Native territory. There were immediate issues that resulted in 14 years of warfare.
On a hunting and trade mission on the Chickahominy River in December 1607, Captain John Smith wrote that he fought a small battle between the Opechancanough, and during this battle, he tied his Indigenous guide to his body and used him as a human shield. Although Smith was wounded in the leg and also had many arrows in his clothing he was not deathly injured, soon after he was captured by the Opechancanough. After Smith was captured the Natives had him ready for execution until he gave them a compass which they saw as a sign of friendliness so they did not kill him, instead took him to a more popular chief, followed by a ceremony. Smith first was introduced to Powhatan's brother, which was a chief under Powhatan to run a smaller portion of the tribe. Later Smith was introduced to Powhatan himself. Smith was captured by Opechancanough, the younger brother of Wahunsenacawh. Smith became the first English colonist to meet the paramount chief Powhatan. According to Smith's account, Pocahontas, Chief Powhatan's daughter, prevented her father from executing Smith.
Some researchers have asserted that a mock execution of Smith was a ritual intended to adopt Smith into the tribe, but other modern writers dispute this interpretation, noting that many of Smith's stories do not line up with the known facts. They point out that nothing is known of 17th-century Powhatan adoption ceremonies and that an execution ritual is different from known rites of passage. Other historians, such as Helen Rountree, have questioned whether there was any risk of execution. They note that Smith failed to mention it in his 1608 and 1612 accounts, and only added it to his 1624 memoir after Pocahontas had become famous.
In 1608, Captain Newport realized that Powhatan's friendship was crucial to the survival of the small Jamestown colony. In the summer of that year, he tried to "crown" the paramount Chief, with a ceremonial crown, to transform him into a "vassal". They also gave Powhatan many European gifts, such as a pitcher, feather mattress, bed frame, and clothes. The coronation went badly because they asked Powhatan to kneel to receive the crown, which he refused to do. As a powerful leader, Powhatan followed two rules: "he who keeps his head higher than others ranks higher," and "he who puts other people in a vulnerable position, without altering his own stance, ranks higher." To finish the "coronation", several English colonists had to lean on Powhatan's shoulders to get him low enough to place the crown on his head, as he was a tall man. Afterward, the English colonists might have thought that Powhatan had submitted to King James, whereas Powhatan likely thought nothing of the sort.
After John Smith became president of the colony, he sent a force under Captain Martin to occupy an island in Nansemond territory and drive the inhabitants away. At the same time, he sent another force with Francis West to build a fort at the James River Falls. He purchased the nearby fortified Powhatan village (present site of Richmond, Virginia) from Parahunt for some copper and an English colonist named Henry Spelman, who wrote a rare firsthand account of the Powhatan ways of life. Smith then renamed the village "Nonsuch", and tried to get West's men to live in it. Both these attempts at settling beyond Jamestown soon failed, due to Powhatan resistance. Smith left Virginia for England in October 1609, never to return, because of an injury sustained in a gunpowder accident. Soon afterward, English colonists established a second fort, Fort Algernon, in Kecoughtan territory.
Anglo-Powhatan Wars and treaties
In November 1609, Captain John Ratcliffe was invited to Orapax, Powhatan's new capital. After he had sailed up the Pamunkey River to trade there, a fight broke out between the colonists and the Powhatan. All of the English colonists ashore were killed, including Ratcliffe, who was tortured by the women of the tribe. Those aboard the pinnace escaped and told the tale at Jamestown.
During that next year, the tribe attacked and killed many Jamestown residents. The residents fought back, but only killed twenty. However, the arrival at Jamestown of a new Governor, Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr, (Lord Delaware) in June 1610 signaled the beginning of the First Anglo-Powhatan War. A brief period of peace came only after the capture of Pocahontas, her baptism, and her marriage to a tobacco planter, John Rolfe, in 1614. Within a few years, both Powhatan and Pocahontas were dead. Powhatan died in Virginia, but Pocahontas died in England. Meanwhile, the English settlers continued to encroach on Powhatan territory.
After Wahunsenacawh's death, his younger brother, Opitchapam, briefly became chief, followed by their younger brother Opechancanough. The Powhatans were frightened by the influx of immigrants, the expansion of new villages on traditional farming lands, the subsequent need to purchase food from the settlers, and the enforced placement of Indian youth in "colleges." In March 1622, they attacked the Jamestown plantations killing hundreds. The settlers quickly sought retaliation, killing hundreds of tribesmen and their families, burning fields, and spreading smallpox. In 1644 the Powhatans again attacked English colonial settlements to force them from Powhatan territories, which was again met with strong reprisals from the colonists, ultimately resulting in the near destruction of the tribe. The Second Anglo–Powhatan War that followed the 1644 incident ended in 1646 after Royal Governor of Virginia William Berkeley's forces captured Opechancanough, thought to be between 90 and 100 years old. While a prisoner, Opechancanough was killed, shot in the back by a soldier assigned to guard him. He was succeeded as Weroance by Necotowance, and later by Totopotomoi and by his daughter Cockacoeske.
The Treaty of 1646 marked the effective dissolution of the United Confederacy, as white colonists were granted an exclusive enclave between the York and Blackwater Rivers. This physically separated the Nansemonds, Weyanokes, and Appomattox, who retreated southward, from the other Powhatan tribes then occupying the Middle Peninsula and Northern Neck. While the southern frontier demarcated in 1646 was respected for the remainder of the 17th century, the House of Burgesses lifted the northern one on September 1, 1649. Waves of new immigrants quickly flooded the peninsular region, then known as Chickacoan, and restricted the dwindling tribes to lesser tracts of land that became some of the earliest Indian reservations.
In 1665, the House of Burgesses passed stringent laws requiring the Powhatan to accept chiefs appointed by the governor. After the Treaty of Albany in 1684, the Powhatan Confederacy all but vanished.[citation needed]
Changing society and English expansion
Educational programs established through the creation of the Indian School at the College of William and Mary in 1691 were a driving force behind cultural change. The College provided Powhatan boys with skills considered to be of little use by their people, however, literacy was generally viewed as a benefit of this Western education, and Powhatan boys who had received education at William and Mary sent their sons to the school. The increasing marriage of Powhatans to non-Indigenous people in the 17th century is also believed to have contributed to cultural change.
The Powhatans had begun gambling, smoking tobacco, and consuming alcohol recreationally by the end of the 17th century.
Culture and lifeways
The Powhatan lived east of the Fall Line in Tidewater Virginia. They built their houses, called yehakins, by bending saplings and placing woven mats or bark over top of the saplings. They supported themselves primarily by growing crops, especially maize, but they also fished and hunted in the great forest in their area. Villages consisted of many related families organized in tribes led by a chief (weroance/werowance or weroansqua if female). They paid tribute to the paramount chief (mamanatowick), Powhatan.
The region occupied by the Powhatan was bounded approximately by the Potomac River to the north, the Fall Line to the west, the Virginia-North Carolina border to the south, and the Atlantic Ocean to the east. Generally peaceful interactions with the Pamlicos and Chowanocs occurred along the southern boundary, while the western and northern boundaries were more contested. Conflicts occurred with Monacans and Mannahoacs along the western boundary and Massawomecks along the northern boundary.
The Powhatans primarily used fires to heat their sleeping rooms. As a result, less bedding was needed, and bedding materials could be easily stored during daytime hours. Couples typically slept head to foot.
According to research by the National Park Service, Powhatan "men were warriors and hunters, while women were gardeners and gatherers. English colonial accounts described the men, who ran and walked extensively through the woods in pursuit of enemies or game, as tall and lean and possessed of handsome physiques. The women were shorter, and strong because of the hours they spent tending crops, pounding corn into meals, gathering nuts, and performing other domestic chores. When the men undertook extended hunts, the women went ahead of them to construct hunting camps. The Powhatan domestic economy depended on the labor of both sexes." Powhatan women would form work parties to accomplish tasks more efficiently. Women were also believed to serve as barbers, decorate homes, and produce decorative clothing. Overall, Powhatan women maintained a significant measure of autonomy in both their work lives and sexual lives. After a long day, the Powhatan people would celebrate and burn off any last energy they had by dancing and singing. This also allowed them to release any tensions they had from working with others.
All of Virginia's Native peoples practiced agriculture. They periodically moved their villages from site to site. Villagers cleared the fields by felling, girdling, or firing trees at the base and then using fire to reduce the slash and stumps. A village became unusable as soil productivity gradually declined and local fish and game were depleted. The inhabitants then moved on to allow the depleted area to revitalize, the soil to replenish, the foliage to grow, and the number of fish and game to increase. With every location change, the people used fire to clear new land. They left more cleared land behind. Native people also used fire to maintain extensive areas of open game habitat throughout the East, later called "barrens" by European colonists. The Powhatan also had rich fishing grounds. Bison had migrated to this area by the early 15th century.
Powhatans made offerings and prayed at sunrise. Although, they also prayed and made offerings to specific gods, who were believed to be in control of the harvest. They used the land differently, and their religion was a Native one. Significantly, one of the major duties of Powhatan priests was controlling the weather.
Tribes of the paramount chiefdom and their territories
This section needs additional citations for verification.(December 2023) |
The number of tribes listed and the number of warriors are based on estimates or reports which mostly go back to Captain John Smith (1580 - 1631) and William Strachey (1572 - 1621). Usually, only the number of the warriors of the individual tribes is known, the stem number will therefore be determined with a ratio of 1: 3, 1: 3,3, or the last 1: 4, and the studies of Christian Feest are decisive. The last-mentioned figures refer to the first mention as well as the last mention of the respective tribes - e.g. 1585/1627 for the Chesapeake (Source: Handbook of North American Indians).
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20th-century history
After Virginia passed stringent racial segregation laws in the early 20th century, and ultimately the Racial Integrity Act of 1924 which mandated every person who had any African heritage be deemed "black", Walter Plecker, the head of the vital Statistics office, directed all state and local registration offices to use only the terms "white" or "colored" to denote race on official documents. This eliminated all traceable records of Virginia Indians. All state documents, including birth certificates, death certificates, marriage licenses, tax forms, and land deeds, thus bear no record of Virginia Indians. Plecker oversaw the Vital Statistics office in the state for more than 30 years, beginning in the early 20th century, and took a personal interest in eliminating traces of Virginia Indians. Plecker surmised that no true Virginia Indians were remaining as years of intermarriage had "diluted the race". Over his years of service, he conducted a campaign to reclassify all biracial and multiracial individuals as Black, believing such persons were fraudulently attempting to claim their race to be Indian or white. The effect of his reclassification has been described by tribal members as "paper genocide".
After the United States entered WWII many Powhatans volunteered to serve in the military. Powhatan men fought to be regarded separately from the Black community by the Selective Service. In 1954, Powhatans were given partial legal recognition by the General Assembly through a law stating that people with one-fourth or more Indian ancestry and one-sixteenth or less African ancestry were to be recognized as tribal Indians.
Powhatan tribes today
State-recognized tribes
The Commonwealth of Virginia state-recognized 11 tribes, beginning with the Mattaponi and Pamunkey since its establishment. In the 1980s, Virginia recognized six more tribes, also descended from the Powhatan Confederacy. In 2010, Virginia recognized three more tribes; one being the Patawomeck Indian Tribe of Virginia, who identify as being descendants of the Patawomeck people who were loosely connected to the Powhatan Confederacy.
Of these state-recognized tribes who identify as being Powhatan descendants, all but the Mattaponi Indian Nation and the Patawomeck Indian Tribe of Virginia have since gained federal recognition.
The Powhatan Renape Nation are a state-recognized tribe in New Jersey who identify as descendants of the Powhatan Confederacy.
Federally recognized tribes
There are six federally recognized tribes of Powhatan people today, all based in Virginia.
- Chickahominy Indian Tribe
- Chickahominy Indian Tribe–Eastern Division
- Nansemond Indian Nation
- Pamunkey Indian Tribe
- Rappahannock Tribe, Inc.
- Upper Mattaponi Tribe
The Pamunkey Indian Tribe was the first to gain federal recognition in 2016. Then the other six were recognized by Congress through the Thomasina E. Jordan Indian Tribes of Virginia Federal Recognition Act of 2017.
Two of these tribes, the Mattaponi and Pamunkey, still retain their reservations from the 17th century and are located in King William County, Virginia. As part of a treaty in 1646, and then another in 1677, the tribes agreed to bring wild game to the governor of Virginia each year.
Powhatan languages
The tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy spoke mutually intelligible Algonquian languages. The most common was likely Powhatan. Its use became dormant due to the widespread deaths and social disruption suffered by the people. Much of the vocabulary bank is forgotten. Attempts have been made to reconstruct the vocabulary of the language using sources such as word lists provided by Smith and by the 17th-century writer William Strachey.
Powhatan in films
The Powhatan people are featured in MGM's live-action film Captain John Smith and Pocahontas (1953) and the Disney animated musical film Pocahontas (1995). They also appeared in the straight-to-video sequel Pocahontas II: Journey to a New World (1998). Some of the current members of Powhatan-descended tribes complained about the Disney film. Roy Crazy Horse of the Powhatan Renape Nation said the Disney movie "distorts history beyond recognition".
An attempt at a more historically accurate representation was the drama The New World (2005), directed by Terrence Malick, which had actors speaking a reconstructed Powhatan language devised by the linguist Blair Rudes. The Powhatan people generally criticize the film for continuing the myth of a romance between Pocahontas and John Smith. Her actual husband was John Rolfe, whom she married on April 5, 1614.
Notable descendants
More than an estimated 100,000 people today descend from Pocahontas' son Thomas Rolfe. Notable descendants include Edith Bolling Galt Wilson, wife of Woodrow Wilson, and actor Edward Norton.
See also
- Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands
- Black Indians in the United States
- Native Americans in the United States
- Tribe (Native American)
- One-drop rule
- Patawomeck
- Powhatan language
- Tsenacommacah
Notes
- "Powhatan". Collins English Dictionary.
- "Writers' Guide" Archived 2012-02-24 at the Wayback Machine, Virginia Council on Indians, Commonwealth of Virginia, 2009
- Keith Egloff and Deborah Woodward. First People: The Early Indians of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1992
- Sandra F. Waugaman and Danielle Moretti-Langholtz. We're Still Here: Contemporary Virginia Indians Tell Their Stories. Richmond: Palari Publishing, 2006 (revised edition).
- Wood, Karenne. The Virginia Indian Heritage Trail, 2007.
- Capossela, Julie Ann (February 2, 2006). "Jamestown from a Non-Western Perspective". NIAHD Journals. National Institute of American History & Democracy. Archived from the original on October 22, 2008.
- Horn, James (November 16, 2021). A Brave and Cunning Prince: The Great Chief Opechancanough and the War for America. Basic Books. ISBN 978-1-5416-0003-4.
- "1700: Virginia Native peoples succumb to smallpox". Native Voices. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved December 23, 2023.
- Rountree 1990
- Gruenke, Jonathan (March 22, 2019). "New project to identify descendants of Pocahontas underway". Daily Press. Virginia Gazette. Retrieved December 23, 2023.
- "Matchut". www.virginiaplaces.org. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
- Hilleary, Cecily (January 31, 2018). "US Recognizes 6 Virginia Native American Tribes". Voice of America. Retrieved December 23, 2023.
- "Chronology of Powhatan Indian Activity", National Park Service
- Rabow-Edling, Susanna (2018). "The civic concept of the nation". Liberalism in Pre-Revolutionary Russia. Routledge. pp. 18–37. doi:10.4324/9781315149509-2. ISBN 978-1-315-14950-9. S2CID 240337595.
- Notes on the State of Virginia, Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826Archived 2013-08-29 at the Wayback Machine
- Acemoglu, Daron; Robinson, James A. (2012). Why nations fail: the origins of power, prosperity and poverty (1st ed.). New York: Crown Publishers. p. 32. ISBN 0307719219. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
- "Encyclopedia". JAMA. 279 (17): 1409. May 6, 1998. doi:10.1001/jama.279.17.1409-jbk0506-6-1. ISSN 0098-7484.
- "Smith, Generall Historie of Virginia, 1624". history.hanover.edu. Retrieved December 10, 2019.
- Rountree, Helen C. and E. Randolph Turner III. Before and After Jamestown: Virginia's Powhatans and Their Predecessors. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2002.
- Rountree, Helen C. Pocahontas, Powhatan, Opechancanough: Three Indian Lives Changed by Jamestown. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2005
- Grizzard, Frank E. (2007). Jamestown Colony: A Political, Social, and Cultural History. Santa Barbara, CA: ABL-CLIO, Inc. pp. Introduction: l-li. ISBN 978-1-85109-637-4.
- Rountree, Helen C. (1996). Pocahontas's people: the Powhatan Indians of Virginia through four centuries. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-585-15425-2. OCLC 44957641.
- Rountree, Helen C. (1998). "Powhatan Indian Women: The People Captain John Smith Barely Saw". Ethnohistory. 45 (1): 1–29. doi:10.2307/483170. ISSN 0014-1801. JSTOR 483170.
- ""The Chesapeake Bay Region and its People in 1607"" (PDF). Retrieved November 15, 2018.
- Rountree, Helen C. (1998). "Powhatan Indian Women: The People Captain John Smith Barely Saw". Ethnohistory. 45 (1): 1–29. doi:10.2307/483170. JSTOR 483170.
- Brown, Hutch (Summer 2000). "Wildland Burning by American Indians in Virginia". Fire Management Today. 60 (3). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: 30–33.
- "Gale General OneFile - Document - Pocahontas celebrates: a Powhatan harvest festival". go.gale.com. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
- Rountree, Helen C. (August 28, 1992). "Powhatan priests and English rectors: world views and congregations in conflict". The American Indian Quarterly. 16 (4): 485–. doi:10.2307/1185294. JSTOR 1185294. Retrieved August 28, 2020 – via Gale.
- "Seventeenth Century Virginia Algonquian Population Estimates (1973)". Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail - James River Basin - Indian Towns & Natural Resources They Relied On" (PDF). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "WE HAVE A STORY TO TELL - Native Peoples of Chesapeake Region" (PDF). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "VDOE :: Virginia's First People Past & Present - Nansemond". www.doe.virginia.gov. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "Chesapeake Bay - Native Americans - The Mariners' Museum". www.marinersmuseum.org. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- The term Nottoway may derive from ″Nadawa″ or ″Nadowessioux″ (widely translated as "poisonous snake"), an Algonquian-language term which speakers used to refer to members of competing language families, specifically the Iroquoian- or Siouan-speaking tribes. Because the Algonquian occupied the coastal areas, they were the first tribes met by the English colonists, who often adopted the use of such Algonquian ethnonyms, names for other tribes, not realizing at first that these differed from the tribes' autonyms or names for themselves. The Nottoway called themselves in their tongue Nottaway (Dar-sun-ke) Cheroenhaka - "People at the Fork of the Stream" (because they lived in the region of the Nottaway, Blackwater River, and Chowan River - all Blackwater rivers), but the meaning of the name Cheroenhaka is uncertain and still disputed.
- "GNIS Detail - Pamunkey River". geonames.usgs.gov. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail - York River Basin - Indian Towns & Natural Resources They Relied On" (PDF). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "VDOE :: Virginia's First People Past & Present - Pamunkey". www.doe.virginia.gov. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "Pampatike Farm - From Opechancanough to Col Thomas Carter". www.pampatike.org. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- not to be confused with the small chieftain, also referred to as Mattapanient along the Patuxent River in northern Calvert and eastern Prince George's Counties of Maryland, which was under the Suzerainty of the Patuxent or the mighty Piscataway (Conoy)
- The information on the number of warriors (and hereby the population) for the additional tribes listed by Strachey – the Cantauncack,'Menapacunt, Pataunck, Ochahannauke, Kaposecock(e), Pamareke, Shamapa, Orapaks, Chepeco and the Paraconos – far exceed the usual populations for the Powhatan tribes. According to Feest Strachey's population numbers for the York and Mattaponi Rivers are to prefer over those of Smith (especially with regard to the mighty Mattaponie) – but are probably too high for the tribes along the Pamunkey River (the given 400 warriors or 1,300 tribal members for the Pamareke and Kaposecock(s) are questionable – since both tribes are often regarded as subgroups of the mighty Pamunkey – which according to Smith & Strachey could raise itself about 300 warriors or 1,000 Tribal members counted).
- "VDOE :: Virginia's First People Past & Present - Mattaponi". www.doe.virginia.gov. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "VDOE :: Virginia's First People Past & Present - Upper Mattaponi". www.doe.virginia.gov. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail - Rappahannock River Basin - Indian Towns & Natural Resources They Relied On" (PDF). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "Christopher Steadman: The Powhatan Chiefdom: 1606, Old Dominion University, Model United Nations Society, 2015" (PDF). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- "VDOE :: Virginia's First People Past & Present - Rappahannock". www.doe.virginia.gov. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- Wolfe, Brendan (February 17, 2021). "Patawomeck Tribe". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
- "Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail – Lower Eastern Shore – Indian Towns & Natural Resources They Relied On" (PDF). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- Fiske, Warren. "The Black-and-White World of Walter Ashby Plecker", The Virginian-Pilot, August 18, 2004
- "Virginia Indians". Secretary of the Commonwealth Kelly Gee. Retrieved December 23, 2023.
- "Patawomeck Indian Tribe of Virginia". Cause IQ. Retrieved December 23, 2023.
- Indian Affairs Bureau (January 12, 2023). "Indian Entities Recognized by and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs". Federal Register. 88: 2112–16. Retrieved December 23, 2023.
- Walsh, Jim (March 18, 2019). "State affirms status of Powhatan Renape, Ramapough Lenape tribes". Courier Post. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
- tribes-uphold-centuries-old-treaty-by-delivering-dead-deer-to-virginia-governor 11/27/2024
- The Pocahontas Myth Archived July 5, 2013, at the Wayback Machine by Roy Crazy Horse, Powhatan Renape Nation website, accessed November 28, 2009
- Hatch, p. 42; Waldrup, p. 186; For a genealogy of Pocahontas' elite slave-holding settler descendants, see Wyndham Robertson, Pocahontas: Alias Matoaka, and Her Descendants through Her Marriage at Jamestown, Virginia, in April 1614, with John Rolph, Gentleman (J W Randolph & English, Richmond, VA, 1887).
- Halpert, Madeline (January 5, 2023). "How actor Edward Norton is related to Pocahontas". BBC News. Retrieved January 7, 2023.
Further reading
- Sakas, Karliana. "The indigenous authorship of the narratives of the Spanish Jesuit mission of Ajacan (1570-1572)." EHumanista, vol. 19, 2011, p. 511+. Gale Academic Onefile, Accessed 14 Nov. 2019.
- Gleach, Frederic W. (1997) Powhatan's World and Colonial Virginia: A Conflict of Cultures. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
- Gleach, Frederic W. (2006) "Pocahontas: An Exercise in Mythmaking and Marketing", In New Perspectives on Native North America: Cultures, Histories, and Representations, ed. by Sergei A. Kan and Pauline Turner Strong, pp. 433–455. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
- Karen Kupperman, Settling With the Indians: The Meeting of English and Indian Cultures in America, 1580–1640, 1980
- A. Bryant Nichols Jr., Captain Christopher Newport: Admiral of Virginia, Sea Venture, 2007
- James Rice, Nature and History in the Potomac Country: From Hunter-Gatherers to the Age of Jefferson, 2009.
- Helen C. Rountree, Pocahontas's People: The Powhatan Indians of Virginia Through Four Centuries, 1990
External links
Media related to Powhatan at Wikimedia Commons
- Chronology of Powhatan Indian Activity, National Park Service
- The Anglo-Powhatan Wars
- A Study of Virginia Indians and Jamestown: The First Century
- "American in 1607", National Geographic
- UNC Charlotte linguist Blair Rudes restores lost language, culture for 'The New World'
- How a linguist revived 'New World' language
- The Indigenous Maps and Mapping of North American Indians
This article s lead section may be too long Please read the length guidelines and help move details into the article s body April 2024 The Powhatan people ˌ p aʊ h e ˈ t ae n ˈ h ae t en are Indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands who belong to member tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy or Tsenacommacah They are Algonquian peoples whose historic territories were in eastern Virginia Powhatan peopleRegions with significant populationsEastern VirginiaLanguagesHistorically Powhatan currently EnglishReligionIndigenous religion ChristianityRelated ethnic groupsPamlico Nanticoke Lenape Massachusett and other Algonquian peoplesPowhatan in a longhouse at Werowocomoco detail of John Smith map 1612 Their Powhatan language is an Eastern Algonquian language also known as Virginia Algonquian In 1607 an estimated 14 000 to 21 000 Powhatan people lived in eastern Virginia when English colonists established Jamestown The term Powhatan is also a title among the Powhatan people English colonial historians often used this meaning of the term In the late 16th and early 17th centuries a mamanatowick paramount chief named Wahunsenacawh forged a Paramount Chiefdom consisting of 30 tributary tribes through inheritance marriage and war whose territory included much of eastern Virginia Their territory was called Tsenacommacah densely inhabited Land English colonists called Wahunsenacawh The Powhatan Each of the tribes within the confederacy was led by a weroance leader commander all of whom paid tribute to the Powhatan After Wahunsenacawh died in 1618 hostilities with colonists escalated under the chiefdom of his brother Opchanacanough who unsuccessfully tried to repel encroaching English colonists His 1622 and 1644 attacks against the invaders failed and the English almost eliminated the confederacy By 1646 the Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom had been decimated not just by warfare but from the infectious diseases such as measles and smallpox newly introduced to North America by Europeans The Native Americans did not have any immunity to these which had been endemic to Europe and Asia for centuries At least 75 percent of the Powhatan people died from these diseases in the 17th century alone By the mid 17th century English colonist were desperate for labor to develop the land Almost half of the European immigrants to Virginia arrived as indentured servants As settlement continued the colonists imported growing numbers of enslaved Africans for labor By 1700 the colonies had about 6 000 enslaved Africans one twelfth of the population Enslaved people would at times escape and join the surrounding Powhatan Some white indentured servants were also known to have fled and joined the Indigenous peoples African slaves and indentured European servants often worked and lived together and while marriage was not always legal some Native people lived worked and had children with them After Bacon s Rebellion in 1676 the colony enslaved Indians for control In 1691 the House of Burgesses abolished the enslavement of Native peoples however many Powhatans were held in servitude well into the 18th century English and Powhatan people often married with the best known being Pocahontas and John Rolfe Their son was Thomas Rolfe who has more than an estimated 100 000 descendants today Many of the First Families of Virginia have both English and Virginia Algonquian ancestry Virginia state recognized eight Native tribes with ancestral ties to the Powhatan Confederation The Pamunkey and Mattaponi are the only two peoples who have retained reservation lands from the 17th century Today many descendants of the Powhatan Confederacy are enrolled in six federally recognized tribes in Virginia They are Chickahominy Indian Tribe Chickahominy Indian Tribe Eastern Division Nansemond Indian Nation Pamunkey Indian Tribe Rappahannock Tribe Inc Upper Mattaponi Tribe Naming and terminologyThe name Powhatan also transcribed by Strachey as Paqwachowng also spelled Powatan is the name of the Native American village or town of Wahunsenacawh The title Chief or King Powhatan used by English colonists is believed to have been derived from the name of this site Although the specific site of his home village is unknown in modern times the Powhatan Hill neighborhood in the East End portion of the modern day city of Richmond Virginia is thought by many to be in the general vicinity of the original village Tree Hill Farm in Henrico County is also a possible site Powhatan was also the name used by the Natives to refer to the river where the town sat at the head of navigation The English colonists chose to name it after their leader King James I The English colonists named many features in the early years of the Virginia Colony in honor of the king as well as for his three children Elizabeth Henry and Charles Although portions of Virginia s longest river upstream from Columbia were much later named for Queen Anne of Great Britain in modern times it is called the James River It forms at the confluence of the Jackson and Cowpasture Rivers near the present day town of Clifton Forge flowing east to Hampton Roads The Rivanna River a tributary of the James River and Fluvanna County were named after Queen Anne The only water body in Virginia to retain a name related to the Powhatan people is Powhatan Creek located in James City County near Williamsburg Powhatan County and its county seat at Powhatan Virginia were honorific names established years later in locations west of the area populated by the Powhatan peoples The county was formed in March 1777 Early historyComplex paramount chiefdom Various tribes each held some individual powers locally and each had a chief known as a weroance male or more rarely a weroansqua female meaning commander As early as the era of John Smith the individual tribes of this grouping were recognized by English colonists as falling under the greater authority of the centralized power led by the chiefdom of Powhatan c 1545 c 1618 whose proper name was Wahunsenacawh or in 17th century English spelling Wahunsunacock In 1607 when the first permanent English colonial settlement in North America was founded at Jamestown he ruled primarily from Werowocomoco which was located on the northern shore of the York River This site of Werowocomoco was rediscovered in the early 21st century it was central to the tribes of the Confederacy The improvements discovered at the site during archaeological research have confirmed that Powhatan had a paramount chiefdom over the other tribes in the power hierarchy Anthropologist Robert L Carneiro in his The Chiefdom Precursor of the State The Transition to Statehood in the New World 1981 deeply explores the political structure of the chiefdom and confederacy citation needed Powhatan and his several successors ruled what is called a complex chiefdom referred to by scholars as the Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom Research work continues at Werowocomoco and elsewhere that deepens understanding of the Powhatan world citation needed Powhatan builds his chiefdom Wahunsenacawh had inherited control over six tribes but dominated more than 30 by 1607 when the English settlers established their Virginia Colony at Jamestown The original six tribes under Wahunsenacawh were the Powhatan proper the Arrohateck the Appamattuck the Pamunkey the Mattaponi and the Chiskiack He added the Kecoughtan to his fold by 1598 Some other affiliated groups included the Rappahannock Moraughtacund Weyanoak Paspahegh Quiyoughcohannock Warraskoyack and Nansemond Another closely related tribe of the same language group was the Chickahominy but they managed to preserve their autonomy from the Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom The Accawmacke located on the Eastern Shore across the Chesapeake Bay were nominally tributary to the Powhatan Chiefdom but enjoyed autonomy under their own Paramount Chief or Emperor Debedeavon aka The Laughing King Half a million Native Americans were living in the Allegheny Mountains around the year 1600 30 000 of those 500 000 lived in the Chesapeake region under Powhatan s rule by 1677 only five percent of his population remained The huge jump in deaths was caused by exposure and contact with Europeans In his Notes on the State of Virginia 1781 82 Thomas Jefferson estimated that the Powhatan Confederacy occupied about 8 000 square miles 20 000 km2 of territory with a population of about 8 000 people of whom 2400 were warriors Later scholars estimated the total population of the paramountcy as 15 000 English settlers in the land of the Powhatan John Smith taking the King of Pamunkey prisoner a fanciful image of Opechancanough from Smith s General History of Virginia 1624 The image of Opechancanough is based on a 1585 painting of another Native warrior by John White 1 The Powhatan Confederacy was where English colonists established their first permanent settlement in North America Conflicts began immediately between the Powhatan people and English colonists the colonists fired shots as soon as they arrived due to a bad experience they had with the Spanish before their arrival Within two weeks of the arrival of English colonists at Jamestown deaths had occurred The settlers had hoped for friendly relations and had planned to trade with the Virginia Indians for food Captain Christopher Newport led the first colonial exploration party up the James River in 1607 when he met Parahunt weroance of the Powhatan proper English colonists initially mistook him for the paramount Powhatan mamanatowick his father Wahunsenacawh who ruled the confederacy Settlers coming into the region needed to befriend as many Native Americans as possible due to the unfamiliarity with the land Not too long after settling down they realized the huge potential for tobacco To grow more and more tobacco they had to impede on Native territory There were immediate issues that resulted in 14 years of warfare On a hunting and trade mission on the Chickahominy River in December 1607 Captain John Smith wrote that he fought a small battle between the Opechancanough and during this battle he tied his Indigenous guide to his body and used him as a human shield Although Smith was wounded in the leg and also had many arrows in his clothing he was not deathly injured soon after he was captured by the Opechancanough After Smith was captured the Natives had him ready for execution until he gave them a compass which they saw as a sign of friendliness so they did not kill him instead took him to a more popular chief followed by a ceremony Smith first was introduced to Powhatan s brother which was a chief under Powhatan to run a smaller portion of the tribe Later Smith was introduced to Powhatan himself Smith was captured by Opechancanough the younger brother of Wahunsenacawh Smith became the first English colonist to meet the paramount chief Powhatan According to Smith s account Pocahontas Chief Powhatan s daughter prevented her father from executing Smith Some researchers have asserted that a mock execution of Smith was a ritual intended to adopt Smith into the tribe but other modern writers dispute this interpretation noting that many of Smith s stories do not line up with the known facts They point out that nothing is known of 17th century Powhatan adoption ceremonies and that an execution ritual is different from known rites of passage Other historians such as Helen Rountree have questioned whether there was any risk of execution They note that Smith failed to mention it in his 1608 and 1612 accounts and only added it to his 1624 memoir after Pocahontas had become famous The Coronation of Powhatan oil on canvas John Gadsby Chapman 1835 In 1608 Captain Newport realized that Powhatan s friendship was crucial to the survival of the small Jamestown colony In the summer of that year he tried to crown the paramount Chief with a ceremonial crown to transform him into a vassal They also gave Powhatan many European gifts such as a pitcher feather mattress bed frame and clothes The coronation went badly because they asked Powhatan to kneel to receive the crown which he refused to do As a powerful leader Powhatan followed two rules he who keeps his head higher than others ranks higher and he who puts other people in a vulnerable position without altering his own stance ranks higher To finish the coronation several English colonists had to lean on Powhatan s shoulders to get him low enough to place the crown on his head as he was a tall man Afterward the English colonists might have thought that Powhatan had submitted to King James whereas Powhatan likely thought nothing of the sort After John Smith became president of the colony he sent a force under Captain Martin to occupy an island in Nansemond territory and drive the inhabitants away At the same time he sent another force with Francis West to build a fort at the James River Falls He purchased the nearby fortified Powhatan village present site of Richmond Virginia from Parahunt for some copper and an English colonist named Henry Spelman who wrote a rare firsthand account of the Powhatan ways of life Smith then renamed the village Nonsuch and tried to get West s men to live in it Both these attempts at settling beyond Jamestown soon failed due to Powhatan resistance Smith left Virginia for England in October 1609 never to return because of an injury sustained in a gunpowder accident Soon afterward English colonists established a second fort Fort Algernon in Kecoughtan territory Anglo Powhatan Wars and treaties Red line shows the boundary between the Virginia Colony and Tributary Indian tribes as established by the Treaty of 1646 The red dot on the river shows Jamestown capital of Virginia Colony In November 1609 Captain John Ratcliffe was invited to Orapax Powhatan s new capital After he had sailed up the Pamunkey River to trade there a fight broke out between the colonists and the Powhatan All of the English colonists ashore were killed including Ratcliffe who was tortured by the women of the tribe Those aboard the pinnace escaped and told the tale at Jamestown During that next year the tribe attacked and killed many Jamestown residents The residents fought back but only killed twenty However the arrival at Jamestown of a new Governor Thomas West 3rd Baron De La Warr Lord Delaware in June 1610 signaled the beginning of the First Anglo Powhatan War A brief period of peace came only after the capture of Pocahontas her baptism and her marriage to a tobacco planter John Rolfe in 1614 Within a few years both Powhatan and Pocahontas were dead Powhatan died in Virginia but Pocahontas died in England Meanwhile the English settlers continued to encroach on Powhatan territory After Wahunsenacawh s death his younger brother Opitchapam briefly became chief followed by their younger brother Opechancanough The Powhatans were frightened by the influx of immigrants the expansion of new villages on traditional farming lands the subsequent need to purchase food from the settlers and the enforced placement of Indian youth in colleges In March 1622 they attacked the Jamestown plantations killing hundreds The settlers quickly sought retaliation killing hundreds of tribesmen and their families burning fields and spreading smallpox In 1644 the Powhatans again attacked English colonial settlements to force them from Powhatan territories which was again met with strong reprisals from the colonists ultimately resulting in the near destruction of the tribe The Second Anglo Powhatan War that followed the 1644 incident ended in 1646 after Royal Governor of Virginia William Berkeley s forces captured Opechancanough thought to be between 90 and 100 years old While a prisoner Opechancanough was killed shot in the back by a soldier assigned to guard him He was succeeded as Weroance by Necotowance and later by Totopotomoi and by his daughter Cockacoeske The Treaty of 1646 marked the effective dissolution of the United Confederacy as white colonists were granted an exclusive enclave between the York and Blackwater Rivers This physically separated the Nansemonds Weyanokes and Appomattox who retreated southward from the other Powhatan tribes then occupying the Middle Peninsula and Northern Neck While the southern frontier demarcated in 1646 was respected for the remainder of the 17th century the House of Burgesses lifted the northern one on September 1 1649 Waves of new immigrants quickly flooded the peninsular region then known as Chickacoan and restricted the dwindling tribes to lesser tracts of land that became some of the earliest Indian reservations In 1665 the House of Burgesses passed stringent laws requiring the Powhatan to accept chiefs appointed by the governor After the Treaty of Albany in 1684 the Powhatan Confederacy all but vanished citation needed Changing society and English expansion Educational programs established through the creation of the Indian School at the College of William and Mary in 1691 were a driving force behind cultural change The College provided Powhatan boys with skills considered to be of little use by their people however literacy was generally viewed as a benefit of this Western education and Powhatan boys who had received education at William and Mary sent their sons to the school The increasing marriage of Powhatans to non Indigenous people in the 17th century is also believed to have contributed to cultural change The Powhatans had begun gambling smoking tobacco and consuming alcohol recreationally by the end of the 17th century Culture and lifewaysReconstructed Powhatan village at the Jamestown Settlement living history museum The Powhatan lived east of the Fall Line in Tidewater Virginia They built their houses called yehakins by bending saplings and placing woven mats or bark over top of the saplings They supported themselves primarily by growing crops especially maize but they also fished and hunted in the great forest in their area Villages consisted of many related families organized in tribes led by a chief weroance werowance or weroansqua if female They paid tribute to the paramount chief mamanatowick Powhatan The region occupied by the Powhatan was bounded approximately by the Potomac River to the north the Fall Line to the west the Virginia North Carolina border to the south and the Atlantic Ocean to the east Generally peaceful interactions with the Pamlicos and Chowanocs occurred along the southern boundary while the western and northern boundaries were more contested Conflicts occurred with Monacans and Mannahoacs along the western boundary and Massawomecks along the northern boundary The Powhatans primarily used fires to heat their sleeping rooms As a result less bedding was needed and bedding materials could be easily stored during daytime hours Couples typically slept head to foot According to research by the National Park Service Powhatan men were warriors and hunters while women were gardeners and gatherers English colonial accounts described the men who ran and walked extensively through the woods in pursuit of enemies or game as tall and lean and possessed of handsome physiques The women were shorter and strong because of the hours they spent tending crops pounding corn into meals gathering nuts and performing other domestic chores When the men undertook extended hunts the women went ahead of them to construct hunting camps The Powhatan domestic economy depended on the labor of both sexes Powhatan women would form work parties to accomplish tasks more efficiently Women were also believed to serve as barbers decorate homes and produce decorative clothing Overall Powhatan women maintained a significant measure of autonomy in both their work lives and sexual lives After a long day the Powhatan people would celebrate and burn off any last energy they had by dancing and singing This also allowed them to release any tensions they had from working with others All of Virginia s Native peoples practiced agriculture They periodically moved their villages from site to site Villagers cleared the fields by felling girdling or firing trees at the base and then using fire to reduce the slash and stumps A village became unusable as soil productivity gradually declined and local fish and game were depleted The inhabitants then moved on to allow the depleted area to revitalize the soil to replenish the foliage to grow and the number of fish and game to increase With every location change the people used fire to clear new land They left more cleared land behind Native people also used fire to maintain extensive areas of open game habitat throughout the East later called barrens by European colonists The Powhatan also had rich fishing grounds Bison had migrated to this area by the early 15th century Powhatans made offerings and prayed at sunrise Although they also prayed and made offerings to specific gods who were believed to be in control of the harvest They used the land differently and their religion was a Native one Significantly one of the major duties of Powhatan priests was controlling the weather Tribes of the paramount chiefdom and their territoriesThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The number of tribes listed and the number of warriors are based on estimates or reports which mostly go back to Captain John Smith 1580 1631 and William Strachey 1572 1621 Usually only the number of the warriors of the individual tribes is known the stem number will therefore be determined with a ratio of 1 3 1 3 3 or the last 1 4 and the studies of Christian Feest are decisive The last mentioned figures refer to the first mention as well as the last mention of the respective tribes e g 1585 1627 for the Chesapeake Source Handbook of North American Indians Tribe From the Chesapeake Bay upriver the Powhatan James River and on the Virginia PeninsulaChesapeake Chesepian Cassapecock Chesepiooc Tribal name meaning is disputed it may mean at a big river great water or it might have just referred to a village located at the bay s mouth The Chesapeake lived in the region of the Hampton Roads along the Rivers Powhatan River later James River Nansemond River and Elizabeth River to the Chesapeake Bay their territory encompassed the cities Norfolk Portsmouth Chesapeake and Virginia Beach Their capital Skicoke may have been near the junction of the Eastern and Southern Branches of the Elizabeth River in downtown Norfolk Other evidence suggests it was located in the Pine Beach area of Sewell s Point The Chesapeake also had two other towns or villages Apasus and Chesepioc both near the Chesapeake Bay in what is now the independent city of Virginia Beach Of these Chesepioc was known to have been located in the present Great Neck Point West of them lived the Nansemond tribe originally not a member of the Chiefdom archaeological evidence suggests that the original Chesapeake people belonged to another Algonquian group the Carolina Algonquian or Pamlico According to William Strachey they were destroyed as a nation before 1607 based on a vision by the Powhatan their villages were resettled by members of other Powhatan tribes their then installed chief was Keyghanghton about 100 warriors 335 tribal members 1585 1627 now extinct as a tribe citation needed Nansemond They called their land along both sides of the Nansemond River Chuckatuck and encompassed the areas of the cities of Suffolk and Chesapeake four villages are known by name the main village or capital Nansemond then Mattanock Teracosick and Mentoughquemec on Dumpling Island were their temples and the seat of the Weroance English colonists burned the sanctuary and the settlement in 1609 their leading chief was Weyhohomo further leaders were Ampuetough Weyingopo and Tirchtough about 200 warriors 665 tribal members according to Smith Strachey according to their descendants they numbered about 300 warriors or 1 200 tribal members 1585 today one of the state recognized tribes of Virginia Appomattoc Appamatuck Apamatic Lived along the Lower Appomattox River in the area of Tri Cities of Virginia with Petersburg as its head of navigation in adjoining counties of Chesterfield Dinwiddie and Prince George in south central Virginia their leading chief Werowance was Coquonasum with his seat in the tribal town Wighwhippoc on the northside of Wighwhippoc Creek now Swift Creek his sister Opossunoquonuske Opussoquionuske referred to by English colonists as Queen of Appamattuck Hattica was female chief Weroansqua of the main town Mattica Hattica near the mouth of the Appomattox River 60 warriors or 200 tribal members according to Smith or 20 warriors 100 warriors or 65 335 tribal members according to Strachey 1607 1705 now extinct as a tribe Arrohateck Arrohattoc Lived in six villages east of the Powhatan tribe on both sides of the James River in Henrico County Virginia their main village was at the James River in today s Henrico Virginia their chief was Ashuaquid about 100 warriors or 200 tribal members according to Smith and Strachey Feest estimated at least 300 tribal members 1607 1611 now extinct as a tribe Kecoughtan Kikotan Kiccowtan Kikowtan Lived in the Hampton Roads they had only one settlement its location is disputed it is assumed at present day Kecoughtan Virginia later called Elizabeth City or downtown Hampton Virginia or Newport News Virginia according to William Strachey Chief Powhatan had slain the weroance at Kecoughtan in 1597 appointing his own young son Pochins as successor there while resettling some of the tribe at the Piankatank River Powhatan annihilated the inhabitants at Piankatank in 1608 1607 1610 now extinct as a tribe Paspahegh Lived opposite the Quiyoughcohanock along the north bank of the James River to the junction of the James and Chickahominy Rivers in today s Charles City and James City Counties they maintained a number of settlements on both sides upriver the Chickahominy River Namqosick and Cinquaoteck on the east bank of the Chickahominy as three villages not known by name including their main village or capital on the west bank their villages were the closest to Jamestown Virginia their chief was Wowinchopunck he could hold to his position even after submission of the tribe to Wahunsanocock Powhatan 40 warriors or 135 tribal members according to Smith and Strachey but Feest believes that these numbers are too low quoting George Percy 1607 139 140 who informed that the Paspahegh chieftain visited the British with one hundred Sauages armed and the next day fortie of his men with a Deere sent 1607 1610 now extinct as tribe Potchiack Potchayick Lived along the James River in the area of Surry County were formed and emerged as a new tribal polity at the beginning of the 17th century from scattered groups of Nansemond Warraskoyack and Quiyoughcohannock in 1669 about 30 warriors or 100 tribal members according to Hening 1661 1669 now extinct as a tribe Powhatan Powatan Lived east of the Atlantic Seaboard fall line on both sides of the Powhatan James River and north of the Kingsland Creek their capital Powhatan or Paqwachowng literally village at the rapids was close to the waterfalls called Paqwachowng in the vicinity of Richmond the capital of Virginia besides they inhabited at least three smaller not known villages according to Smith Archer 1607a 86 adds another village on Mayo Island in James River opposite of their capital which he called Pawatahs Towre Powhatan Town their chief was Parahunt another son of Wahunsanocock Powhatan about 40 warriors or 135 tribal members according to Smith or 50 warriors and 165 tribal members according to Strachey according Feest up to 300 tribal members is likely due to the number of settlements 1607 1670 now extinct as a tribe Not the same as the Powhatan Renape Nation of New Jersey a state recognized tribe of New Jersey Quiyoughcohannock Quiockohannock Coiacohanauke Lived east of the Weanock on both sides of the James River in several villages their capital Quiyoughcohannock was the spiritual center of the Powhatan Chiefdom three villages are known by name Quiyoughcohannock Nantapoyac perhaps Zuniga s Manattapoyek and Chawopo which was led by the former Quiyoughcohannock tribal chief Chopoke Choapock there were also two other not known villages along Chippoak Creek in the area of today Chippokes Plantation State Park they were often mistakenly referred to as the Tappahannock after the capital of the northern Rappahanock their chief Pepiscumah Pipisco was appointed by Wahunsonacock Powhatan further known leaders were the Weroansqua female chief Oholasc and the Weroance Tatahcoope estimates range from 25 warriors or 85 tribal members according to Smith 60 warriors or 200 tribal members according to Strachey up to about 300 and even more tribal members according to Feest some banded together with splinter groups of Warraskoyack and Nansemond to form a new tribe the short lived Potchiack 1607 1627 now extinct as a tribe Warraskoyack Warrosquyoake Warrascocke Lived northwest of the Nansemond along the Pagan Warraskoyak River down to its mouth into the James River in Warrosquyoake Shire today Isle of Wight Southampton Greensville and Brunswick Counties the main Warraskoyak village was located in present day Smithfield Virginia while a satellite village called Mokete was at Pagan Point and another called Mathomank was on Burwell s Bay under a sub weroance named Sasenticum To the southwest and west the north bank of the Blackwater River was the boundary to the enemy Southern Iroquoian speaking Nottoway Cheroenhaka people to the south along the Chowan River lived the rival Chowanoc people with 19 villages the most numerous and powerful of the Carolina Algonquian speaking tribes in North Carolina the shore of the James River was the northern boundary of Warraskoyack territory their chief weroance was Tackonekintaco about 40 warriors or 135 tribal members according to Smith or 60 warriors and 200 tribal members according to Strachey some banded together with splinter groups of Quiyoughcohannock and Nansemond to form a new tribe the short lived Potchiack 1585 1627 who are now extinct as a tribe Weanock Weyanock Weanoc Weyanoke Lived on both sides of James River on Weyanoke Peninsula or Weanoc Neck in Charles City County Virginia upriver of the Quiyoughcohannock and Paspahegh and south of the Arrohateck and Appamatuck to the north of their territory lived the Chickahominy people while independent the Chickahominy were at times allied to the Powhatan tribes according to Smith their capital Tindall s Pomonke as well two not named villages on the north bank of the James River Archer 1607a 82 adds another village on the north bank south of the James River he tells of three more villages the second of them is Tindall s Wynough perhaps identical with Zuniga s Weanock Strachey 1953 64 mentions an additional Weanock province called Cecocomake near Powell s Creek in Prince George County After 1623 the settlements Tanx Little Weanock north and Great Weanock south of the James River are mentioned and at least until 1627 there were still two Weanock villages their chief was Kaquothocun about 100 warriors or 335 tribal members according to Smith or 150 warriors or 500 tribal members according to Strachey which adds 50 warriors for Cecocomake the Weanock province By the 18th century they had fully integrated with the Nottoways and were speaking their language their former presence visible only in the surname Wineoak 1607 1707 now extinct as a tribe Tribe Along the Pamunkey York River and its tributaries Youghtanund Pamunkey River and Mattaponi River as well as the southern Middle Peninsula and the Pamunkey NeckKiskiack Chisiack Chiskiack Lived in several villages along the south bank of the York River in today s York County formerly Charles River County in the northern part of the Virginia Peninsula between the Paspehegh in the west and the Kecoughtan to the east their capital also known as Kiskiack was about 15 miles 24 km from Jamestown their chief was Ottahotin about 40 50 warriors or 135 170 tribal members according to Smith amp Strachey 1607 1677 now extinct as a tribe the remaining Kiskiack appear to have merged and intermarried with other groups probably the Pamunkey Chickahominy or Rappahannock Cantauncack Candaungack Lived along the north bank of the York River between Carter and Cedarbush Creeks their chief was Ohonnamo about 100 warriors or 335 tribal members according to Strachey 1608 1629 now extinct as a tribe Werowocomoco Werowacomoco Were living along the York River upriver to the confluence of the Pamunkey and Mattaponi Rivers since the first capital of the Powhatan Confederation lay in their territory this tribe was known by the same name as the capital it was called Werowocomoco Werowacomoco the name Werowocomoco comes from the Powhatan werowans weroance meaning leader in English and komakah comoco settlement literally settlement of the leader or chief the capital of the Powhatan Chiefdom Werowocomoco itself lay on the north bank of the York River in Gloucester County near the city of Yorktown here resided Wahunsonacock Powhatan until 1609 when he moved his capital to a new location named Orapaks Orapax Orapakes about 40 warriors or 135 tribal members according to Smith amp Strachey 1607 1611 now extinct as a tribe Caposepock e Kaposecocke Kupkipcock Lived along the north bank of the Pamunkey River their chief was Weyamat presumablyKaposecockewas however only one of the largest villages within the mighty Pamunkey tribe and therefore tributary to the leading chief Werowance of the Pamunkey However Strachey gives them to him about 400 warriors and 1 300 tribal members 1608 1611 now extinct as a tribe Orapax Orapaks Orapakes Lived between the upper reaches of the Chickahominy River and the Pamunkey River in the north on their western border lived the hostile Eastern Sioux tribes south of them lived the real Powhatan tribe and north of them the Youghtanund and directly downstream they had the powerful autonomous Chickahominy as neighbors since 1609 the second capital of the Powhatan Confederation called Orapaks Orapax Orapakes Werowocomoco had been abandoned due to the colonists pressure to settle was located in their area this was built for better defense in a swamp area in western New Kent County on the north bank of the Upper Chickahominy River chief Wahunsonacock Powhatan resided here about 1609 1611 1614 approx 50 warriors or 165 tribal members according to Strachey 1607 1611 Pamareke Pamuncoroy Pamakeroy Lived along the south bank of the Pamunkey River sometimes attributed to Pamunkey their chief was Attasquintan about 400 warriors or 1 300 tribal members according to Strachey 1608 1611 Pamunkey Lived on both sides of the Pamunkey River above its mouth into the York River in today s King William and New Kent Counties had several main villages with about 300 warriors and 1000 tribal members the largest and most powerful tribe within the Confederacy according to Smith amp Strachey Wahunsonacock Powhatan and his daughter Matoaka Pocahontas belonged to this tribe 1607 today one of the state recognized tribes of Virginia and since 2015 also a federally recognized tribe Paraconosko Paraconos Along the Pamunkey River their chief was Attossomunck originally aleading chief Werowance of the Tauxenent Doeg about 10 warriors or 35 tribal members 1608 1611 Potaunk Pataunck Potawuncack Lived along the southern banks of the Pamunkey River their chief was Essenataught about 100 warriors or 335 tribal members according to Strachey 1608 1611 Shamapent Shamapa Lived south of the Pamunkey River their chief was Nansuapunck about 100 warriors or 335 tribal members according to Strachey 1608 1611 Quackohamaock Quackohowaon Ochahannanke Ochahannauke Lived either on both sides of the Mattaponi River or along the north bank of the Pamunkey River their chief was Vropaack about 40 warriors or 135 tribal members according to Strachey 1608 1611 Youghtanund Youghtamund Lived northwest of the Pamunkey along the Pamunkey River to the confluence of the North Anna and South Anna Rivers which form the Pamunkey River their chief was Pomiscatuck about 60 warriors or 200 tribal members according to Smith or 70 warriors or 235 tribal members according to Strachey 1607 1611 Cattachiptico Cattachipico Cakkiptico Chepecho Chepeco The main village Cattachiptico was located on the site of today s Pampatike on the Pamunkey River in what is now King William County other smaller villages were along Totopotmoy Creek Manskin Creek and possibly along the Mattaponi River presumably these villages all belonged to a subtribe of the Pamunkey the Manaskint Manskin which also maintained close ties to the Youghtanand during the Second Anglo Powhatan War their main village Cattachiptico figured as the headquarters of Opechancanough then paramount chief their chief was Opopohcumunck possibly meaning Opechancanough about 300 warriors or 1 000 tribal members according to Strachey 1608 1611 Menapacunt Mummapacune Mummapacun Lived between the north bank of the Pamunkey River to the Mattaponi River their territory was most likely upstream and thus northwest of the mighty Mattaponi and Pamunkey tribes their chief was Ottondeacommoc about 100 warriors or 335 tribal members according to Strachey 1608 1611 Mattaponi Mattapanient Lived along the central reaches of the Pamunkey and the Mattaponi Rivers until their confluence with the York River in today King William and King and Queen Counties their main village was named Mattapanient according to Smith another village was Cinquoteck in the area of West Point formerly Delaware at the confluence of Pamunkey and Mattaponi their chief was Werowough approximately 30 warriors or 100 tribal members according to Smith or 140 warriors or 465 tribal members according to Strachey 1607 now as Mattaponi and Upper Mattaponi two of the state recognized tribes of Virginia Payankatank Piankatank Lived in several villages Smith names three along the Piankatank River in what is now Middlesex County to the west their territory bordered the Opiscopank Opiscatumek to the south the Werowocomoco Werowacomoco and to the north lived directly on the other side of the Rappahannock River the Lower Cuttatawomen according to Strachey these were defeated by the Powhatan tribes in 1608 24 warriors were killed and all women and children were taken captive the area and the villages were then repopulated with former inhabitants of Kecoughtan Smith gives two numbers in 1608 about 40 warriors or 135 tribal members and in 1624 about 50 60 warriors or 165 200 tribal members according to Strachey about 40 50 warriors or 135 200 tribal members according to Feest possibly up to 300 tribal members 1608 1611 Tribe Lived along the Rappahannock River north toward the Patawomeck Tidal Potomac River and on the northern Middle Peninsula and the Northern NeckRappahannock The dominant tribe in the Rappahannock River Valley settled in 13 villages on both sides of the river named after them their main village was Topahanocke Tappahannock and their main hunting grounds were south of the river Due to their military strength and geographical distance from the center of the Powhatan Confederation they were able to obtain partial autonomy their chief was Taweeren ca 100 warriors or 335 tribal members according to Smith amp Strachey 1608 now one of the state recognized tribes of Virginia Opiscopank Opiscatumek 1608 1611 Lower Cuttatawomen Corrotoman Lived in Lancaster County as a direct neighbor of the Moraughtachand Moratico to the northwest and the Wicocomoco Wighcocomoco to the north their territory bordered the Rappahannock River to the south and the Chesapeake Bay to the east 30 warriors or 100 tribal members according to Smith amp Strachey 1608 1656 Matchotic Mattehatique Sometimes referred to as Lower Matchotic lived between the Rappahannock River and the Patawomeck Potomac River north of them lived the Pissaseck and south of them lived the Chicacoan Seccawoni further upstream another group called Upper Matchotic is identified sometimes the tribal name Matchotic is used as Collective noun for the Tauxenent Doeg Patawomeck Potomac Cuttatawomen Pissasec and Onawmanient in Northumberland King George and Westmoreland Counties 1608 1659 or 1669 Moraughtachund Moratico Lived on the north bank of the Rappahannock River south of the mighty Rappahannock tribe and north of the Lower Cuttatawomen in what is now Lancaster and Richmond Counties their chief was Ottondeacommoc 80 warriors or 270 tribal members according to Smith amp Strachey 1608 1669 Pissaseck Pissasec Lived from the north bank of the Rappahannock River to the south bank of the Potomac River between the Matchotic Mattehatique in the south and the Potomac Patawomeck in the north 1608 1611 Nantaughtacund Nausatico Nanzatico Lived on both sides of the Rappahannock River in the Caroline King George and Essex Counties above the mighty Rappahannock tribe and south of the Potomac Patawomeck since the middle of the 17th century scattered Nantaughtacund Patawomeck Matchotic Mattehatique Rappahannock the Portobago Portobacco from Maryland and smaller groups such as the cities Nanzemond Warisquock and Ausaticon are known under the anglicized name Nanzatico for this period in 1705 after a murder committed by tribal members the entire tribe including some refugees of neighboring tribes with the exception of the Portobago Portobacco and Rappahannock were deported to Antigua of the Lesser Antilles and thus ceased to exist as an ethnic group their chief was Vropaack about 150 warriors or 500 tribal members according to Smith and Strachey 1608 1705 Upper Cuttatawomen Lived along the north bank of the Upper Rappahannock River in what is now King George County to the north their territory bordered the Patawomeck Potomac and directly on the south side of the river lived the Nantaughtacund about 20 warriors or 70 tribal members according to Smith amp Strachey 1608 1611 Wicocomoco Wicocomico Wighcocomoco Wicomico Lived at the southern tip of the Northern Neck along the south bank of the Potomac River and its estuary into the Chesapeake Bay According to Stephen Potter their main village was on the upper reaches and slightly north of the Little Wicomico River and another village called Cinquck near the mouth and south of the Little Wicomico in Northumberland County their chief was Mosco in 1655 the colonial rulers ordered the Chicacoan to join forces with the Wicocomoco between 1656 1659 the Lower Cuttatawomen had also joined them and as a common new tribe under the leadership of the English appointed chief Machywap to settle in a reservation approximately 18 km2 near Dividing Creek south of the Great Wicomico River about 130 warriors or 435 tribal members according to Smith and Strachey 1608 1719 Chicacoan Sekakawon Sekakawoni Seccawoni Cekakawwon Lived along the Coan River a tributary of the Potomac River in what is now Northumberland County with about 30 warriors or 100 tribal members according to Smith other sources about 435 tribal members according to Smith and Strachey 1608 1660 Onawmanient Lived south of Upper Cuttatawomen in Nominy Bay in Westmoreland County about 100 warriors or 335 tribal members according to Smith Patawomeck Potomac Potomack Lived in at least ten villages along the south bank of the Patawomeck Potomac River approx 160 warriors or 540 tribal members 1612 or about 200 warriors or 670 tribal members 1624 both according to Smith according to Strachey about 160 warriors or 540 tribal members 1608 1668 In 1666 the Governor s Council of Virginia called for the utter destruction of the Patawomeck After a devastating attack by the English the surviving Patawomeck converted to Christianity and remained in the area of White Oak Their descendants were recognized as a tribe by the state of Virginia in 2010 Tauxenent Doeg Taux Tacci Doag Dogue Dogi Lived in four villages north of the Patawomeck along the south bank of the Upper Patawomeck Potomac River above Aquia Creek in what is now Caroline Prince William Fairfax and King George Counties their main village Tauxenent was located on Doggs Island or Miompse May Umps now known as Mason Neck south of Washington D C other villages were Pamacocack later anglicized to Quantico along Quantico Creek Yosococomico along Powells Creek near Montclair Virginia Niopsco along Neabsco Creek and Namassingakent on the north bank of the Dogue Creek Assaomeck on the south bank of Hunting Creek and Namoraughquend near today s Roosevelt Island about 40 warriors or 135 tribal members according to Smith amp Strachey probably too low a population 1607 1675 Tribe Lived on Southern Delmarva Peninsula were usually only nominally members of the Powhatan Confederation from the mainland as they were geographically separated from it by the Chesapeake BayAccomac Accomac Accawmack Accawmacke Accowmack Were organized into a confederation of about 2 000 tribal members under the leadership of Debedeavon The Laughing King died 1657 when they first came into contact with English colonists in 1608 lived on the Southern Delmarva Peninsula on the Eastern Shore of Virginia but only about 80 warriors or 270 tribal members according to Smith more recent archaeological historical studies and comparisons with other sources make a much larger population more likely in the late 17th century were mostly referred to by the colonists as Gingaskins Accohannock Accohanoc Occohannock Lived along Accohannock Creek in the counties of Accomack and Northampton north of Accomac Confederation in Virginia were under the leadership of Kiptoteke the brother of Debedeavon and therefore probably politically subject to the Accomac Confederation about 40 warriors or 135 tribal members 20th century historyAfter Virginia passed stringent racial segregation laws in the early 20th century and ultimately the Racial Integrity Act of 1924 which mandated every person who had any African heritage be deemed black Walter Plecker the head of the vital Statistics office directed all state and local registration offices to use only the terms white or colored to denote race on official documents This eliminated all traceable records of Virginia Indians All state documents including birth certificates death certificates marriage licenses tax forms and land deeds thus bear no record of Virginia Indians Plecker oversaw the Vital Statistics office in the state for more than 30 years beginning in the early 20th century and took a personal interest in eliminating traces of Virginia Indians Plecker surmised that no true Virginia Indians were remaining as years of intermarriage had diluted the race Over his years of service he conducted a campaign to reclassify all biracial and multiracial individuals as Black believing such persons were fraudulently attempting to claim their race to be Indian or white The effect of his reclassification has been described by tribal members as paper genocide After the United States entered WWII many Powhatans volunteered to serve in the military Powhatan men fought to be regarded separately from the Black community by the Selective Service In 1954 Powhatans were given partial legal recognition by the General Assembly through a law stating that people with one fourth or more Indian ancestry and one sixteenth or less African ancestry were to be recognized as tribal Indians Powhatan tribes todayState recognized tribes The Commonwealth of Virginia state recognized 11 tribes beginning with the Mattaponi and Pamunkey since its establishment In the 1980s Virginia recognized six more tribes also descended from the Powhatan Confederacy In 2010 Virginia recognized three more tribes one being the Patawomeck Indian Tribe of Virginia who identify as being descendants of the Patawomeck people who were loosely connected to the Powhatan Confederacy Of these state recognized tribes who identify as being Powhatan descendants all but the Mattaponi Indian Nation and the Patawomeck Indian Tribe of Virginia have since gained federal recognition The Powhatan Renape Nation are a state recognized tribe in New Jersey who identify as descendants of the Powhatan Confederacy Federally recognized tribes There are six federally recognized tribes of Powhatan people today all based in Virginia Chickahominy Indian Tribe Chickahominy Indian Tribe Eastern Division Nansemond Indian Nation Pamunkey Indian Tribe Rappahannock Tribe Inc Upper Mattaponi Tribe The Pamunkey Indian Tribe was the first to gain federal recognition in 2016 Then the other six were recognized by Congress through the Thomasina E Jordan Indian Tribes of Virginia Federal Recognition Act of 2017 Two of these tribes the Mattaponi and Pamunkey still retain their reservations from the 17th century and are located in King William County Virginia As part of a treaty in 1646 and then another in 1677 the tribes agreed to bring wild game to the governor of Virginia each year Powhatan languagesThe tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy spoke mutually intelligible Algonquian languages The most common was likely Powhatan Its use became dormant due to the widespread deaths and social disruption suffered by the people Much of the vocabulary bank is forgotten Attempts have been made to reconstruct the vocabulary of the language using sources such as word lists provided by Smith and by the 17th century writer William Strachey Powhatan in filmsThe Powhatan people are featured in MGM s live action film Captain John Smith and Pocahontas 1953 and the Disney animated musical film Pocahontas 1995 They also appeared in the straight to video sequel Pocahontas II Journey to a New World 1998 Some of the current members of Powhatan descended tribes complained about the Disney film Roy Crazy Horse of the Powhatan Renape Nation said the Disney movie distorts history beyond recognition An attempt at a more historically accurate representation was the drama The New World 2005 directed by Terrence Malick which had actors speaking a reconstructed Powhatan language devised by the linguist Blair Rudes The Powhatan people generally criticize the film for continuing the myth of a romance between Pocahontas and John Smith Her actual husband was John Rolfe whom she married on April 5 1614 Notable descendantsMore than an estimated 100 000 people today descend from Pocahontas son Thomas Rolfe Notable descendants include Edith Bolling Galt Wilson wife of Woodrow Wilson and actor Edward Norton See alsoIndigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands Black Indians in the United States Native Americans in the United States Tribe Native American One drop rule Patawomeck Powhatan language TsenacommacahNotes Powhatan Collins English Dictionary Writers Guide Archived 2012 02 24 at the Wayback Machine Virginia Council on Indians Commonwealth of Virginia 2009 Keith Egloff and Deborah Woodward First People The Early Indians of Virginia Charlottesville VA University Press of Virginia 1992 Sandra F Waugaman and Danielle Moretti Langholtz We re Still Here Contemporary Virginia Indians Tell Their Stories Richmond Palari Publishing 2006 revised edition Wood Karenne The Virginia Indian Heritage Trail 2007 Capossela Julie Ann February 2 2006 Jamestown from a Non Western Perspective NIAHD Journals National Institute of American History amp Democracy Archived from the original on October 22 2008 Horn James November 16 2021 A Brave and Cunning Prince The Great Chief Opechancanough and the War for America Basic Books ISBN 978 1 5416 0003 4 1700 Virginia Native peoples succumb to smallpox Native Voices National Library of Medicine Retrieved December 23 2023 Rountree 1990 Gruenke Jonathan March 22 2019 New project to identify descendants of Pocahontas underway Daily Press Virginia Gazette Retrieved December 23 2023 Matchut www virginiaplaces org Retrieved November 15 2018 Hilleary Cecily January 31 2018 US Recognizes 6 Virginia Native American Tribes Voice of America Retrieved December 23 2023 Chronology of Powhatan Indian Activity National Park Service Rabow Edling Susanna 2018 The civic concept of the nation Liberalism in Pre Revolutionary Russia Routledge pp 18 37 doi 10 4324 9781315149509 2 ISBN 978 1 315 14950 9 S2CID 240337595 Notes on the State of Virginia Jefferson Thomas 1743 1826Archived 2013 08 29 at the Wayback Machine Acemoglu Daron Robinson James A 2012 Why nations fail the origins of power prosperity and poverty 1st ed New York Crown Publishers p 32 ISBN 0307719219 Retrieved October 27 2024 Encyclopedia JAMA 279 17 1409 May 6 1998 doi 10 1001 jama 279 17 1409 jbk0506 6 1 ISSN 0098 7484 Smith Generall Historie of Virginia 1624 history hanover edu Retrieved December 10 2019 Rountree Helen C and E Randolph Turner III Before and After Jamestown Virginia s Powhatans and Their Predecessors Gainesville University Press of Florida 2002 Rountree Helen C Pocahontas Powhatan Opechancanough Three Indian Lives Changed by Jamestown Charlottesville University of Virginia Press 2005 Grizzard Frank E 2007 Jamestown Colony A Political Social and Cultural History Santa Barbara CA ABL CLIO Inc pp Introduction l li ISBN 978 1 85109 637 4 Rountree Helen C 1996 Pocahontas s people the Powhatan Indians of Virginia through four centuries University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 585 15425 2 OCLC 44957641 Rountree Helen C 1998 Powhatan Indian Women The People Captain John Smith Barely Saw Ethnohistory 45 1 1 29 doi 10 2307 483170 ISSN 0014 1801 JSTOR 483170 The Chesapeake Bay Region and its People in 1607 PDF Retrieved November 15 2018 Rountree Helen C 1998 Powhatan Indian Women The People Captain John Smith Barely Saw Ethnohistory 45 1 1 29 doi 10 2307 483170 JSTOR 483170 Brown Hutch Summer 2000 Wildland Burning by American Indians in Virginia Fire Management Today 60 3 Washington DC U S Department of Agriculture Forest Service 30 33 Gale General OneFile Document Pocahontas celebrates a Powhatan harvest festival go gale com Retrieved March 12 2020 Rountree Helen C August 28 1992 Powhatan priests and English rectors world views and congregations in conflict The American Indian Quarterly 16 4 485 doi 10 2307 1185294 JSTOR 1185294 Retrieved August 28 2020 via Gale Seventeenth Century Virginia Algonquian Population Estimates 1973 Retrieved August 28 2020 Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail James River Basin Indian Towns amp Natural Resources They Relied On PDF Retrieved August 28 2020 WE HAVE A STORY TO TELL Native Peoples of Chesapeake Region PDF Retrieved August 28 2020 VDOE Virginia s First People Past amp Present Nansemond www doe virginia gov Retrieved August 28 2020 Chesapeake Bay Native Americans The Mariners Museum www marinersmuseum org Retrieved August 28 2020 The term Nottoway may derive from Nadawa or Nadowessioux widely translated as poisonous snake an Algonquian language term which speakers used to refer to members of competing language families specifically the Iroquoian or Siouan speaking tribes Because the Algonquian occupied the coastal areas they were the first tribes met by the English colonists who often adopted the use of such Algonquian ethnonyms names for other tribes not realizing at first that these differed from the tribes autonyms or names for themselves The Nottoway called themselves in their tongue Nottaway Dar sun ke Cheroenhaka People at the Fork of the Stream because they lived in the region of the Nottaway Blackwater River and Chowan River all Blackwater rivers but the meaning of the name Cheroenhaka is uncertain and still disputed GNIS Detail Pamunkey River geonames usgs gov Retrieved August 28 2020 Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail York River Basin Indian Towns amp Natural Resources They Relied On PDF Retrieved August 28 2020 VDOE Virginia s First People Past amp Present Pamunkey www doe virginia gov Retrieved August 28 2020 Pampatike Farm From Opechancanough to Col Thomas Carter www pampatike org Retrieved August 28 2020 not to be confused with the small chieftain also referred to as Mattapanient along the Patuxent River in northern Calvert and eastern Prince George s Counties of Maryland which was under the Suzerainty of the Patuxent or the mighty Piscataway Conoy The information on the number of warriors and hereby the population for the additional tribes listed by Strachey the Cantauncack Menapacunt Pataunck Ochahannauke Kaposecock e Pamareke Shamapa Orapaks Chepeco and the Paraconos far exceed the usual populations for the Powhatan tribes According to Feest Strachey s population numbers for the York and Mattaponi Rivers are to prefer over those of Smith especially with regard to the mighty Mattaponie but are probably too high for the tribes along the Pamunkey River the given 400 warriors or 1 300 tribal members for the Pamareke and Kaposecock s are questionable since both tribes are often regarded as subgroups of the mighty Pamunkey which according to Smith amp Strachey could raise itself about 300 warriors or 1 000 Tribal members counted VDOE Virginia s First People Past amp Present Mattaponi www doe virginia gov Retrieved August 28 2020 VDOE Virginia s First People Past amp Present Upper Mattaponi www doe virginia gov Retrieved August 28 2020 Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail Rappahannock River Basin Indian Towns amp Natural Resources They Relied On PDF Retrieved August 28 2020 Christopher Steadman The Powhatan Chiefdom 1606 Old Dominion University Model United Nations Society 2015 PDF Retrieved August 28 2020 VDOE Virginia s First People Past amp Present Rappahannock www doe virginia gov Retrieved August 28 2020 Wolfe Brendan February 17 2021 Patawomeck Tribe Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Humanities Retrieved May 30 2021 Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail Lower Eastern Shore Indian Towns amp Natural Resources They Relied On PDF Retrieved August 28 2020 Fiske Warren The Black and White World of Walter Ashby Plecker The Virginian Pilot August 18 2004 Virginia Indians Secretary of the Commonwealth Kelly Gee Retrieved December 23 2023 Patawomeck Indian Tribe of Virginia Cause IQ Retrieved December 23 2023 Indian Affairs Bureau January 12 2023 Indian Entities Recognized by and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs Federal Register 88 2112 16 Retrieved December 23 2023 Walsh Jim March 18 2019 State affirms status of Powhatan Renape Ramapough Lenape tribes Courier Post Retrieved December 22 2023 tribes uphold centuries old treaty by delivering dead deer to virginia governor 11 27 2024 The Pocahontas Myth Archived July 5 2013 at the Wayback Machine by Roy Crazy Horse Powhatan Renape Nation website accessed November 28 2009 Hatch p 42 Waldrup p 186 For a genealogy of Pocahontas elite slave holding settler descendants see Wyndham Robertson Pocahontas Alias Matoaka and Her Descendants through Her Marriage at Jamestown Virginia in April 1614 with John Rolph Gentleman J W Randolph amp English Richmond VA 1887 Halpert Madeline January 5 2023 How actor Edward Norton is related to Pocahontas BBC News Retrieved January 7 2023 Further readingLibrary resources about Powhatan Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Sakas Karliana The indigenous authorship of the narratives of the Spanish Jesuit mission of Ajacan 1570 1572 EHumanista vol 19 2011 p 511 Gale Academic Onefile Accessed 14 Nov 2019 Gleach Frederic W 1997 Powhatan s World and Colonial Virginia A Conflict of Cultures Lincoln University of Nebraska Press Gleach Frederic W 2006 Pocahontas An Exercise in Mythmaking and Marketing In New Perspectives on Native North America Cultures Histories and Representations ed by Sergei A Kan and Pauline Turner Strong pp 433 455 Lincoln University of Nebraska Press Karen Kupperman Settling With the Indians The Meeting of English and Indian Cultures in America 1580 1640 1980 A Bryant Nichols Jr Captain Christopher Newport Admiral of Virginia Sea Venture 2007 James Rice Nature and History in the Potomac Country From Hunter Gatherers to the Age of Jefferson 2009 Helen C Rountree Pocahontas s People The Powhatan Indians of Virginia Through Four Centuries 1990External linksMedia related to Powhatan at Wikimedia Commons Chronology of Powhatan Indian Activity National Park Service The Anglo Powhatan Wars A Study of Virginia Indians and Jamestown The First Century American in 1607 National Geographic UNC Charlotte linguist Blair Rudes restores lost language culture for The New World How a linguist revived New World language The Indigenous Maps and Mapping of North American Indians