The Native Americans: An Illustrated HistoryDispossessed, of their ancestral homelands by successive invasions of Europeans, the first real Americans have long been cloaked in a veil of myth and legend that has hidden from us the true richness and diversity of Indian civilizations and cultures. This newly unfolding legacy represents an unparalleled body of untapped wisdom, which even now provides fresh perspectives on very modern problems. The astonishing reality of Indian history, presented here for the first time from the perspective of native Americans, will deepen our understanding of what it really means to be an American. The archaeological history of the native peoples of the Americas goes back more than 30,000 years. By the time Columbus landed in this "New" World, it was a very old world that already had seen entire civilizations rise and fall through the centuries. These linked continents were by then populated by some 75,000,000 people who spoke 2,000 distinct languages and had developed a rich diversity of separate cultures, all joined in trade by a venerable network that covered the entire northern continent. Here, in a fresh look at the Americas, is a view of this "new" world's magnificent sweep of history through the eyes of its original inhabitants. It is an inspiring story of their amazing adaptability to a challenging land, especially in the past five hundred years when native Americans were forced to cope with the introduction into their environment of the most rapacious predator they had ever faced: white European invaders. Spanning a thousand generations, from the time Ice Age man first set foot on this continent to the present, and beautifully written by five well-known authorities on Indian history andculture, this volume is lavishly illustrated with photographs, maps, and, the work of both historic and contemporary artists. |
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Page 84
... hands at flintknapping - chipping hand- held stone with a hammer or another stone to create flint weapons and tools . In his fifty years of flintknapping , the Master , Don Crabtree , has slashed himself in about every conceivable way ...
... hands at flintknapping - chipping hand- held stone with a hammer or another stone to create flint weapons and tools . In his fifty years of flintknapping , the Master , Don Crabtree , has slashed himself in about every conceivable way ...
Page 326
... hand , he promised that when the Civil War was over he would decisively eradicate graft within the Indian Bureau by rooting out those politi- cized Indian agents and their cronies in Washington and in the field - collec- tively known as ...
... hand , he promised that when the Civil War was over he would decisively eradicate graft within the Indian Bureau by rooting out those politi- cized Indian agents and their cronies in Washington and in the field - collec- tively known as ...
Page 378
... hand of the Indian Bureau has us in charge , " he proclaimed in the fiery speech he had dramatically entitled " Let ... hands , appointing committees , listening to papers . " Montezuma left that meeting wholly dissatisfied , and the ...
... hand of the Indian Bureau has us in charge , " he proclaimed in the fiery speech he had dramatically entitled " Let ... hands , appointing committees , listening to papers . " Montezuma left that meeting wholly dissatisfied , and the ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 14 |
BY ALVIN M JOSEPHY | 21 |
BLENDING WORLDS | 111 |
Copyright | |
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The Native Americans: An Illustrated History David H. Thomas,Jay Miller,Richard White Snippet view - 1995 |
Common terms and phrases
American American Indian animals Apache arrived attack bear became become began beliefs buffalo California called century ceremonial Cherokee chief civilization Coast colony communities continued corn created Creek cultural Dance dead developed disease early English European exchange farming father federal five followed force French groups hand horses houses human hundred hunting Huron Indian Iroquois killed Lake land language later leaders lived Mexico miles Mississippi moved named native natural Navajo needed North once OPPOSITE peace perhaps Plains plants political population Pueblo region religious remained reservation ritual River Sioux social society Spanish Standing symbolic Territory thousand throughout tion took towns trade traditional treaty tribal tribes turn United villages wanted warriors women