Beschreibung
Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 40. Chapters: King George County, Virginia, Powhatan, Pamunkey, Occaneechi, Monacan people, Saponi, Paspahegh, Nansemond, Mattaponi, Chickahominy people, Appomattoc, Nottoway people, Manahoac, Patawomeck, Assateague people, Doeg tribe, Rappahannock Tribe, Manskin, Tutelo, Ani-Stohini/Unami, Chisca, Chesepian, Nacotchtank, Wicocomico, Senedos. Excerpt: This page details the history and current status of Indian tribes in the Commonwealth of Virginia. All of the Commonwealth of Virginia used to be Virginia Indian territory, an area estimated to have been occupied by indigenous peoples for more than 12,000 years. Their population has been estimated to have been about 50,000 at the time of European colonization. The various peoples belonged to three major language families: roughly, Algonquian on the coast, and Siouan and Iroquoian in the interior. About 30 Algonquian tribes were allied in the powerful Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom, estimated to include 15,000 people at the time of English colonization. Today, enrolled tribal members of the eleven state-recognized tribes number more than 5,000. Collectively they own fewer than 2,000 acres (8.1 km) of land. Only two of the tribes, the Pamunkey and Mattaponi, retain reservation lands assigned by treaties signed with the English colonists in the 17th century. Federal legislation is being considered that would provide recognition to six of Virginia's non-reservation tribes. Hearings established that they would meet the federal criteria for continuity and retention of identity as tribes, but they have been disadvantaged by lacking reservations and by state governmental actions that altered records of Indian identification. Some records were destroyed during the American Civil War. More recently, in the early decades of the 20th century, state officials changed vital records of birth and marriage while implementing the Racial Integrity Act of 1924 and caused Indian individuals and families to lose documentation of their identities. A 1585 painting of a Chesapeake Bay warrior by John WhiteDocumentation suggests that Spanish explorers entered what is now Virginia in two separate places, decades before the English founded Jamestown. They had charted the eastern Atlantic coastline north of Florida by 1525. In 1609, Ecija, seeking to deny the English claim, asserted that Lucas Váz
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