- Wyandot people - Wikipedia
The Wyandot people (also Wyandotte, Wendat, Waⁿdát, or Huron) [2] are an Indigenous people of the Northeastern Woodlands of the present-day United States and Canada
- Wendat Confederacy | Haudenosaunee, Huron, Wyandotte, Great Lakes . . .
Wendat Confederacy, among Indigenous North American groups, a confederacy of four Iroquoians-speaking bands of the Wendat nation—the Rock, Bear, Cord, and Deer bands—together with a few smaller communities that joined them at different periods for protection against the Haudenosaunee Confederacy
- Wendat (Huron) - The Canadian Encyclopedia
The Wendat (also known as Huron-Wendat) are an Iroquoian -speaking nation that have occupied the St Lawrence Valley and estuary to the Great Lakes region “Huron” was a nickname given to the Wendat by the French
- Huron Traditional Site - Wendake, Québec
Located on the Wendat community, the Huron Traditional Site is a unique opportunity to discover the history, the culture and the lifestyle of Wendats of the past and of today
- History - Wyandotte Nation
Four different and equally powerful tribes were known as the Huron (Wendat) Confederacy The founders of the Huron Confederacy were the Attignawantan and Attingueenongnahac
- Huron wendat - Summary - eHRAF World Cultures
Due to the important role the Wendat played as middlemen during the fur trade era (first half of the seventeenth century), Wendat was the lingua franca of business and diplomacy
- 5. 6 Belief and Culture: The Wendat Experience
In 1636 smallpox swept through the Wendat villages Over a five-year period the disease picked away at the Wendat past and future, claiming the lives of elders (who were both the story-keepers and political memory of their community) and children in particular
- Huron-Wendat - Misko Aki
The Huron-Wendat were the northernmost Iroquoian language speakers, who in the seventeenth century inhabited the area between Lake Simcoe and Georgian Bay, known historically as Wendake
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