Page:Archæologia Americana—volume 2, 1836.djvu/101

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SECT. II.] ALGONKIN-LENAPE AND IROQUOIS NATIONS. 65 Although the Shawnoes have been well known to us since the year 1680, their previous history is very uncertain, and the various notices we have of them difficult to be reconciled. The first mention we have of them is by Ue Laet in 1632. After having enumerated the various tribes on both sides of Delaware River, he says, "some persons add to them the Shawanoes, Capitanasses &c." They are mentioned by the French under the name of Chaouanons, in the year 1672, as being neighbours and allies of the Andastes, an extinct Iroquois tribe, lying southwest of the Senecas, by whom they were de- stroyed or incorporated in that year.* Their original seats are uniformly placed, in all the ancient French maps, on the south side of the Ohio and extending southerly to the Cumberland River, which, in all the French and English maps, as late as that of Hutchins, bears also their name. That name which means " Southern," accords with that position. The Sauks and Foxes say, that they were originally of the same stock with themselves, and had migrated to the south.f The account given by the Five Nations corroborates the fact of their having been in alliance with the enemies of the Senecas, and that they were but late comers north of the Ohio. In the year 16S4, in answer to the complaint of the French, that they had attacked the Twightees or Miamis, the Five Nations assigned as one of the causes of war, that the Twightees had invited into their country the Satanas, in order to make war against them. J It is also well known that, when the Shawnoes of Pennsylvania began, in the year 174Q ; to migrate to the Ohio, they were ob- liged to obtain a grant or permission to that effect from the Wyandots. And, in a memorandum annexed to the treaty of Fort Harmar with the Wyandots, of January, 17S9, they de- clare that the country north of the Ohio, then occupied by the Shawnoes, is theirs (the Wyandots') of right, and that the Shawnoes are only living upon it by their permission. Lawson, in his account of Carolina, (1708,) speaking of the erratic habits of the Indian nations, says, that the Savanoes formerly lived on the banks of the Mississippi, that they re- moved to the head of one of the rivers of South Carolina, since which most of them had gone to the Iroquois country

  • Charlevoix. f Morse's Report.

J Satanas is the name given by the Five Nations to the Shawnoes. Colden, chap. V. pp. 69, 70. VOL. II. 9