Brings the paranormal beings and places of the Iroquois folklore tradition to life through historic and contemporary accounts of otherworldly encounters • Recounts stories of shapeshifting witches, giant flying heads, enchanted masks, ethereal lights, talking animals, Little People, spirit-choirs, potent curses, and haunted hills, roads, and battlefields • Includes accounts of miraculous healings by shamans and medicine people such as Mad Bear and Ted Williams • Shows how these traditions can help one see the richness of the world and help those who have lost the chants of their own ancestors With a rich history reaching back more than one thousand years, the six nations of the Iroquois Confederacy--the Mohawk, the Oneida, the Onondaga, the Cayuga, the Seneca, and the Tuscarora--are considered to be the most avid storytellers on earth with a collection of tales so vast it would dwarf those of any other society. Covering nearly the whole of New York State from the Hudson and Mohawk River Valleys westward across the Finger Lakes region to Niagara Falls and Salamanca, this mystical culture’s supernatural tradition is the psychic bedrock of the Northeast, yet their treasury of tales and beliefs is largely unknown and their most powerful sacred sites unrecognized. Assembling the lore and beliefs of this guarded spiritual legacy, Michael Bastine and Mason Winfield share the stories they have collected of both historic and contemporary encounters with beings and places of Iroquois legend: shapeshifting witches, strange forest creatures, ethereal lights, vampire zombies, cursed areas, dark magicians, talking animals, enchanted masks, and haunted hills, roads, and battlefields as well as accounts of miraculous healings by medicine people such as Mad Bear and Ted Williams. Grounding their tales with a history of the Haundenosaunee, the People of the Long House, the authors show how the supernatural beings, places, and customs of the Iroquois live on in contemporary paranormal experience, still surfacing as startling and sometimes inspiring reports of otherworldly creatures, haunted sites, after-death messages, and mystical visions. Providing a link with America’s oldest spiritual roots, these stories help us more deeply know the nature and super-nature around us as well as offer spiritual insights for those who can no longer hear the chants of their own ancestors.
Legends , Traditions , and Laws of the Iroquois ; or , Six Nations and History of the Tuscarora Indians . Lockport , N.Y .: Union Printing and Publishing . Jones , Dorothy V. 1982. License for Empire : Colonialism by Treaty .
This is especially evident in Iroquois medical practices, which connect man to nature and the powerful forces in the supernatural realm.
Likewise among the Cherokee , Timberlake reported that warriors danced individually , recited exploits , and threw ... and by the Seneca ganisdogk'e .
SUPERNATURAL AID FOR HUMAN PURPOSES The prayers of Iroquois converts cannot be seen purely as gestures of affiliation with the French . Along with their social function , the Catholic observances practiced so assiduously at Kahnawake ...
The Seventh Edition of This Land was Theirs examines both the traditional and contemporary lifeways of 12 North American Indian tribes. Ranging from the Netslilik hunters of the Arctic Circle...
Gibson, Jon L. (1974). Aboriginal Warfare in the Protohistoric Southeast: An Al— ternative Perspective. American Antiquity 39:130—33. Gibson, Jon L., and Philip Carr (2004). Big Mounds, Big Rings, Big Power. In Signs of Power: The Rise ...
Introduces the French and Indian War, including the origins of the war; the interactions of the Native Americans, French settlers, British colonists, and British officials; and the consequences of the war.
Symposium on Cherokee and Iroquois Culture ( Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin , no . 180 , Washington ) . FENTON , WILLIAM H. , AND MERLE H. DEARDORFF 1943 . The Last Passenger Pigeon Hunts of the Cornplanter Senecas ( Journal of ...
For three decades, Native American history has been dominated by two major themes. The first is "The Cant of Conquest," the notion that all native peoples who came into...