Book contents
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Contributors to Volume ii
- Introduction to Volume ii
- Part I Settler Colonialism
- Part II Empire-Building and State Domination
- 4 A Case Lacking Contemporaneous Local Sources
- 5 Atrocity and Genocide in Japan’s Invasion of Korea, 1592–1598
- 6 The English Conquest of Ireland, c.1530–c.1650
- 7 Extirpation and Annihilation in Cromwellian Ireland
- 8 Genocide in the Spice Islands
- 9 ‘Too Furious’
- 10 The Destruction of Wendake (Huronia), 1647–1652
- 11 A ‘Spreading Fire’
- 12 The Qing Extermination of the Zünghars
- 13 A Vicious Civil War in the French Revolution
- 14 The Zulu Kingdom as a Genocidal and Post-genocidal Society, c.1810 to the Present
- Part III Nineteenth-Century Frontier Genocides
- Part IV Premonitions
- Index
10 - The Destruction of Wendake (Huronia), 1647–1652
from Part II - Empire-Building and State Domination
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2023
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Contributors to Volume ii
- Introduction to Volume ii
- Part I Settler Colonialism
- Part II Empire-Building and State Domination
- 4 A Case Lacking Contemporaneous Local Sources
- 5 Atrocity and Genocide in Japan’s Invasion of Korea, 1592–1598
- 6 The English Conquest of Ireland, c.1530–c.1650
- 7 Extirpation and Annihilation in Cromwellian Ireland
- 8 Genocide in the Spice Islands
- 9 ‘Too Furious’
- 10 The Destruction of Wendake (Huronia), 1647–1652
- 11 A ‘Spreading Fire’
- 12 The Qing Extermination of the Zünghars
- 13 A Vicious Civil War in the French Revolution
- 14 The Zulu Kingdom as a Genocidal and Post-genocidal Society, c.1810 to the Present
- Part III Nineteenth-Century Frontier Genocides
- Part IV Premonitions
- Index
Summary
Examining the pandemic relations of violence emerged across interior portions of seventeenth-century North America, this chapter assesses the displacement of colonialism onto Indigenous peoples. Starting with the French and Dutch colonization of Northeastern American watersheds, concentric waves of devastation radiated into interior Iroquoian and Algonquian-speaking communities, disrupting existing social, military, and economic relations. This chapter revisits the clash of the Wendat (Huron) and Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) confederacies in the first half of the Seventeenth century and situates this violent history within the broader imperial contests remaking Native North America.
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- Information
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide , pp. 243 - 266Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023