Browse all books

Books in The Iroquois and Their Neighbors series

  • Origins of the Iroquois League: Narratives, Symbols, and Archaeology

    Anthony Wonderley, Martha L. Sempowski

    Paperback (Syracuse University Press, Oct. 15, 2019)
    The League of the Iroquois, the most famous native government in North America, dominated intertribal diplomacy in the Northeast and influenced the course of American colonial history for nearly two centuries. The age and early development of the League, however, have long been in dispute. In this highly original book, two anthropological archaeologists with differing approaches and distinct regional interests synthesize their research to explore the underpinnings of the confederacy. Wonderley and Sempowski endeavor to address such issues as when tribes coalesced, when intertribal alliances presaging the League were forged, when the five-nation confederation came to fruition, and what light oral tradition may shine on these developments. This groundbreaking work develops a new conversation in the field of Indigenous studies, one that deepens our understanding of the Iroquois League’s origins.
  • A Journey into Mohawk and Oneida Country, 1634-1635: The Journal of Harmen Meyndertsz Van Den Bogaert

    Charles Gehring, William Starna

    Paperback (Syracuse University Press, April 24, 2013)
    In 1634, the Dutch West India Company was anxious to know why the fur trade from New Netherland had been declining, so the company sent three employees far into Iroquois country to investigate. Harmen Meyndertsz van den Bogaert led the expedition from Fort Orange (present-day Albany, NY). His is the earliest known description of the interior of what is today New York State and its seventeenth-century native inhabitants. Van den Bogaert was a keen observer, and his journal is not only a daily log of where the expedition party traveled; it is also a detailed account of the Mohawks and the Oneidas: the settlements, modes of subsistence, and healing rituals. Van den Bogaert’s extraordinary wordlist is the earliest known recorded vocabulary of the Mohawk language. Gehring’s translation and Starna’s annotations provide indispensable material for anthropologists, ethnohistorians, linguists, and anyone with a special interest in Native American studies. Michelson’s current additions to the wordlist of Mohawk equivalents with English glosses (wherever possible) and his expert analysis of the language in the Native American passages offer a valuable new dimension to this edition of the journal.
  • Warrior in Two Camps: Ely S. Parker, Union General and Seneca Chief

    William Armstrong

    Paperback (Syrcause University Press, June 1, 1978)
    Traces the life of Parker, the first native American to serve as commissioner of Indian Affairs, and a staff officer to General Grant during the Civil War
  • Skunny Wundy: Seneca Indian Tales

    Arthur Parker

    Paperback (Syrcause University Press, Jan. 1, 1995)
    A collection of children's tales, handed down by Seneca Indians. They have been gathered together by a Seneca anthropologist, who himself is the grandson of a leading Seneca chief.
  • The History and Culture of Iroquois Diplomacy: An Interdisciplinary Guide to the Treaties of the Six Nations and Their League

    Francis Jennings

    Paperback (Syrcause University Press, June 1, 1995)
    This is a comprehensive collection of essays and reference material on the historical and ethnological aspects of Iroquois diplomacy, on its rituals and formulas, and on the treaties and alliances in which it was involved.
  • Legends of the Delaware Indians and Picture Writing

    Richard C. Adams, Legends of the Delaware Indians and Picture Writing Deborah Nichols

    Paperback (Syrcause University Press, May 1, 2000)
    Originally published in 1905, this book brings together 22 traditional Delaware Indian stories. Four of the legends have been re-translated into the Delaware language by native speakers, revealing the transformation of a transliterated Delaware text into an English-language story.
  • A Half-Life of Cardio-Pulmonary Function: Poems and Paintings

    Eric Gansworth

    Hardcover (Syrcause University Press, Feb. 25, 2008)
    Echoing the muscular rhythms of the heart beat, the poems in this stunning collection alternate between contraction and expansion. Eric Gansworth explores the act of enduring, physically, historically, and culturally. A member of the Haudenosaunee tribe, Gansworth expresses the tensions experienced by members of a marginalized culture struggling to maintain tradition within a much larger dominant culture. With equal measures of humor, wisdom, poignancy, and beauty, Gansworth’s poems mine the infinite varieties of individual and collective loss and recovery. Fourteen paintings punctuate his poetry, creating an active dialogue between word and image steeped in the tradition of the mythic Haudenosaunee world. A Half-Life of Cardio-Pulmonary Function is the most recent addition to Gansworth’s remarkable body of work chronicling the lives of upstate New York’s Indian communities.
  • The Journey into Mohawk and Oneida Country, 1634-1635: The Journal of Harmen Meyndertsz van den Bogaert

    Charles Gehring, William Starna

    Paperback (Syracuse University Press, May 1, 1988)
    This edition of the earliest account of Iroquis culture includes scholarly notes on the historical context of New Netherland and corrects some significant errors and omissions in previous translations of the journal.
  • A Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison

    James Seaver

    Paperback (Syrcause University Press, May 1, 1990)
    As one of the earliest literary forms of colonial America, the Indian captivity narrative is important not only in the history of American letters but also as an indispensable source concerning the colonization of the “frontier,” the peoples who dwelt on either side of it, and the often limited understanding they had of one another. A Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison is one of the best of this literary genre. In 1758, fifteen-year-old Mary Jemison and her family were captured near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, by a Shawnee and French raiding party. Shortly thereafter, her family was killed; she was turned over to a Seneca family, adopted by them, and four years later taken to their western New York homeland―where, by choice, she spent the rest of her life as an Iroquois wife, mother, and landed proprietor. In time she gained respect as a negotiator and was known in New York and adjacent states as the “white woman of the Genesee.” James E. Seaver’s account of her life, written in the first person, taking on her voice as narrator, tells not only of her own adventures and misfortunes but also of the lives, customs, and attitudes of the Indians with whom she identified. When Seaver (about whom very little is known) interviewed Jemison in 1823, she was eighty years old. She did not read or write English, but she spoke it fluently. The book, published in 1824 and reprinted more than thirty times both in the United States and abroad, lives on; for readers continue to wonder at the strength and complexity of this remarkable woman’s life.
  • Legends of the Delaware Indians and Picture Writing

    Richard Adams

    Hardcover (Syracuse University Press, Dec. 1, 1997)
    Book by Adams, Richard C.
  • The History and Culture of Iroquois Diplomacy: An Interdisciplinary Guide to the Treaties of the Six Nations and Their League

    Francis Jennings

    Hardcover (Syracuse University Press, June 1, 1995)
    Examines the historical and ethnological aspects of Iroquois diplomacy, discussing its rituals and formulas and detailing the treaties and alliances in which is was used.
  • Origins of the Iroquois League: Narratives, Symbols, and Archaeology

    Anthony Wonderley, Martha L. Sempowski

    Hardcover (Syracuse University Press, Oct. 15, 2019)
    The League of the Iroquois, the most famous native government in North America, dominated intertribal diplomacy in the Northeast and influenced the course of American colonial history for nearly two centuries. The age and early development of the League, however, have long been in dispute. In this highly original book, two anthropological archaeologists with differing approaches and distinct regional interests synthesize their research to explore the underpinnings of the confederacy. Wonderley and Sempowski endeavor to address such issues as when tribes coalesced, when intertribal alliances presaging the League were forged, when the five-nation confederation came to fruition, and what light oral tradition may shine on these developments. This groundbreaking work develops a new conversation in the field of Indigenous studies, one that deepens our understanding of the Iroquois League’s origins.