CHAPTER V.
THE IROQUOIS.
The most intelligent and credible Indians of the Lenape stock, including the Mohicans, have ever asserted, that in the whole country bounded on the north by the river St. Lawrence and the Great Lakes (including what is now Nova Scotia and New Brunswick), on the west by the Mississippi, on the east by the Great Salt-water Lake,[108] and on the south by the country of the Creeks, Cherokees, and other Florida Indians, there were but two nations, the Mengwe, and themselves. Theirs was by far the most numerous and the most extensively settled, for their tribes extended even beyond the Mississippi. On the other side of the St. Lawrence, the Algonquins, the Killistenos or Knisteneaux, and others, speaking dialects of their language, prove their origin from the same stock. The Mengwe, on the contrary, were comparatively few, and occupied a much less portion of territory, being almost confined to the vicinity of the great lakes. But few tribes are known to be connected with them by descent and language; the principal ones are the Wyandots, otherwise called Hurons, and the Naudowessies. Almost every other nation within the boundaries described, is of the Lenape family.
Each of these two great nations, say the Delawares, had an ancient national name, and a tradition of their respective origin, handed down to them by their ancestors, and diffused among all the kindred tribes. By whatsoever names those tribes might be called, and whatever their numbers were, still they considered themselves, and were considered by others, as the offspring of the same original stock. All the tribes who had sprung from the Lenape called the mother nation _grandfather_, and received, in return, the appellation of _grandchildren_. They were all united by the strongest ties of friendship and alliance; in their own expressive language, they made but _one house, one fire, and one canoe_, that is to say, that they constituted together, one people, one family. The same thing took place between the Mengwe and the tribes descended from them. They and the Lenape had no relationship with each other, though they came over the Mississippi together at the same time. They considered each other as nations entirely distinct.
The Mengwe or Iroquois were always considered by the Lenape as only one nation, consisting of several confederated tribes. The name of Five and afterwards Six Nations, was given to them by the English, whose allies they were, probably to raise their consequence, and magnify the idea of their strength; but the Indian nations never did flatter them with that high sounding appellation, and considered them merely as confederated _tribes_.
The late Rev. Mr. Pyrlæus, in a large volume of MS. notes which he wrote between the years 1740 and 1760 (upwards of 70 years ago), has taken down on this subject the account given by the Iroquois themselves, as he had it from the mouth of an intelligent Mohawk chief,[109] whose veracity might be depended upon. After giving some details respecting the origin of their confederation, the time about which it took place, the names of the delegates from each of the confederated tribes, &c., he proceeds thus: “They then gave themselves the name _Aquanoshioni_, which means _one house_, _one family_, and consisted of the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagoes, Cayugas, and Senecas. This alliance having been first proposed by a Mohawk chief, the Mohawks rank in the _family_ as the _eldest brother_, the Oneidas, as the _eldest son_; the Senecas, who were the last who at that time had consented to the alliance, were called the _youngest son_; but the Tuscaroras, who joined the confederacy probably one hundred years afterwards, assumed that name, and the Senecas ranked in precedence before them, as being the _next youngest son_, or as we would say, the youngest son but one.”
The Rev. David Zeisberger also says: “That the Iroquois call themselves _Aquanoschioni_, which means _united people_, having united for the purpose of always reminding each other that their safety and power consist in a mutual and strict adherence to their alliance.”[110] He adds, that Onondago is the chief town of the Iroquois.
Thus, in the different translations of the name which these people gave themselves, we find nothing that conveys the ideas of _nations_, it implies no more than a _family_, an _united people_, a _family compact_. The different sections take ranks in this family, of which the _Onondagoes_ are the head, while the others are brothers and sons; all which tends clearly to prove, that they were originally but tribes, detached bodies of the same people, who, when brought together in close union, formed a complete family and became entitled to the name of a NATION.
We also see that self-preservation was the cause of their uniting, and that they were compelled by necessity to this measure, on which their existence depended. And though we have a right to suppose that that tribe which always takes the lead in the government of an Indian nation (the _Turtle_ tribe), existed among them, yet it is evident that its authority at that time was either wholly disregarded, or at least, was too weak to give complete efficacy to its measures.
If, then, we believe the information given us by both Pyrlæus and Zeisberger to be correct, we must be fully convinced that the Iroquois confederacy did not consist of Five or Six Nations, but of as many tribes or sections of the same people, forming together one nation. These two Missionaries are known to have been men of the strictest veracity; they were both, I may say, critically acquainted[111] with the Mengwe idiom, and they had their information from the most respectable and intelligent men among that nation, the former from the Mohawk, the latter from the Onondaga tribe. There is no reason, therefore, why the truth of their statements should be doubted.
The Lenape and their kindred tribes never have called the Iroquois “the Five or Six Nations.” In conversation, they call them the Mengwe, and never make use of any other but this generic name when speaking of them. In their councils, however, they occasionally distinguished them by the name _Palenach endchiesktajeet_.[113] These two words, literally translated mean “the five divisions, sections or parts together,” and does not in any manner imply the idea of _nations_. Had they meant to say “the Five Nations,” they would have expressed it by the words _Palenach ekhokewit_; those which they used, on the contrary, expressly imply _sectional divisions_, and leave no doubt about their meaning.
The Iroquois themselves, as we have already seen, had adopted a name, _Aquanoschioni_, merely indicative of their close union. After, however, they came to be informed of the meaning of the name which the English had given them, they were willing to let it pass as correct. The Indians are very fond of high sounding names; I have known myself chiefs who delighted to be called _Kings_, after they had learned from us that the rulers of the English and French nations were distinguished by that title.
Thus the proper name of those six united tribes is in their own language _Aquanoschioni_. By other nations they are called _Mengwe_, _Maquas_, _Mingoes_, and _Iroquois_. The Lenape call them by the first, the Mohicans and Dutch by the second, the English and Americans by the third, and the French by the fourth. I employ these different names indiscriminately in the course of this work.
As detached bodies or tribes, their names with the Lenape are the following:
1. _Sankhícani_, the Mohawks, from _Sankhican_, a gunlock, this people being the first who were furnished with muskets by the Europeans, the locks of which, with their effect in striking fire, was a subject of great astonishment to them; and thus they were named, as it were, _the fire-striking people_.
2. _W’Tássone_, the Oneidas. This name means the _stone-pipe makers_, and was given to them on account of their ingenuity in making tobacco pipes of stone.
3. _Onondágoes_, the Onondagoes. This name signifies in their own language _on the top of the hill_, their town being so situated.
4. _Queúgue_, Cayugas, thus called after a lake of the same name.
5. _Mæchachtínni_, the Senecas. This name means _Mountaineers_, and was given them because they inhabited the hilly parts of the country.
6. The _Tuscaroras_, the sixth and last tribe in the league, they call by the same name, yet I have never heard the Lenape speak of the _six divisions or tribes_; when they describe them in that manner, it is always by the number _Five_.