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Kittamaqundi

Coordinates: 38°42′06″N 77°02′36″W / 38.701786°N 77.043445°W / 38.701786; -77.043445
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Kittamaqundi
Piscataway Creek
Map
Country United States of America
State Maryland
County Prince George's
Government
 • TayacKittamaquund
Population
 (2013)
 • Estimate 
()
Disbanded
Time zoneUTC-5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-4 (EDT)

38°42′06″N 77°02′36″W / 38.701786°N 77.043445°W / 38.701786; -77.043445

manuscript prayers written between 1634 and 1640 in English, Latin, and Piscataway in the hand of Andrew White SJ, the first Catholic missionary to the Maryland colony. In the blank Pages of an Edition of Manuale sacerdotum hoc est, ritus administrandi sacramenta. Printed in Douai 1610. In the Lauinger Library, University of Georgetown

Around 1622, the Piscataway tribe, which led the Conoy Federation, built a town they soon called Kittamaqundi on Piscataway Creek near the modern day town of Piscataway, Prince George's County, Maryland.[1][2][3][4] When English first visited the town, in 1634, they learned it was named after the relatively new Tayac (Emperor) Kittamaquund, who had assumed power the previous year after killing his brother Wannas.[5]

Etymology

Some English translated the Algonkian name Kittamaquund as Chitomachen.[6] One author translated Kittamaqundi as "Great Beaver Place" and Chitomachen as "strong bear".[7]

History

Previously, the Piscataway's principal town (and the site of its cemetery and holy places) had been Moyaone on the Accokeek Creek near the Potomac River, which was abandoned after a fire.[8] Famine and disease in previous years, and retaliation by either the English or tribes in the Powhatan Confederacy could have contributed to Moyaone's abandonment, for Kittamaquund would pursue an assimilation or accommodation strategy with the English. Wahunsenacawh, the former paramount chieftain of the Powhatan Confederacy across the Potomac River, had died in 1618, and in his last years had convinced his subordinate tribes near Jamestown, Virginia (including the Kecoughtan and Chickahominy) to stop trading grain to the English settlers, who he wished would leave. The Piscataway (later called the Piscataway-Conoys), who although speaking a related Algonquin tongue were not under Powhatan's control, remained willing to trade foodstuffs with the English who sailed to their village, since they sought assistance against Susquehannock and Seneca raiders.[9] On March 22, 1622, the new war-leader of the Powhatan Confederacy, Opchanacanough, led a series of coordinated attacks on English settlements, nearly wiping out the Jamestown settlement but for warnings given the colonists by natives friendly to them, thus beginning the second Anglo-Powhatan war.

In June 1639, Jesuits led by Father Andrew White established a mission at Kittamaqundi. White wrote of curing Kittamaquund and his son of an illness with a combination of a powder, holy water, and blood letting and baptizing a condemned tribesman before execution.[10] On 5 July 1640 Fr. White baptised the chief as "Charles" and his wife as "Mary" along with his counselor Mosorcoques' as John. White then married Charles and Mary. The couple entrusted their seven-year-old daughter (also Mary) to Governor Leonard Calvert and his sister-in-law Margaret Brent for education in English ways at St. Mary's City, Maryland.[11] By 1642, six Jesuits lived in the village.[12] The Jesuits abandoned the village in 1643 after Susquehannock raiders took men and supplies. In 1644, as both another Anglo-Powhatan war neared its end and English religious wars spread and nearly obliterated the Maryland colony, English occupied the town as a protective outpost.[citation needed]

By 1675, Susquehannock displaced by English settlers had taken over Kittamaqundi's agricultural fields and built a 180 foot long palisade wall. Virginia and Maryland militia led by Major Truman blamed the Susquehannock for killing settlers across the Potomac River in Stafford County, Virginia. Their killing of five Susquehannock chiefs who agreed to a peace parley, as well as the town's destruction, led to revenge killings across the Potomac in Virginia, precipitating Bacon's Rebellion.[13]

Piscataway signed a treaty with William Penn in 1701. Many had settled near Conoy (their name to Iroquois-speakers ) creek in Pennsylvania by 1718.[14] In 1704, English settlers laid out the town of Piscataway, Maryland near or on the site of Kittamaqundi.[15] A stained glass at Saint Ignatius Church in nearby Port Tobacco, Maryland depicts Kittamaquund's baptism.[16]

Village life

Villagers lived in oval tent structures made of hide covered saplings with a central hole for light and ventilation for a fire. Tribe leaders used beds raised above the ground by four posts.[17] Wooded areas would have been cleared by the traditional technique of stripping bark off trees to kill them, then using fire to clear a field. Once cleared, mounds of dirt would host corn comingled with bean plants using the stalks for support. Squash would be grown between the mounds.[18] The river based village would also collect fish and oysters using dugout canoes. Kittamaquund was described as wearing shells to denote his role as leader.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ Maryland: A History of Its People. p. 10.
  2. ^ Jordan E. Kerber. Cross-cultural Collaboration: Native Peoples and Archaeology in the Northeastern United States. p. 115.
  3. ^ Sharon Malinowski. The Gale Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes: Northeast, Southeast, Caribbean. p. 249.
  4. ^ Sharon Malinowski. The Gale Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes: Northeast, Southeast, Caribbean. p. 249.
  5. ^ Daniel S. Murphree. Native America: A State-by-state Historical Encyclopedia, Volume 1. p. 487.
  6. ^ Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences, Volume 16. 1926. p. 308.
  7. ^ Daniel Garrison Brinton. The Lenâpé and their legends; with the complete text and symbols. p. 27.
  8. ^ Paul Joseph Travers (1990). The Patapsco: Baltimore's River of History. Maryland Historical Society Tidewater Publishers. p. 20.
  9. ^ Thelma Ruskin, Indians of the Tidewater County of Maryland, Virginia, Delaware and North Carolina (Maryland Historical Press, 1986) p. 33
  10. ^ Andrew White. Relatio itineris in Marylandiam, Issue.
  11. ^ James Grant Wilson, John Fiske. Appleton's cyclopædia of American biography, Volume 1. p. 605.
  12. ^ Andrew White. Relatio itineris in Marylandiam, Issue. p. 63.
  13. ^ Barry C. Kent. Jacob My Friend: His 17th Century Account of the Susquehannock Indians. p. 472.
  14. ^ Paula W. Wallace. Indians in Pennsylvania. p. 111.
  15. ^ Baltz, Shirley Vlasak (1984). A Chronicle of Belair. Bowie, Maryland: Bowie Heritage Committee. pp. 4–7. LCCN 85165028.
  16. ^ "Exploring the Piscataways of Southern Maryland". Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  17. ^ Donald B. Ricky. Indians of Maryland. p. 90.
  18. ^ Craig A. Doherty, Katherine M. Doherty. Maryland. p. 5.
  19. ^ Andrew White. Relatio itineris in Marylandiam, Issue. p. 63.
  20. ^ The Howard County Historical Society. Howard County. p. 50.
  21. ^ "Columbia Association Lakes". Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  22. ^ Karen Nitkin. Maryland: Hundreds of Ideas for Day Trips with the Kids. p. 10.
  23. ^ "BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES FOR SYMPHONY STREAM AND LAKE KITTAMAQUNDI WATERSHEDS" (PDF). Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  24. ^ Ann Forsyth. Reforming Suburbia: The Planned Communities of Irvine, Columbia, and the Woodlands. p. 112.
  25. ^ Pioneer Society of America (1970). Echoes of History, Volumes 1-5. p. 29.