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・ Pavoncito Prison
・ Pavone
・ Pavone Canavese
・ Pavone del Mella
・ Pavones (Madrid Metro)
・ Pavoni
・ Pavonia
・ Pavonia (plant)
・ Pavonia Ferry
・ Pavonia hastata
・ Pavonia lasiopetala
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・ Pavonia Terminal
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・ Pavonia × gledhillii
Pavonia, New Netherland
・ Pavonia-Newport (HBLR station)
・ Pavonine cuckoo
・ Pavonine quetzal
・ Pavonis
・ Pavonis Mons
・ Pavoor
・ Pavoor Uliya
・ Pavoor, Dakshina Kannada
・ Pavoorchatram
・ Pavor
・ Pavor Nocturnus (Sanctuary)
・ Pavoraja
・ Pavoraja alleni
・ Pavoraja arenaria


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Pavonia, New Netherland : ウィキペディア英語版
Pavonia, New Netherland

Pavonia was the first European settlement on the west bank of the North River (Hudson River) that was part of the seventeenth-century province of New Netherland in what would become the present Hudson County, New Jersey.
==Hudson and the Hackensack==

The first European to record exploration of the area was Robert Juet, first mate of Henry Hudson, an English sea captain commissioned by the Dutch East India Company. Their ship, the ''Halve Maen'' (''Half Moon''), ventured in the Kill van Kull and Newark Bay and anchored at Weehawken Cove during 1609, while exploring the Upper New York Bay and the Hudson Valley.〔(Juet's Journal )〕 By 1617 a ''factorij'', or trading post, was established at Communipaw.〔Joan F. Doherty, ''Hudson County The Left Bank'', ISBN 0-89781-172-0 (Windsor Publications, Inc., 1986)〕 Others may have been established at Arresick or Hobokan Hackingh.〔Perhaps at Paulus Hook, in what is now Jersey City, or else at Castle Point, the trading station of Hobokan Hackingh. From either one of these places the runners may have made their way to what is now Elizabeth, N. J., and thence followed an Indian trail to the bend in the Delaware, near Trenton, N. J. (See R. P. Bolton, Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis Lin the series of Indian Notes and Monographs published by the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, pp. 198–99, and map of eastern New Jersey, of 1747, in the same volume.) De Vries says that when Michiel Pauw, during 1630, discovered that other directors of the West India Company had appropriated the land at Fort Orange for themselves, he "immediately had the land below, opposite Fort Amsterdam, where the Indians are compelled to cross to the fort with their beavers, registered for himself, and called it Pavonia." (J. F. Jameson, Narratives of New Netherland, p. 210.)〕
Initially, these posts were set up for fur trade with the indigenous population. At that time the area was inhabited by bands of Algonquian language speaking peoples, known collectively as Lenni Lenape and later called the Delawares. Early maps show it to be the territory of the Sangicans.〔(1614 Block Map )〕 Later, the group of seasonally migrational people who circulated in the region were to become known by the exonym, Hackensack. They, along with the Tappan, the Wappinger, the Raritan, the Manhattan, the Canarsee, and other groups would be known to future settlers as "the River Indians".〔Indian Tribes of Hudson's River; Ruttenber, E.M.; Hope Farm Press, 3rd ed, 2001, ISBN 0-910746-98-2〕

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