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Wabanaki Confederacy : ウィキペディア英語版
Wabanaki Confederacy
The Wabanaki Confederacy (''Wabenaki, Wobanaki'' - translated roughly as 'People of the First Light' or 'People of the Dawnland') are a First Nations and Native American confederation of five principal Nations: the Mi'kmaq, Maliseet, Passamaquoddy, Abenaki and Penobscot.
Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy — the Wabanaki peoples — are located in, and named for, the area they call ''Wabanahkik'' ('Dawnland'), generally known to European settlers as Acadia. It is now most of Maine, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, plus some of Quebec south of the St. Lawrence River. The Western Abenaki are located in New Hampshire, Vermont, and into Massachusetts.〔Toensing, Gale Courey. ("Sacred fire lights the Wabanaki Confederacy" ), ''Indian Country Today'' (June 27, 2008), ICT Media Network〕
In its most recent official communications the confederacy has emphasized common cause, and acceptance of alliances, with environmental activists allied with its goal of protecting the land and waters, powers gained under the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and related treaties major powers have signed.〔Howe, Miles. ("Rebuilding the Wabanaki Confederacy" ). ''Halifax Media Co-op'' (September 3, 2012).〕
==History==
Historically, the confederacy has united five North American Algonquian language-speaking First Nations Peoples. It played a key role in the American Revolution via the Treaty of Watertown signed in 1776, by two of its constituent Peoples, the Mi'kmaq and Passamaquoddy. Wabanaki soldiers from Canada are still permitted, due to this treaty, to join the US military, and have done so in the recent conflicts the US has engaged in, including the Afghanistan war and the Iraq War.
Members of the Wabanaki Confederacy are:
* ''(Western) Abenaki''
* ''(Eastern) Abenaki'', or ''Penawapskewi'' (Penobscot)
* ''Míkmaq'' (Mi'kmaq, L'nu or Micmac)
* ''Pestomuhkati'' (Passamaquoddy)
* ''Wolastoqiyik'' (Maliseet or Malicite)
Nations in the Confederacy are also closely allied with the Innu and Algonquin, and with the Iroquoian-speaking Wyandot. Historically, Wabanaki were also allies of the Huron and with them jointly invited the colonization of Quebec City and LaHave and the formation of New France in 1603, to put French guns, ships and forts between themselves and the Mohawk people. Today the only remaining Huron First Nation is in the suburbs of Quebec City itself, a legacy of this protective alliance.
The Wabanaki ancestral homeland stretches from Newfoundland, Canada, to the Merrimack River valley in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. Following the European settlement in the early 17th century, this became a hotly contested borderland between colonial New England and French Acadia. Beginning with King William's War in 1688, members of the Wabanaki Confederacy of Acadia participated in six major wars before the British defeated the French in North America:
*King William's War (1688–1697)
*Queen Anne's War (1702–1713)
*Father Rale's War (1722–1725)
*King George's War (1744–1748)
*Father Le Loutre's War (1749–1755)
*French and Indian War (1754–1763)
During this period, their population was not only radically decimated due to many decades of warfare, but also because of famines and devastating epidemics.〔Prins, Harald E.L., and McBride, Bunny, ("Asticou's Island Domain: Wabanaki Peoples at Mount Desert Island 1500-2000 )," (National Park Service, 2007)〕
Wabanaki people freely intermarried with French Catholics in Acadia starting in 1610 after the conversion of Chief Henri Membertou. After 1783 Black settlers, refugees from the US, began to settle in the historical territory and many intermarriages between these peoples occurred, especially in southwest Nova Scotia from Yarmouth to Halifax. Suppression of Acadian, Black, Mi'kmaq and Irish people under British rule tended to force these peoples together as allies of necessity. Mixed-race children were commonly abandoned on reserves to be raised in Wabanaki tradition, as late as the 1970s.
The Wabanaki Confederacy was forcibly disbanded in 1862, but the five Wabanaki nations still exist, and they remain friends and allies - in part because all peoples claiming Wabanaki heritage have forebears from multiple Wabanaki and colonial ancestries.

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