| Ontario Archaeological Museum (Toronto) - 1922 - 436 páginas
...subject of their origin. That writer's words regarding their former history are as follows: — "The general name, and that which is common to these four Nations, in the language of the country is \Vendat; the individual names are Attignawantan, Attigueenongnahac, Arendahronons, and Tohontaenrat.... | |
| Ontario Archaeological Museum (Toronto) - 1919 - 376 páginas
...subject of their origin. That writer's words regarding their former history are as follows: — "The general name, and that which is common to these four...others into their country, as it were, and adopted them — the one fifty years ago, and the other thirty. These first two speak with certainty of the... | |
| Ontario. Legislative Assembly - 1923 - 1150 páginas
...former history are as follows: — "The general name, and that which is common to these four Xations, in the language of the country is Wendat; the individual names are Attignawantan, Attigneenonguahac. Arendahronons, and Toliontaenrat. The first two are the two most important, having... | |
| Virgil J. Vogel - 1986 - 260 páginas
...Relations of 1639, Father Paul Le Jeune described the Huron as an alliance of four tribes, adding that "the general name, and that which is common to these four Nations in the language of the country is Wendat."24 From wendat came the better-known name Wyandot, or Wyandotte. These are the names given... | |
| Claudio R. Salvucci - 2002 - 346 páginas
...enemies, and of other interests, are hardly distinguishable except by their different progenitors... The general name, and that which is common to these four...Attigneenongnahac, Arendahronons, and Tohontaenrat. 229 But let us come to the name "Huron," applied originally to these principal nations of whom we have... | |
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