Mixing chronological narrative with a full ecological portrait, anthropologists Rountree and Davidson have reconstructed the culture and history of Virginia’s and Maryland’s Eastern Shore Indians from a.d. 800 until the last tribes disbanded in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
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Blackwell North Amer)
800 until the last tribes disbanded in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. - (Univ of Virginia)
Mixing chronological narrative with a full ecological portrait, anthropologists Rountree and Davidson have reconstructed the culture and history of Virginia’s and Maryland’s Eastern Shore Indians from a.d. 800 until the last tribes disbanded in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
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Univ of Virginia)
Helen C. Rountree, Professor of Anthropology at Old Dominion University, is the author of Pocahontas’s People: The Powhatan Indians of Virginia through Four Centuries and the editor of Powhatan Foreign Relations, 1500–1722 (Virginia). Thomas E. Davidson is Chief Curator, Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation.
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Blackwell North Amer)
Helen C. Rountree, Professor of Anthropology at Old Dominion University, is the author of Pocahontas’s People: The Powhatan Indians of Virginia through Four Centuries and the editor of Powhatan Foreign Relations, 1500–1722 (Virginia). Thomas E. Davidson is Chief Curator, Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation.
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Univ of Virginia)