Native nations A millennium in North America

Kathleen DuVal

Book - 2024

"In this magisterial history of the continent, Kathleen DuVal traces the power of Native nations from the rise of ancient cities more than 1000 years ago to the present. She reframes North American history, noting significantly that Indigenous civilizations did not come to a halt when a few wandering explorers or hungry settlers arrived, even when the strangers came well-armed. A millennium ago, North American cities rivaled urban centers around the world in size, but following a period of climate change and instability DuVal shows how numerous nations emerged from previously centralized civilizations. From this urban past, patterns of egalitarian government structures, complex economies and trade, and diplomacy spread across North Ame...rica. And, when Europeans did arrive in the 16th century, they encountered societies they did not understand and whose power they often underestimated. For centuries, Indigenous people maintained an upper hand and used Europeans in pursuit of their own interests. In Native Nations, we see how Mohawks closely controlled trade with the Dutch--and influenced global trade patterns--and how Quapaws manipulated French colonists. With the American Revolution, power dynamics shifted, but Indigenous people continued to control the majority of the continent. The Shawnee brothers Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa built alliances across the continent and encouraged a controversial new definition of Native identity to attempt to wall off U.S. ambitions. The Cherokees created new institutions to assert their sovereignty to the U.S. and on the global stage, and the Kiowas used their preponderance of power in the west to regulate the passage of white settlers across their territory. The definitions of power and means of exerting it shifted over time, but the sovereignty and influence of Indigenous nations has been a constant"--

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Subjects
Genres
History
Informational works
Biographies
Published
New York : Random House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Kathleen DuVal (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxx, 718 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 563-687) and index.
ISBN
9780525511038
  • List of Illustrations and Maps
  • Foreword: Many Nations
  • Part I. The Indigenous Peoples of North America, 1000s to 1750
  • Chapter 1. Ancient Cities in Arizona, Illinois, and Alabama
  • Chapter 2. The "Fall" of Cities and the Rise of a More Egalitarian Order
  • Chapter 3. Ossomocomuck and Roanoke Island
  • Chapter 4. Mohawk Peace and War
  • Chapter 5. The O'odham Himdag
  • Chapter 6. Quapaw Diplomacy
  • Part II. Confronting Settler Power, 1750 and Beyond
  • Chapter 7. Shawnee Towns and Farms in the Ohio Valley
  • Chapter 8. Debates over Race and Nation
  • Chapter 9. The Nineteenth-Century Cherokee Nation
  • Chapter 10. Kiowas and the Creation of the Plains Indians
  • Chapter 11. Removals from the East to a Native West
  • Chapter 12. The Survival of Nations
  • Afterword: Sovereignty Today
  • Acknowledgments
  • Further Reading
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This prodigiously researched and enlightening study from University of North Carolina historian DuVal (Independence Lost) recenters the past 1,000 years of Native North American history around the political power exercised by Indigenous governments. Beginning with the civilizations that established large cities a millennium ago in the Mississippi Valley--with pyramids, castles, and major road and river systems--she explains that agricultural instability during the Little Ice Age (c. 1250) prompted a turn away from urbanization. Native governments morphed into smaller-scale, more egalitarian organizations that encouraged "shared prosperity and shared decision making." These smaller states developed complex and advanced systems of diplomacy, economics, and governance that, DuVal argues, perplexed, intrigued, and often outmatched the first several centuries of European settlers. One fascinating example is the Mohawk government's regulation of trade with the Dutch in the 17th century. "Hardly the passive consumers the colonial planners hoped for," the Mohawks artificially inflated the price of furs so the Dutch could only turn a profit by paying with guns, the Mohawks' most sought after European good. Tracing numerous Native governments across the ensuing centuries--including the 19th century's Cherokee republic and alliance of Great Plains nations--DuVal provides a profoundly empowered history of Native America. This keen reframing will appeal to fans of David Graeber and David Wengrow's The Dawn of Everything. (Apr.)Correction: An earlier version of this review misidentified the century in which the Cherokee republic existed.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

DuVal's (history, Univ. of North Carolina; Independence Lost) comprehensive latest is a thought-provoking account of the history and achievements of Indigenous peoples in North America. In this impressively researched book, DuVal focuses primarily on the contiguous United States, debunking the idea that Indigenous civilizations were destined to fall before the might of European nations. She argues that complex and mighty societies existed long before colonizers arrived, and many thrived after, even when new European neighbors fell prey to plague, famine, and conflict. Narrator Carolina Hoyos is a measured, nuanced guide through the dense hours of DuVal's work. Each chapter brims with revelations and facts. Hoyos adds enough variation to her narration to capture listeners' attention without rising into a popular history voice that risks losing vital gravitas. The breadth of the book requires repetition throughout chapters and section summaries to highlight important ideas. Hoyos's similar delivery of these pieces feels almost like an underline for key passages, enhancing what might otherwise feel tedious. VERDICT This eye-opening challenge to the traditional canon of North American history is highly recommended for any library.--Matthew Galloway

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A historical survey of Native America's political autonomy. In this impressive history, DuVal, author of Independence Lost and The Native Ground, offers a long-term view of how Indigenous peoples in North America flourished both before and long after the arrival of Europeans, leveraging their power and negotiating their place alongside or within settler culture amid increasing existential threats. The author covers the last 1,000 years, sketching a trajectory of resistance, adaptability, and endurance and countering other historians who emphasize the victimization and steady disappearance of Indigenous peoples. Focusing on decisive periods involving individual nations, DuVal presents a selection of "examples and trends of Native North American sovereignty, politics, economics, diplo-macy, and war." In doing so, she provides a compelling record of Indigenous agency and provides a rich context for understanding the survival of--and the political challenges still faced by--hundreds of Native nations today. The colonization of the continent, she demonstrates, was neither rapid nor fated, and alternative historical outcomes in which Native America maintained control of large territories are plausible. "Nothing was inevitable," writes DuVal, "about the rise of the United States." A highlight of this work is the author's revision of conventional understandings of the scale of pre-contact Indigenous communities. DuVal points out the sophistication and vitality of urban centers, which resembled their European counterparts in size and population density a millennium ago, before gradually dissolving in response to climatic and political shifts. Also cogent are the author's summaries of the collective values and traditions that emerged out of this shift to smaller-scale societies. Throughout, DuVal is clear and cogent, and her foregrounding of Indigenous achievements and careful delineation of ongoing struggles for personal and collective autonomy offer a useful and illuminating corrective to past histories. A revelatory account of the power and influence of Indigenous peoples in North America. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Ancient Cities in Arizona, Illinois, and Alabama It is rare that everyone in the world has the same thing on their minds at once, but we know one thing that everyone was talking about in the spring of 1006: the star. It had always been in the sky, but now it was sixteen times as bright as the planet we call Venus. In some places it was visible during the day for an entire month and startlingly bright at night for several years. Scientists today say it was the brightest supernova ever recorded. A chronicler in Baghdad recorded that "its rays on the earth were like those of the Moon." A Benedictine monk in Switzerland wrote that "a new star of unusual size appeared; it was glittering in appearance and dazzling the eyes, causing alarm." Alarm was a common reaction. Egyptian scholar Ali ibn Ridwan wrote about wars and famines that followed the star's appearance. Chinese astronomers worried about whether what they called "guest stars" were auspicious or, as the scholar Li Shunfeng put it, a sign that "presages military action, death, and countrywide famine." Court astronomers worked to assure Emperor Zhenzong that, despite recent invasions, "it presages great prosperity to the state over which it appears." In our age of electric lights, it is hard to grasp how important the stars were to everyone before the twentieth century. People all around the world used the sky to keep track of time. They could see countless more stars than we can today, and many cultures believed that a change in the sky meant something significant was happening. When another supernova appeared in 1054, less than fifty years later, some people believed the skies were telling them to make a change. They moved to new places and adjusted their religious beliefs and practices. Leaders used the skies for guidance and sometimes pointed to them as evidence that people should follow whatever path they advised. The capital of the Ghana Empire fell to the Islamic Almoravids around the time of the 1054 supernova, and its call to change may have assisted in persuading Ghanaians to convert to Islam. Both the Normans and their English adversaries saw the appearance of Halley's Comet in 1066 as presaging the Norman conquest of England; it is woven into the Bayeux Tapestry. The people of North America watched the sky, too. Their calendars were based on changes in the moon and in the sun's position relative to Earth. Archaeologists speculate that the second supernova, in 1054, inspired people who had lived in small farming towns in what's now Illinois to tear one of them down and build Cahokia, a large and influential city that would set off a trend of grand civilizations called "Mississippian" that spread all across the Mississippi Valley and the American Southeast in the following centuries. Cahokians clearly saw the sky as important--near its central city was a huge outdoor calendar made of tall red cedar posts, carefully placed to mark solstices and equinoxes. Cahokia was just one of a constellation of city-states across the continent. Also around 1054, the already sprawling civilization of the Huhugam, in what's now Arizona, began its greatest period of growth and centralization. Around the world, a combination of portentous signs, agricultural expansion, and human decisions sparked the growth of cities. They became crossroads of economic and cultural exchange on a phenomenal scale. They grew and distributed food for thousands, even tens of thousands, of people; they were bursting with artists and craftworkers; and they had fighters capable of defending them and conquering surrounding territory. North America followed this global pattern, but Europeans and white Americans couldn't square this urban past with their assumption that Indians were primitive and nomadic, people whose use and ownership of the land were so light that it really didn't belong to them. By overlooking the continent's history of powerful, sophisticated cities in this self-serving way, Europeans and their descendants would justify taking a continent. This chapter starts by looking at those myths at their height, in the late nineteenth century, and Native Americans' attempts to correct those myths with their own historical and cultural memories. After that we'll look at the realities of that ancient past in three places: Cahokia, the cities of the Huhugam, and Moundville, in present-day Alabama. Myths In the 1880s, William McAdams, a member of the St. Louis Academy of Science, stood in a cellar in southern Illinois looking for evidence that the huge earthen pyramids that dotted the Mississippi Valley were human-made. Only a few decades earlier, the United States had forced the Chickasaws from their homelands, yet by McAdams's time, archaeologists puzzled over the places that the ancestors of Chickasaws and neighboring Native peoples had built. Indeed, after they removed Native Americans, nineteenth-century white Americans tried to forget they had ever been there at all. The aptly named Mr. and Mrs. Hill had built this house--and the cellar in which McAdams stood--on the highest place on their farm, the flat top of a pyramid ten stories above the prairie below. The walls of the cellar were black, carved out of rich soil that was easy to dig and fertile for the corn and pumpkins the Hills were growing on the flat surfaces of the multitiered hill. But interspersed in the black dirt of the walls here and there, McAdams could see patches of yellow clay and gray silty dirt. If these variations had been natural, they would have come in stratified layers, but these were patches, McAdams noted, "about such size as a man could easily carry." Humans had built this hill, one bucketful at a time. McAdams's certainty grew when Mr. and Mrs. Hill showed him artifacts they had found on their property, including pottery and axes. Mr. Hill explained that he had dug a well starting at the top of the mound, deep into the soft soil. At the depth of sixty-five feet, he had pulled up broken pieces of pottery and decayed ears of corn, perhaps the lunch remains of an ancient worker building the hill up from the prairie's surface. McAdams was contributing to a vigorous late-nineteenth-century debate about the origins of hills like this one that people could see rising abruptly from the flatlands of the Midwest, the floodplains of the Southeast, and the deserts of the Southwest. A few years later, exploring the place that had become the city of Phoenix, anthropologist Frank Cushing was astounded to see "the remains of the most extensive ancient settlement we had yet seen, or I had ever dreamed would be possible for us to find within the limits of the United States," a long series of flat-topped pyramids that "lay stretched out in seemingly endless succession," with "the yellow, almost angular slopes of the great central temple-mound" above them. All across the United States, many of these mounds still exist today, after centuries of erosion, although most were destroyed to make room for new towns and cities that Americans built on Native American land. McAdams had been drawn to the particularly dense ruins of a great Native city that archaeologists called Cahokia (after the Illinois-speaking Cahokia Indians living nearby in the eighteenth century). In his day, two hundred mounds rose up out of the tall prairie grass on both sides of the Mississippi River, so striking that one of St. Louis's early nicknames was "Mound City." McAdams and other scientists in the late nineteenth century were worried that the main city of Cahokia would be bulldozed before they had a chance to understand what they were--just as Cahokia's outlying cities already had been leveled to make room for St. Louis and East St. Louis. Developers were putting pressure on landowners like the Hill family to sell so they could build steel mills at this place near the confluence of the Mississippi River and the Missouri, Ohio, and Illinois rivers, as much a crossroads of the continent then as it had been in Cahokia's time. Nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century geologists, though, argued that the mounds were natural occurrences, raised up by a deep glacier passing through in a previous millennium or carved out of bluffs by erosion. Many Americans found the geological explanation for the mounds easier to believe than the idea that Native Americans had built cities on a grand scale centuries before the founding of the United States. In the Southwest, because the great civilizations had elaborate irrigation systems apparent to the untrained eye and, in some places, towering stone and adobe buildings, it was harder to claim that there was no human design there. In fact, all across the continent, flat-topped pyramids like the one the Hills had built upon were human-made and once had palaces and temples on top and cities all around. Excerpted from Native Nations: A Millennium in North America by Kathleen DuVal All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.