- The Susquehannock, also
known as the Conestoga,
Minquas, and Andaste, were an
Iroquoian people who
lived in the
lower Susquehanna River watershed in what...
-
ancient enemy, the
Minqua or Susquehannock. With the loss of
their lands on the
Delaware River and the
destruction of the
Minqua by the
Iroquois of the...
-
Great Minquas Path, or The
Great Trail, was a 17th-century
trade route that ran
through southeastern Pennsylvania from the
Susquehanna River, near Conestoga...
-
settlement in Delaware. The
Kalmar Nyckel anc****d at a
rocky point on the
Minquas Kill.
Today this site is
called Swedes' Landing; it is
located in Wilmington...
-
Delaware County, Pennsylvania. This cr**** is
believed to be
named after a
Minqua chief who
befriended the
Swedish settlers of the area. A
large tract of...
- and
other Minquas. They
exchanged these furs for
Dutch and, from the late 1630s, also
Swedish imports.
Relations between some
Lenape and
Minqua polities...
-
Algonquian language,
meaning "stealthy". In the 17th century, the
terms Minqua or
Minquaa were used
interchangeably to
refer to the five
nations of the...
- [page needed] (Europeans
later said that they used the
terms White Minqua and
Black Minqua to
differentiate their ancestries from one another.) A
whole other...
- Godyn's Bay (Delaware Bay), up the
South River (Delaware River), past
Minquas Kill (Christina River), to
Sankikans (Trenton Falls).
Printz settled on...
- "
Minquas Civic ****ociation and Fire Company" and
later changed their name to "Minquadale Fire Company, Inc." in 1929 to
avoid confusion with
Minquas of...