-
decades of the 17th century, the
Tarrantines had a
warlike re****tion with
their southwestern neighbors. The
Tarrantines were
spared the
epidemic of 1617...
- A
subgroup of Mi'kmaq who
lived in New
England were
known as
Tarrantines. The
Tarrantines sent 300
warriors to kill
Nanepashemet and his wife in 1619 at...
- them as Mickmakis. The
British originally referred to the
people as
Tarrantines,
which appears to have a
French basis.
Various explanations exist for...
- list of
ghost towns in Maine.
Appledore (York County) Askwith, now
named Tarrantine (Piscataquis County) Flagstaff,
submerged to form
Flagstaff Lake (Somerset...
-
disastrous time for the Naumkeag. Many
Naumkeag died in a war with the
Tarrantine and as a
result of a
smallpox epidemic in 1617–1619,
including their powerful...
-
Merchant Marine and
marine related industries.
Called Majabigwaduce by
Tarrantine Abenaki Indians,
Castine is one of the
oldest towns in New England, predating...
-
buried at his
fortification in present-day
Medford during a war with the
Tarrantines in 1619. The
contact period introduced several European infectious diseases...
-
Wabanaki Confederacy, Maine, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia,
Quebec Abenaki (
Tarrantine), Quebec, Maine, New Brunswick,
historically Vermont and New Hampshire...
- in 1617 in
present day Medford, M****achusetts, in
conflict with the
Tarrantines, an
Eastern Algonquian exonym for Miꞌkmaq,
where his
burial place was...
- 1616-1619 and took a
particularly heavy toll with the
Naumkeag people. The
Tarrantines took
advantage of this weakness, and
further decimated their numbers...