Originally from the area that would later become upstate New York and Quebec, the nation is known as the "elder brothers" and "keepers of the eastern door (of the long house)" to the other nations of the confederacy. Due to their overwhelming support of the British Army during French and Indian and the American Revolutionary Wars, they were often subjected to slander, and were nicknamed "Mohawk". This insult originated from the Algonquian language, which means "flesh-eater".
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| - Kanien'kehá:ka
- Kanien'kehá:ka
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| - Ze względu na ich duże poparcie armii brytyjskiej podczas wojny siedmioletniej i wojny o niepodległość Stanów Zjednoczonych, byli oni często zniesławiani i nazywano ich Mohawkami, co w języku ludów algonkińskich oznaczało „pożeracze ciała”. W XVIII wieku, wioska Kanien'kehá:ka, Kanatahséton, leżała na północy pogranicza, przy granicy terenu Diamond Basin.
- Originally from the area that would later become upstate New York and Quebec, the nation is known as the "elder brothers" and "keepers of the eastern door (of the long house)" to the other nations of the confederacy. Due to their overwhelming support of the British Army during French and Indian and the American Revolutionary Wars, they were often subjected to slander, and were nicknamed "Mohawk". This insult originated from the Algonquian language, which means "flesh-eater".
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abstract
| - Originally from the area that would later become upstate New York and Quebec, the nation is known as the "elder brothers" and "keepers of the eastern door (of the long house)" to the other nations of the confederacy. Due to their overwhelming support of the British Army during French and Indian and the American Revolutionary Wars, they were often subjected to slander, and were nicknamed "Mohawk". This insult originated from the Algonquian language, which means "flesh-eater". During the 18th century, the Kanien'kehá:ka village of Kanatahséton was situated by a lakeside in the Diamond Basin region of the Frontier.
- Ze względu na ich duże poparcie armii brytyjskiej podczas wojny siedmioletniej i wojny o niepodległość Stanów Zjednoczonych, byli oni często zniesławiani i nazywano ich Mohawkami, co w języku ludów algonkińskich oznaczało „pożeracze ciała”. W XVIII wieku, wioska Kanien'kehá:ka, Kanatahséton, leżała na północy pogranicza, przy granicy terenu Diamond Basin.
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