Definition of Tarrantines. Meaning of Tarrantines. Synonyms of Tarrantines

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Definition of Tarrantines

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Meaning of Tarrantines from wikipedia

- decades of the 17th century, the Tarrantines had a warlike re****tion with their southwestern neighbors. The Tarrantines were spared the epidemic of 1617...
- them as Mickmakis. The British originally referred to the people as Tarrantines, which appears to have a French basis. Various explanations exist for...
- 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...
- buried at his fortification in present-day Medford during a war with the Tarrantines in 1619. The contact period introduced a number of European infectious...
- 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...
- Merchant Marine and marine related industries. Called Majabigwaduce by Tarrantine Abenaki Indians, Castine is one of the oldest towns in New England, predating...
- were going down river in two whale boats when they were ambushed by the Tarrantines (Mi'kmaq). All but three were killed, including Josiah Winslow. The natives...
- 1616-1619 and took a particularly heavy toll with the Naumkeag people. The Tarrantines took advantage of this weakness, and further decimated their numbers...
- all life. The Haudenosaunee equivalent of Manitou is orenda. Abenaki (Tarrantine), Quebec, Maine, New Brunswick, historically Vermont and New Hampshire...
- The Tarratine Wars also known as the Penobscot–Tarrantine War or Micmac Wars was an armed conflict that sporadically occurred over a period of 25 years...