The Petun (from ), also known as the Tobacco people or Tionontati (Dionnontate, Etionontate, Etionnontateronnon, Tuinontatek, Dionondadie, or Khionotaterrhonon) ("People among the hills/mountains"), were an indigenous Iroquoian people of the woodlands of eastern North America. Their last known traditional homeland was south of Lake Huron's Georgian Bay, in what is today's Canadian province of Ontario. Lee Sultzman. "Erie History". Retrieved August 9, 2016. In 1639 the Erie and Neutrals withdrew their protection from the Wenro leaving them to fend for themselves. The Iroquois attacked, and the Wenro were quickly defeated. Most fled to the Wendat and Neutrals, although one Wenro group remained east of the Niagara River and resisted until 1643.
The Petun were closely related to the Wyandot people, or Huron. Similarly to other Iroquoian peoples, they were structured as a confederacy. One of the less numerous Iroquoian peoples when they became known to Europeans, they had eight or nine villages in the early 17th century, and are estimated to have numbered around 8,000 before European contact.
A number of disease epidemics were documented in Huron–Petun societies between 1634 and 1640, which have been linked to the arrival of settlers from urban Europe; this decimated their population. Although they each spoke Iroquoian languages, they were independent of the Five Nations of the Iroquois (Haudenosaunee), based south of the Great Lakes in present-day New York State. The powerful Iroquois sent raiding parties against the smaller tribes in 1648–1649 as part of the Beaver Wars associated with the lucrative fur trade, and virtually destroyed them. Some remnant Petun joined with refugee Wendat to become the Hurons, who were later known as the Wyandot people.
Numerous sources connect the name, Petun, to the cultivation and trade of tobacco by the historical Iroquoian society that existed at the time of the arrival of Europeans. For example, a 19th-century American translation by John Gilmary Shea of the History and General Description of New France, written by the late 17th and early 18th century French Jesuit historian Pierre François Xavier de Charlevoix, notes that they "raised and sold tobacco, whence the French called them Petuns or Peteneux." This widespread claim was later echoed by other sources such as the Smithsonian Institution's Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico in 1910, which referenced "large fields of tobacco." Later encyclopedias, such as the 1998 Gale Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes and the 2001 Columbia Guide to American Indians of the Northeast also emphasize tobacco cultivation and trade as an explanation for the French nickname, "pétun".
Despite this, no contemporary French accounts mention tobacco cultivation at Petun settlements. The nickname was originally used by Samuel de Champlain for a particular village he visited during his 1616 expedition. Wider usage of the term can be traced to the Récollet brother Gabriel Sagard in 1623. One of the earliest traceable claims for notable tobacco production by the Petun is in the table of notes accompanying a 1632 map attributed to Champlain, but which was not wholly his creation. The table has significant differences from Champlain's earlier work; in his 1619 text, he notes that the Petun grew corn, but did not mention tobacco, whereas the 1632 table explicitly mentions cultivation and trade of tobacco.
In the Iroquoian Mohawk language, the name for tobacco is O-ye-aug-wa.Gallatin, Synopsis American Aboriginal Archives, Vol. II, p. 484. French colonial traders in the Ohio Valley transliterated the Mohawk name as Wyandot people, their spelling of how it sounded in their language. Later European-American settlers in the valley adopted this name. They named the Guyandotte River in south-western West Virginia for the Wyandot people people, who had migrated to the area during the Beaver Wars of the late seventeenth century.
Compounding the issue, early sources did not clearly distinguish between the Wendat, Petun, and Neutral confederacies. The Petun were sometimes grouped with the Wendat, and at other times unrelated peoples, such as the Cayuga people, were called "Petun".
Throughout the Late Ceramic period, agriculture became more important, while the importance of hunting decreased. Corn was first introduced to the area during the Early Ceramic period (3000–1100 Before Present) and coincides with the rise of the Princess Point culture, which is generally agreed by archaeologists to be ancestral to Iroquoians, even as it shows discontinuity with previous archaeological cultures in the area and possibly represents a movement of Iroquoian peoples to the area from the south. The lavish grave goods which appeared in the Early Ceramic, often made from imported materials, underscored a Late Ceramic development of more elaborate funerary practices, which included and the use of ossuary.
Immediately before contact with Europeans, later Ontario Iroquoians had developed into two separate cultural groupings: the Huron–Petun to the north, and the Neutrals and their close relatives, the Erie people, to the south. Populations became more centralized around large, well-fortified village sites. The Huron–Petun and Neutrals both retreated to core areas: the Wendat around their "homeland" territory near Georgian Bay, and the Neutrals in the Niagara Peninsula.
Politically, the Petun were a tribal confederacy, similarly to the Wendat. The Petun were composed of two sub-groups which the Jesuits termed the "Nation of the Wolves" and the "Nation of the Deer".
In 1648, the Iroquois raided and destroyed a number of eastern Wendat villages. That winter, a thousand-strong Iroquois army of mostly Seneca people and Mohawk people warriors secretly camped north of Lake Ontario, and in the spring they were unleashed on the Wendat. The Iroquois overran the western Wendat villages around Sainte-Marie; the French burned Sainte-Marie to avoid its capture by the Iroquois, then ultimately retreated from the Pays d'en Haut to the safety of Quebec. The Wendat themselves dispersed in defeat, with some following the French to Quebec (settling at Wendake), while others took refuge among the Neutrals and the Petun.
By the end of 1649, however, the Iroquois had turned on the Petun as well. Many Wendat and Petun were then absorbed into Iroquois society. However, a large group of Wendat and Petun refugees fled to the upper Great Lakes, where they took refuge with the Odawa people and Potawatomi. The bulk of them at first stayed with the Odawa on Manitoulin Island, then occupied the Michilimackinac–Green Bay area, before eventually migrating to the area near modern-day Detroit and by 1701 arriving at the southwest shore of Lake Erie.
In the 1830s during the period of Indian Removal, most removed to the Indian Territory in present-day Kansas and Oklahoma. In 1843, they were all resettled in Wyandotte County, Kansas and in 1867, the American government gave them land in Indian Territory, now northeastern Oklahoma. Wyandotte people organized the federally recognized tribe, the Wyandotte Nation, headquartered in northeastern Oklahoma. Other descendants formed the unrecognized Wyandot Nation of Kansas.
The Wyandotte Nation self-identifies as being primarily descended from the Petun, with mixed Wendat and Wenro ancestry.
The Petun nation shared a similar dialect with the Wendat Nation and many of the same cultural customs. They had an alliance with the Neutral Nation southwest and south of the, and with the Odawa, an Algonquian-speaking nation to the east. They also shared elements of material culture with the Odawa, as a disc pipe of similar type to ones found at Odawa sites was also found at a Petun site dated to 1630–47.
Names
History
Historical sources
Precontact
Arrival of Europeans
Beaver Wars
Later migrations
Culture
Historical Iroquoian peoples
Five Nations of the Iroquois
Western areas
Southern interior/mountains
Citations
Sources
Further reading
External links
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