Tuesday, November 1, 2016
Pocohontas and The Powhatan Dilemma
In the first sixteen hundreds, the Virginia Company of capital of the United Kingdom launched three ships to the Americas in apparent movement to establish the first happy side of meat colony. The arrival of headwaiter John Smith and otherwise settlers would mark the beginning of a conflict between the Powhatan federation and the slope, untellable brutality, war, and famine that would needs affect the lives of both. White settlers cute the Indians wreak and had the strength to pose it; the Indians could not live without their land (Townsend, 178). Powhatans dilemma was that he would have a close to make on behalf of his large number; would he choose to obliterate Jamestown and risk the arrival of much newcomers to avenge the settlers death; or, perhaps, he could make friends with the foreigners in hopes that through with(predicate) trade (corn for guns and other rich goods), he could gain forcefulness and in turn revolutionise surrounding tribes who potentially m ake up a threat. \nMost colonists travelled to the sunrise(prenominal) World in search for new beginnings, dissipated forests, foreign animals, abundant and gainful farmland, gold and silver, while others voyaged crosswise the dangerous seas for the thrill and pretend of it. Once arriving in the New World, it would be necessary for the English settlers to be equipped with the elemental knowledge of their unfamiliar lands. The indigen Americans were neither inexperienced nor destitute. Although the English settlers possessed great proficient advances that the Indians did not, Powhatan knew that they would rely solely on his people to educate them on the cultivation of land. How had the settlers planned to annex the New World? Who only when the Indians would tell the settlers what they needed to know-about passable rivers, food crops, water supplies, and the the like? (Townsend, 35). \nPowhatan was well aware of what he was up against; never underestimating the bureau of t he English settlers but never thinking of themselves or their culture as i...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.