Wyandot

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
also Wy·an·dotte ('ən-dŏt') pronunciation
n., pl., Wyandot, or -dots, also Wyandotte or -dottes.
    1. A Native American people formed of groups displaced by the destruction of the Huron confederacy in the mid-17th century, formerly located in Ohio and the upper Midwest and now living in northeast Oklahoma.
    2. A member of this people.
  1. The Iroquoian language of the Wyandot.

[Wyandot wãdát, tribal name.]



North American Indian alliance of four bands of the Huron nation together with a few smaller communities that joined them at different periods for protection against the Iroquois Confederacy. Their language is of the Iroquoian family. At first European contact, the people who mostly call themselves Wendot lived in Ouendake (Huronia), between Georgian Bay and Lake Simcoe in Ontario, Can. Their villages, sometimes palisaded, consisted of large, bark-covered dwellings that housed several families related through maternal descent. Crops included corn, beans, squash, sunflowers, and tobacco; hunting and fishing supplemented the diet. The Wendat were nearly annihilated by the Iroquois in 164850. The survivors dispersed, some joining with remnant Tionontati; these newly formed groups were sometimes known as the Wyandot. In the early 21st century, population estimates indicated some 3,500 Wendat descendants.

For more information on Wendat, visit Britannica.com.

Wyandot may refer to:

Contents

Native American ethnography

Places

Other uses

See also


Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

Copyrights:

Mentioned in

Wyandotte (domestic chicken)
Iroquoian (family of North American Indian languages)
Tobacco Nation (tribe, North America)
Huron (Native American confederacy)