The Hurons and the Algonquins
The Huron were the traditional enemy of the Iroquois. They were enemies for quite some time. When the Huron made allies with the French in the 1600s, the Iroquois saw this as a threat. They started doing raids, and they wiped out the Huron tribes. They were also an enemy of the French. The Beaver Wars that started in 1609 were actually the Iroquois fighting against the French and Huron over hunting grounds related to the fur trade. They also fought against the French and Algonquians during the French Indian War.
the iroquois
The Iroquois tribes did not live on Long Island; the tribes were all from the Algonquian language group.
The Iroquois decided to form the Iroquois League which was a confederation or a loose group of government
the Iroquois men married are the women from diffrent tribes.
The Iroquois and the Algonquin tribes.
The Huron were the traditional enemy of the Iroquois. They were enemies for quite some time. When the Huron made allies with the French in the 1600s, the Iroquois saw this as a threat. They started doing raids, and they wiped out the Huron tribes. They were also an enemy of the French. The Beaver Wars that started in 1609 were actually the Iroquois fighting against the French and Huron over hunting grounds related to the fur trade. They also fought against the French and Algonquians during the French Indian War.
The Northeastern tribes like the Mohawks, Iroquois
they consider all tribes their friends.
Well the Iroquois was involved with Britain
Several Native American tribes were involved in the French and Indian War. On the French side were the Shawnee, Algonquian, and Ottawa. On the British side were the Iroquois, Seneca and Onondaga.
The British Colonists and some of the Iroquois tribes fought against the French.
to replace missing members of their tribes
the iroquois
Mohican tribes, Chappaqua, and some Crow Tribes iroquois
The French had a long standing relationship with the Northeastern Native Americans. French trappers had lived and married into many tribes and the French treated the Native Americans with respect and dignity. The English on the other hand treated the tribes they encountered with fear and hate. They came to take the land and not share it. These attitudes made more enemies than friends, so when the war broke out more tribes worked and helped the French than the English.
Brulé betrayed Champlain by aligning himself with the Iroquois, who were traditional enemies of the French and their Algonquin allies. Despite having been a valuable interpreter and guide for Champlain, Brulé's actions in favor of the Iroquois undermined the French's alliances and their strategic position in North America. This betrayal not only jeopardized Champlain's relationships with Indigenous tribes but also created distrust among his own ranks.