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  1. Longfellow: The Song of Hiawatha, The Song of Hiawatha - HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW. The Song of Hiawatha. Introduction. Should you ask me, whence these stories? Whence these legends and traditions, With the odors of the forest. With the dew and damp of meadows, With the curling smoke of wigwams, With the rushing of great rivers,

  2. Nov 8, 2021 · How the Iroquois Confederacy Was Formed. In the story of the Great Law of Peace, Hiawatha and the Peacemaker convince leaders of the Five Nations to literally bury the hatchet. By: Tony ...

  3. Feb 16, 2016 · Hiawatha is an important figure in the precolonial history of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) of present-day southern Ontario and upper New York (ca. 1400-1450). He is known most famously for uniting the Five Nations—Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida and Mohawk—into a political confederacy.

  4. In Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: The Song of Hiawatha, Paul Revere’s Ride, and other poetry … as his medium, he fashioned The Song of Hiawatha (1855). Its appeal to the public was immediate. Hiawatha is an Ojibwa Indian who, after various mythic feats, becomes his people’s leader and marries Minnehaha before departing for the Isles of the ...

  5. Jun 8, 2018 · History. North American indigenous peoples: Biographies. Hiawatha. views 3,239,655 updated Jun 08 2018. Hiawatha. The Native American honored as a leader of the Iroquois nation in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 's "The Song of Hiawatha" is not an actual person, although Hiawatha (c. 1400) has entered American legend as such.

  6. Hiawatha was a Mohawk chief who came to symbolize the whole concept of peace and unity. Though the details of his life are not known with absolute certainty, his name and legend have survived for hundreds of years.

  7. In this epic work, Longfellow set out to honor Native American heritage, but simultaneously perpetuated stereotypes and the false assertion that Indigenous culture was dying in America. Since then, the merits and pitfalls of Hiawatha have been rightly debated as its hold on American culture endures. Anishinaabe People.

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