
Contents
Imperial Politics, Enlightenment Philosophy, and Transatlantic Print Culture
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Published:June 2017
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Extract
The History of the Five Indian Nations Depending on the Province of New-York in America, which was first published in New York in 1727 and then reissued in a revised and extended edition in London in 1747, is a remarkable and groundbreaking work of American history. As the first original and comprehensive English-language account of the Iroquois (or Haudenosaunee) confederacy of Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and (from around 1722) Tuscarora nations, it became a standard eighteenth-century reference work on native culture, society, and diplomacy. Numerous Enlightenment scholars read and cited this book, and the celebrated Encyclopédie of Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d’Alembert praised it as a curious and judicious history. Almost 300 years after its initial publication, The History of the Five Indian Nations remains an invaluable resource for students of Native American history, British and French imperialism in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century North America, and early American intellectual history.
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