Difference between revisions of ".MTI0Nw.NTkxMA"
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447 Marlboro | 447 Marlboro | ||
April 7/30 | April 7/30 | ||
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Dear Mrs. Eckström, | Dear Mrs. Eckström, | ||
− | I will call up | + | |
− | About | + | I will call up Mr. Barry [?], & glad of the chance. |
− | ..."Muheakun | + | |
− | This looks reasonable | + | About Monhegan, Ruttenbro [?] has this: - |
+ | |||
+ | ..."Muheakun was the name of the people occupying both banks of the river (Hudson) from -- a few miles south of Catskill, north & east - - The Dutch wrote Mahikan, Maikan, & the English of Connecticut Mohegan which was claimed by Drs. Schoolcraft & Trumbull to be derived from maingun (Cree mahiggun) wolf - - from their prevailing totem or prevailing coat of arms, The wolf, the French called them Loups [one underlined], 'wolves', and also monhigans, including under the name 'the nine nations gathered between Manhattan & Quebec." | ||
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+ | This looks reasonable, though there is a little room for speculation on other lines. The under meaning of the wolf name connects with eating, it is the animate form, what is eaten was the meat sort, perhaps people; Mohawk did mean cannibal. | ||
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+ | Your Mohegan word for Monhigan seems merely a spelling of the common word for island - monahan usually. | ||
+ | |||
+ | I think your cornland name is pretty |
Latest revision as of 21:27, 24 February 2023
447 Marlboro April 7/30
Dear Mrs. Eckström,
I will call up Mr. Barry [?], & glad of the chance.
About Monhegan, Ruttenbro [?] has this: -
..."Muheakun was the name of the people occupying both banks of the river (Hudson) from -- a few miles south of Catskill, north & east - - The Dutch wrote Mahikan, Maikan, & the English of Connecticut Mohegan which was claimed by Drs. Schoolcraft & Trumbull to be derived from maingun (Cree mahiggun) wolf - - from their prevailing totem or prevailing coat of arms, The wolf, the French called them Loups [one underlined], 'wolves', and also monhigans, including under the name 'the nine nations gathered between Manhattan & Quebec."
This looks reasonable, though there is a little room for speculation on other lines. The under meaning of the wolf name connects with eating, it is the animate form, what is eaten was the meat sort, perhaps people; Mohawk did mean cannibal.
Your Mohegan word for Monhigan seems merely a spelling of the common word for island - monahan usually.
I think your cornland name is pretty