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The Oneida people (/ oʊ ˈ n aɪ d ə / ⓘ oh-NY-də; [1] autonym: Onʌyoteˀa·ká·, Onyota'a:ka, the People of the Upright Stone, or standing stone, Thwahrù·nęʼ [2] in Tuscarora) are a Native American tribe and First Nations band.
The Oneida Indian Nation (OIN) or Oneida Nation (/ oʊ ˈ n aɪ d ə / ⓘ oh-NY-də) [1] is a federally recognized tribe of Oneida people in the United States. The tribe is headquartered in Verona, New York, where the tribe originated and held territory prior to European colonialism, and continues to hold territory today.
Oneida language study has been formally sanctioned by the New York Oneida Nation for the past fifteen years and, through a collaboration with Berlitz to promote intensive language study, has been progressing rapidly since 2004. [31] The Berlitz representative acting as liaison to the Oneida Nation identified the task as a particularly difficult ...
Scarouady (/ ˈ s k æ r ə ˌ w ɒ d i /, fl. 1747–1755; also spelled Scarowady, Scarrouady, Scaroyady, Scarujade, Scaiohady, Skaronyade, Scaronage, Scruniyatha, Seruniyattha, or Skaruntia) was an Oneida leader at Logstown.
Darlene Denny of Green Bay, a member of the Oneida Tribe, landed in a vendor business, eventually opening Turtle Island Gifts.
The Seneca's own name for themselves is O-non-dowa-gah or Onödowá’ga, meaning "Great Hill People" [5] [6] The exonym Seneca is "the Anglicized form of the Dutch pronunciation of the Mohegan rendering of the Iroquoian ethnic appellative" originally referring to the Oneida.
In one, a man named David Hawk sued the Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin under NAGPRA for building a parking lot over what he believed was a burial site containing the remains of his ancestors.
Onaquaga (also spelled many other ways) was a large Iroquois village, located on both sides of the Susquehanna River near present-day Windsor, New York.During the American Revolutionary War, the Continental Army destroyed it and nearby Unadilla in October 1778 in retaliation for British and Iroquois attacks on frontier communities.