Pocahontas, Powhatan, Opechancanough:
Three Indian Lives Changed by Jamestown |
| Helen C. Rountree |
| 294 pages, 6 x 9 |
| 23 b&w illustrations |
| Paper ISBN 978-0-8139-2596-7 $16.95 |
| Available August 2006 |
 |
"Highly recommended. All levels/libraries."
Choice
Pocahontas may be the most famous Native American who ever lived,
but during the settlement of Jamestown, and for two centuries
afterward, the great chiefs Powhatan and Opechancanough were the
subjects of considerably more interest and historical documentation
than the young woman. It was Opechancanough who captured the foreign
captain “Chawnzmit”John Smith. Smith gave Opechancanough
a compass, described to him a spherical earth that revolved around
the sun, and wondered if his captor was a cannibal. Opechancanough,
who was no cannibal and knew the world was flat, presented Smith
to his elder brother, the paramount chief Powhatan. The chief,
who took the name of his tribe as his throne name (his personal
name was Wahunsenacawh), negotiated with Smith over a lavish feast
and opened the town to him, leading Smith to meet, among others,
Powhatan’s daughter Pocahontas. Thinking he had made an
ally, the chief finally released Smith. Within a few decades,
and against their will, his people would be subjects of the British
Crown.
Despite their roles as senior politicians in these watershed
events, no biography of either Powhatan or Opechancanough exists.
And while there are other “biographies” of Pocahontas,
they have for the most part elaborated on her legend more than
they have addressed the known facts of her remarkable life. As
the 400th anniversary of Jamestown’s founding approaches,
nationally renowned scholar of Native Americans, Helen Rountree,
provides in a single book the definitive biographies of these
three important figures. In their lives we see the whole arc of
Indian experience with the English settlers – from the wary
initial encounters presided over by Powhatan, to the uneasy diplomacy
characterized by the marriage of Pocahontas and John Rolfe, to
the warfare and eventual loss of native sovereignty that came
during Opechancanough’s reign.
Writing from an ethnohistorical perspective that looks as much
to anthropology as the written records, Rountree draws a rich
portrait of Powhatan life in which the land and the seasons governed
life and the English were seen not as heroes but as Tassantassas
(strangers), as invaders, even as squatters. The Powhatans were
a nonliterate people, so we have had to rely until now on the
white settlers for our conceptions of the Jamestown experiment.
This important book at last reconstructs the other side of the
story.
Helen C. Rountree, Professor Emerita of
Anthropology at Old Dominion University, is the author and editor
of numerous works on the Native Americans of the East Coast, including
Powhatan Foreign Relations, 1500-1722
and, with Thomas E.
Davidson, Eastern Shore Indians of Virginia and Maryland
(both Virginia).