Melungeons: The Last Lost Tribe in America

الغلاف الأمامي
Mercer University Press, 2005 - 186 من الصفحات

Most of us probably think of America as being settled by British, Protestant colonists who fought the Indians, tamed the wilderness, and brought "democracy"-or at least a representative republic-to North America. To the contrary, Elizabeth Caldwell Hirschman's research indicates the earliest settlers were of Mediterranean extraction, and of a Jewish or Muslim religious persuasion. Sometimes called "Melungeons," these early settlers were among the earliest nonnative "Americans" to live in the Carolinas, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, and West Virginia. For fear of discrimination-since Muslims, Jews, "Indians," and other "persons of color" were often disenfranchised and abused-the Melungeons were reticent regarding their heritage. In fact, over time, many of the Melungeons themselves "forgot" where they came from. Hence, today, the Melungeons remain the "last lost tribe in America," even to themselves. Yet, Hirschman, supported by DNA testing, genealogies, and a variety of historical documents, suggests that the Melungeons included such notable early Americans as Daniel Boone, John Sevier, Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, and Andrew Jackson. Once lost, but now, forgotten no more.

من داخل الكتاب

المحتوى

Melungeon Mythology Who Are We and How Did We Get Here?
ix
DNA Disease and Demographics The Keys to the Mystery
33
1492 A Most Propitious Year
45
Rewriting the Past A New Origin Story
55
Family Trees and Family Treks Migration Marriage and Naming Patterns among the Melungeons
83
The TemplarFreemason Connection
99
Keeping the Faith How Jews and Moslems Gathered Together and Became Baptists
115
We Are Not Alone Melungeons around the World
125
Reconstructing Our Past and Exploring Our Future Whither The Melungeons?
133
Appendixes
145
Index
179
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة

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الصفحة 63 - You are to go out as soon as possible to the Westward of the great Mountains, and carry with you such a Number of Men, as You think necessary, in Order to search out and discover the Lands upon the River Ohio, & other adjoining Branches of the Mississippi down as low as the great Falls thereof: You are particularly to observe the Ways & Passes thro all the Mountains you cross, & take an exact Account of the Soil, Quality, & Product of the Land, and the Wideness and Deepness of the Rivers, & the several...
الصفحة 70 - THE WILDERNESS ROAD : A description of the routes of travel by which the pioneers and early settlers first came to Kentucky.
الصفحة 63 - • along, tho there is not a sufficient Quantity for the Company's Grant, but You need not be so particular in the Mensuration of that, as in the larger Bodies of Land. You are to draw as good a Plan as you can of the Country You pass thro : You are to take an exact and particular Journal of all your Proceedings, and make a true Report thereof to the Ohio Company.
الصفحة 63 - When you find a large quantity of good, level Land, such as you think will suit the Company...
الصفحة 23 - ... people, not many yeares since ye Tomahittans sent twenty men laden with beavor to ye white people, they killed tenn of them and put ye other tenn in irons, two of which tenn escaped and one of them came with one of my men to my plantation as you will understand after a small time of rest one of my men...
الصفحة 125 - It may come as a bit of a shock to realize that many of these Southern Appalachian Baptist fellowships use actual wine in their enactments of the Last Supper.
الصفحة 70 - I returned home to my family with a determination to bring them as soon as possible to live in Kentucky, which I esteemed a second Paradise, at the risk of my life and fortune.
الصفحة 62 - ... calumet." He attended them to the post at Crevecoeur, on the Illinois, " from which place he was conveyed to Fort Frontignac." The route, at this period, would have been by Fort Niagara, which he reached, apparently about 1743 or 1744 ; for at Frontenac he " was redeemed by the Governor of Canada, who sent him to the Dutch settlement in New York, whence he made his way home after an absence of six years.
الصفحة 51 - Judaism, and did not find much difficulty in accommodating themselves equally well to their new religion. But the vast majority had accepted Christianity only to escape death, and remained at heart as completely Jewish as they had ever been. Outwardly, they lived as Christians.
الصفحة 23 - Eight dayes jorny down this river lives a white people which have long beardes and whiskers and weares clothing, and on some of ye other rivers lives a...

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