Powhatan Lords of Life and Death

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Powhatan Lords of Life and Death

Command and Consent in Seventeenth-Century Virginia

Margaret Holmes Williamson

323 pages
Illus., maps

Hardcover

April 2003

978-0-8032-4798-7

$55.00 Add to Cart
Paperback

January 2008

978-0-8032-6037-5

$25.00 Add to Cart

About the Book

A richly textured portrait of the famous Native leader Powhatan and his realm emerges in this revisionist study. For decades the English colonists at and around Jamestown lived in the shadow of a powerful confederation of Native American communities led by Powhatan. That realm encompassed the Tidewater area of Virginia from the James River to the Potomac River. For many years Powhatan skillfully staved off threats from other Native peoples and from European colonists. Despite the prominence of Powhatan during the early colonial years, our knowledge of him and life in his realm is filtered nearly completely through the eyewitness accounts of Europeans.
 
In Powhatan Lords of Life and Death, an incisive structuralist perspective and an impressive synthesis and reinterpretation of available records by anthropologist Margaret Holmes Williamson provides a more complex and culturally appropriate view of the realm of Powhatan during the crucial early decades of the seventeenth century. Alternative conceptions of power and cosmology are set forth that force reconsideration of important components of Powhatan society, including the basis of leadership, the relationship between political leaders and religious specialists, the role of ritual, and the resonance of Powhatan cosmological beliefs with those of other southeastern Native peoples. Powhatan Lords of Life and Death revisits a pivotal figure in American history and enables us to appreciate more fully Powhatan and the fascinating world he helped to create.

Author Bio

Margaret Holmes Williamson is Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at Mary Washington College.

Praise

"Powhatan Lords of Life and Death is required reading for those interested in the Powhatans or early Virginia and offers an example of careful and creative analysis of difficult sources that should provide a model for anyone interested in understanding Indian societies through European materials."—April Lee Hatfield, Journal of Southern History

"An important, insightful, and original contribution to the burgeoning literature on the Native peoples of the Chesapeake region."—James Rice, Maryland Historical Magazine

“The reader finishes this book with a deeper and clearer understanding of the Powhatan interpretation of the cosmos and of their social customs.”—Cassandra Farrell, Virginia Libraries

Awards

2004 James Mooney Award, sponsored by the Southern Anthropological Society, honorable mention