What was the underlying cause for the wars between the colonists and the Powhatan between 1622 and 1670?

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With the development of new settlements over the next four years, the English began pushing the Powhatans off their land, which fronted the rivers. Fighting between the groups was common, with raids on each other’s land and kidnappings.

What caused the conflict between colonists at Jamestown and the Powhatan?

The conflict between the Powhatan and the colonists was caused by colonists killing a Powhatan leader, Opecancanough sought out revenge on the colonists. He killed about 350 men, women and children. One of them was John Rolfe.

What was the conflict between the Powhatan and the colonists?

The First Anglo-Powhatan War was fought from 1609 until 1614 and pitted the English settlers at Jamestown against an alliance of Algonquian-speaking Virginia Indians led by Powhatan (Wahunsonacock). After the English arrived in Virginia in 1607, they struggled to survive through terrible drought and cold winters.

What was the relationship between Jamestown and the Natives?

While Native Americans and English settlers in the New England territories first attempted a mutual relationship based on trade and a shared dedication to spirituality, soon disease and other conflicts led to a deteriorated relationship and, eventually, the First Indian War.

What happened when people arrived to Jamestown?

Not long after Captain Newport left, the settlers began to succumb to a variety of diseases. They were drinking water from the salty or slimy river, which was one of several things that caused the death of many. The death tolls were high. They were dying from swellings, fluxes, fevers, by famine, and sometimes by wars.

What caused conflict between settlers and Native American?

They hoped to transform the tribes people into civilized Christians through their daily contacts. The Native Americans resented and resisted the colonists’ attempts to change them. Their refusal to conform to European culture angered the colonists and hostilities soon broke out between the two groups.

Who was Pocahontas and how did she help with the conflict between the Powhatan and the colonists?

The English knew Pocahontas was the favorite daughter of the great Powhatan, and was consequently seen as a very important person. On one occasion, she was sent to negotiate for the release of Powhatan prisoners. According to John Smith, it was for and to Pocahontas alone that he finally released them.

What was the underlying cause for the wars between the colonists and the Powhatan between 1622 and 1670?

The colonists believed that the English king owned the land surrounding Jamestown, and they took it away from the Powhatan. Since the Powhatan and the colonists viewed the land differently, they eventually fought and the Powhatan were driven from their lands.

After the English arrived in Virginia in 1607, they struggled to survive through terrible drought and cold winters. Unable to adequately provide for themselves, they pressured the Indians of Tsenacomoco for relief, which led to a series of conflicts along the James River that intensified in the autumn of 1609.

What were the causes of conflict between English colonists and the Powhatan?

The conflict between the Powhatan and the colonists was caused by colonists killing a Powhatan leader, Opecancanough sought out revenge on the colonists. He killed about 350 men, women and children. One of them was John Rolfe. The colonists want land from the Indians.

What caused the war with the Powhatan?

The First Anglo-Powhatan War was the result of Lord de la Warr’s orders to George Percy on August 9, 1610. The killing of women and children was not tolerable in Powhatan warfare: it greatly affected Powhatan and his people. …

What happened between the Powhatan and the colonists?

Powhatan was finally forced into a truce of sorts. Colonists captured Powhatan’s favorite daughter, Pocahontas, who soon married John Rolfe. Their marriage did help relations between Native Americans and colonists. The Native Americans, led by Powhatan’s brother Opechancanough, bided their time.

When did the Powhatan war start?

1610 – 1646
Anglo-Powhatan Wars/Periods

What were the two main causes of the Powhatan Confederacy’s fall?

In general, this warfare was caused by cultural differences and conflicts over land.

What events led to a conflict between the Jamestown settlers and Powhatan Confederacy?

The events that led to a conflict was that the settlers killed one of the Powhatan leaders after Pocahontas died. Why were indentured servants necessary in Virginia? Indentured servants were necessary because they needed a lot of help on the ships and in the farms so they can pay for their trip.

What was the underlying cause for the wars between the colonists and the Powhatan between 1622 and 1670?

The colonists believed that the English king owned the land surrounding Jamestown, and they took it away from the Powhatan. Since the Powhatan and the colonists viewed the land differently, they eventually fought and the Powhatan were driven from their lands.

Who brought about a time of peace between the English colonists and Powhatan tribe?

Finally, in 1614, Powhatan accepted peace with the English. His daughter Pocahontas, after being kidnapped and ransomed, was married to John Rolfe and taken to England. Unfortunately, she died of disease only three years later. Powhatan died in despair in 1618.

Why did the colonists fight with the Powhatan Indians?

As the colonists grew stronger they began to put pressure on the Powhatan’s for more land. This was one reason why warfare erupted between the two cultures in two major conflicts in 1622 and 1644.

When did the Powhatan War start and end?

See Article History. Powhatan War, (1622–44), relentless struggle between the Powhatan Indian confederacy and early English settlers in the tidewater section of Virginia and southern Maryland.

Who was the leader of the Powhatan Empire?

Powhatan. Powhatan, North American Indian leader, father of Pocahontas. He presided over the Powhatan empire at the time the English established the Jamestown Colony (1607). Powhatan had inherited rulership of an empire of….

What did the colonists take from the Virginia Indians?

Some colonists did not hesitate to take canoes from the Virginia Indians, which they may or may not have returned. On one occasion the King of Rappahanna demanded the return of a canoe, which was restored.

Contributor: James Douglas Rice

At the beginning of 1622, it seemed that the greatest danger facing the Jamestown colony was disease. According to Samuel Wrote, an investor in the Virginia Company of London, since 1619 the colony’s initial population of 700 had been supplemented by at least 3,570 new arrivals, and yet the total population had grown to only 1,240 people—a net growth of only about 540 new residents. The rest had died. As one young man, Richard Frethorne, wrote home to his parents, “the country … is such that it causeth much sickness, [such] as the scurvy and the bloody flux and diverse other diseases.”

The colonists’ Indian neighbors seemed to pose less of an immediate threat. The Algonquian-speaking Indians of Tsenacomoco comprised a polity of twenty-eight to thirty-two small chiefdoms and tribes that stretched from the James to the Potomac rivers and encompassed much of Virginia’s coastal plain. Often called the Powhatan Indians, after their paramount chief, Powhatan, they had been at peace with the English since 1614, when the marriage of Powhatan’s daughter Pocahontas to John Rolfe had put an end to the First Anglo-Powhatan War. Although tensions remained, the vast majority of encounters between the Indians and the English were peaceful. They routinely traded with one another for food (grain and wild game), “truck” (cloth, manufactured beads, and metal tools), and labor (Indians hunted for and worked in English households).

By 1622 the growing tobacco trade had put the colony on a sounder economic footing than during its first few years, easing another constant worry on the part of colonists and investors in the Virginia Company of London. The English tobacco farms that spread along the banks of the James and its tributaries, wrote the company’s secretary, Edward Waterhouse, were “placed scatterlingly and straglingly as a choyce veyne of rich ground invited them, and the further from the neighbors held the better.”

Thus isolated from one another, no single colonist was in a position to observe that an unusually large number of Indians were visiting and working among the English settlements on the morning of March 22. They came unarmed, offering to trade fish, skins, or labor. Many sat for breakfast with their English hosts.

Then, suddenly, “at a given signal” the Indians “drew their weapons and fell upon us murdering and killing everybody they could reach sparing neither women nor children, as well inside as outside the dwellings.” Some of the dead, Waterhouse wrote, were mutilated: “not being content with taking life away alone,” the attackers made “a fresh murder, defacing, dragging, and mangling the dead carcasses into many pieces, and carrying away many parts in derision.” More than 300 colonists, or nearly a third of the population, were killed in the space of a few hours.

The result of this devastatingly effective attack was a ten-year conflict, the Second Anglo-Powhatan War, that transformed the relationship between the two groups and reshaped both Virginia Indian and colonial English societies.

It seems surprising, in retrospect, that the Powhatan Indians were able to maintain such secrecy. A single defection, just one warning to the English, could have spoiled their plans. (In fact there were several alerts, including one by an Indian known as Chauco [sometimes Chanco], but it came only at the last moment; there was no chance to sound a general alarm.) Moreover, the basic issues between the Powhatan Indians and the English were hardly a secret. In the immediate aftermath of March 22 colonists had no trouble identifying the grievances that had led the Powhatan Indians to attack. Their analyses, and those of historians, emphasize two explanations: the importance of land and the lack of respect.

At the conclusion of the First Anglo-Powhatan War in 1614 both sides could claim a draw. The Powhatan Indians allowed the colonists to stay, but the English settlements were confined to fewer than a dozen settlements clustered just below the falls of the James, at Jamestown, and around Point Comfort.

Relations between the Powhatan Indians and the English soured in 1617, however. In March, just as she was about to depart to Jamestown after a visit to London, Pocahontas died. Her marriage to Rolfe had been at the heart of the peace between her father and the English; now that bond was broken. No comparable diplomatic marriage was arranged to replace this connection. (Thomas Savage attempted to negotiate one, on behalf of Sir Thomas Dale, but failed.) Moreover, an important member of Pocahontas’s entourage, an influential priest named Uttamatomakkin, formed a harsh impression of the English during his stay in England. When he returned to Virginia in May 1617, Uttamatomakkin delivered a bitterly unfavorable report to Opechancanough, Powhatan’s brother (or close kinsman) and main advisor, about his observations of the English.

Nearly simultaneous changes to the leadership of both the Powhatan Indians and English also led to a less compromising attitude on both sides. Samuel Argall, who had captured Pocahontas in 1613 and later captained the ship that carried her to England, took over as deputy governor after returning from London in 1617. Argall tried to restrict contacts between Indians and English, though these efforts failed. Similarly Powhatan, who had presided over the peace of 1614, stepped aside as paramount chief in 1617 in favor of his brother (or close kinsman) Opitchapam. (Upon becoming paramount chief, Opitchapam changed his name to Otiotan, sometimes rendered Itoyatin.) Powhatan died the following April. The number of violent incidents and diplomatic conflicts between the Indians and the colonists increased.

At the same time, changes in the distribution of land (including the introduction of the headright system and the granting of larger parcels of land to government officials and private investors) enabled English tobacco planters to spread out over a much larger area than before. By 1622 English settlements covered prime agricultural lands on both sides of the James River near Jamestown and on a few patches along the lower James and lower Eastern Shore. The greatest growth, however, was along the middle stretches of the James between the Chickahominy River and the falls of the James (at present-day Richmond).

The growing number of colonists living near the larger Powhatan Indian population centers upriver from Jamestown, coupled with the continuing practice of private trade between Indians and newcomers, led to a “daily familiarity” between the two groups. It did not, however, lead to increased respect. George Thorpe, who arrived in 1620 as part of a concerted attempt to convert the Indians to Christianity (and civility), complained that “there is scarce any man amongest [the colonists] that doth soe much as afforde [the Indians] a good thought in his hart and most men with their mouths give them nothing but maledictions and bitter execrations.” But Thorpe, too, offended the Powhatan Indians. His job was, in effect, turning Indians into English Christians; or, as John Smith later wrote in his Generall Historie of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Isles (1624), “insinuating himselfe into [Opechancanough’s] favour for his religious purpose.” If necessary, he planned to take away Indian children and raise them as English. It was hardly a sign of esteem for Powhatan Indian culture.

The English seriously underestimated both the Indians’ resentment and their confidence that they, and not the English, ruled this land the English called Virginia. Opitchapam (Otiotan) had inherited from Powhatan the title of paramount chief of Tsenacomoco. In 1622 the population of Tsenacomoco was roughly twenty times that of the Jamestown colony; thus the colony continued to exist because Opitchapam and Opechancanough (responsible for external relations, including both war and diplomacy) wanted it to.

At some point before 1621 Opechancanough began laying plans for an attack that would signal the Powhatan Indians’ superiority over the English and allow them to exert more control over the newcomers. In 1621 Opitchapam took on a new name, Sasawpen, while Opechancanough became Mangopeesomon. In Powhatan culture such name changes usually signaled an important new development in a person’s life. Perhaps not coincidentally, at about the same time Opechancanough asked Esmy Shichans, a weroance (the head of a chiefdom) from the Eastern Shore, for a supply of poison to use against the colonists. Shichans refused. Although he did not immediately tell the English about the poisoning plot, he did tell them about a great ceremony for “the takinge upp of Powhatans bones” for secondary reburial that had recently brought together Indians from throughout Tsenacomoco. The gathering presented Opechancanough with the perfect opportunity to plan a coordinated attack “uppon every Plantatione of the Colonie.”

Having lost the opportunity for surprise thanks to Shichans’s revelations, Opechancanough postponed his plans. In the meantime he adopted a more conciliatory demeanor toward the English. He showed George Thorpe much kindness, going so far as to hint that he might welcome instruction in Christianity. Opechancanough even appeared to brush off the murder of one of his leading warriors, Nemattanew (also known as Jack of the Feather), by the English. Although he was, in fact, enraged by the killing, Opechancanough sent a message to the governor, Sir Francis Wyatt, that Nemattanew had been too “farr owt of … favor” for the Powhatan Indians to make an issue of it.

March 22 was less than two weeks away.

The simultaneous attacks of 1622 came as a complete shock to the English. The blow was “so sudden,” wrote Waterhouse, “that few or none discerned the weapon or blow that brought them to destruction.” In only a few places were they able to defend themselves. Counterattacks were out of the question, since the colonists’ ability to withstand even the next wave of attacks was questionable. Yet the Powhatan Indians did not press their advantage. They launched no further attacks in 1622, except for a single skirmish in September that killed four colonists.

Opitchapam and Opechancanough evidently did not wish to eliminate the English settlements; otherwise, they would not have contented themselves with striking a single major attack. What, then, did they hope to accomplish through the March 22 assault?

The Powhatan Indians’ behavior provides several important clues to their intentions. First, twenty of the twenty-four attacks fell on the upriver settlements, where the spread of the English settlements had most directly intruded on the original, core nations of the paramount chiefdom. (Powhatan had inherited several chiefdoms in this area in the 1570s, then greatly expanded his influence and control over the next few decades). The older English settlements, especially Jamestown and other downriver places where the colonists had originally been allowed to live, were less hard-hit. Second, many of the English dead were mutilated, adding to the humiliation of their resounding defeat. According to Edward Waterhouse, George Thorpe’s killers, “with such spight and scorne abused his dead corps as is unfitting to be heard with civill eares.” Third, Opitchapam and Opechancanough followed through after their victory with studied silence rather than with additional raids, evidently assuming that a single devastating blow would communicate their message.

Given the evidence above, the Powhatan Indians seemed satisfied that the March 22 attacks had fulfilled their purpose: to put the English in their proper place, both literally and figuratively. They expected the English to remain in a subordinate position to Powhatan’s (now Opitchapam’s) paramount chiefdom and to remain geographically confined to the downriver settlements near Jamestown or the remote Eastern Shore. Thus the anthropologist Frederic Gleach has aptly characterized the March 22 attacks not as a “massacre” (which suggests a simple, savage randomness) or as an “uprising” (which assumes that the Powhatan Indians had already been subdued by the English), but rather as a “coup … a sudden and vigorous attack” intended as a corrective blow to the misbehaving English living in the midst of Powhatan’s people.

Opechancanough must have felt vindicated by the initial results. The English abandoned many of their more exposed settlements in the immediate aftermath of the attacks of March 22, huddling together in Jamestown and other relatively safe places as they decided what to do next. The situation was so dire that Governor Wyatt took refuge on the Eastern Shore for six weeks during the summer of 1622. There was even some talk of moving the entire colony there.

Despite appearances, however, the English colonists’ retreat did not mean that they understood the Powhatan Indians’ message. On the contrary, they assumed that their intent, according to Edward Waterhouse, was to “destroy us.” Their withdrawal from outlying settlements was purely strategic. In fact, some regarded the March 22 attacks as the perfect excuse to wage unrestricted war against the Powhatan Indians. “Our hands which before were tied with gentlenesse and faire usage, are now set at liberty,” Waterhouse wrote. He continued, “[We] may now by right of Warre, and law of Nations, invade their Country,” and then “enjoy their cultivated places” while reducing the Indians “to servitude and drudgery.”

But how? There were still far more Indians than English colonists. The first step was to find allies and food to sustain the colony through the next year. Rather than counterattack right away, the English initially focused their attention on the Potomac River and the Eastern Shore, trading and strengthening alliances with more distant chiefdoms while they developed a strategy for repaying the Powhatan Indians.

The strategy that emerged was devastatingly effective. “To lull them the better in securitie,” John Smith wrote, the English deliberately “sought no revenge till thier corne was ripe.” Then, throughout the fall and early winter of 1622–1623, they sacked the most vulnerable Powhatan villages (timing their raids to “surprize their corne”). When Wyatt listed his military assets he counted not only fighting men, but also, according to the governor’s Council, those who were “serviceable for caryinge of corne.” Even diplomacy revolved around food: the English agreed to a truce in the spring of 1623 in order to let both sides plant their crops, but they fully intended to resume their “feede fights” after the corn ripened.

This was not the only truce that was arranged with the intention of violating it. In May 1623 Opechancanough agreed to meet with an English delegation. After the negotiations the English offered poisoned drinks to toast the accord, then fired on the deathly ill Powhatan delegates. Some of the English took scalps, and back in Jamestown they bragged (mistakenly) of having killed Opechancanough.

The climax of the war came in the summer of 1624. In the only full-scale battle of the decade-long conflict, sixty Englishmen landed near a key Powhatan town, one inhabited by members of the Pamunkey Tribe. For two days the two sides fought to a stalemate. While the struggle continued on the open battlefield, a few Englishmen took advantage of the diversion to burn the Indians’ fields, destroying enough food, the governor’s Council claimed, “to have sustained four thousand men for a twelve-month.” When the Powhatan Indians finally realized the extent of the damage, they “gave over fightinge and dismayedly, stood most ruthfully lookinge one while theire corne was cutt downe.”

Virginia’s leaders deliberately prolonged the war for another eight years after the climactic victory of 1624. Although the Powhatan Indians mounted occasional raids and light skirmishes, the English generally took the offensive. The Virginians staged regular “fieringe and wastinge” attacks in which they inflicted light casualties and carried away large quantities of grain, always taking care to leave enough survivors to plant another crop the following spring. Strategically timed truces and peace treaties encouraged the Powhatan Indians to plant more food, which the English then looted at harvest time. As late as 1629 the English could report that the year’s campaign had done more damage than any other “since the great massacre.” The fighting continued well into 1632, when a new governor finally signed an agreement—unpopular with Virginia’s elites, who were profiting from the “feede fights”—to end the war.

The Powhatan Indians were not exactly vanquished. Their 1632 agreement with the English merely ended the war; there is no indication that it contained any humiliating provisions or admissions of defeat. (The original was destroyed during the American Civil War; notes taken by the early Virginia historian Conway Robinson described it only as “a peace.”) The Powhatan Indians still outnumbered the English, and they retained control of considerable territory (greater in extent than that of the English) north of the James River. The basic rhythms of their lives remained fundamentally the same, as did their economy, religion, and political system. Following the old rules governing the succession, for example, Opechancanough succeeded his brother Opitchapam, who had died in 1629, as paramount chief.

The balance of power, however, had tipped toward the English. By the end of the war English farms had spread all along both banks of the James River below the falls, and even across the Peninsula to the south side of the lower York River. At the end of the 1630s the English population (now grown to nearly 8,000) exceeded that of the Powhatan Indians, and early in the 1640s colonists began taking up lands on the north bank of the York River, along the Rappahannock, and even as far north as the Potomac River. The war also presented a great many reluctant “Powhatan” Indians—chiefdoms that had for a time been under the paramount chief Powhatan, but not entirely willingly—the opportunity to reclaim their independence; thus Opechancanough’s power was restricted to a much smaller number of subordinate chiefdoms covering a much smaller area.

The war also significantly altered colonial society. The March 1622 attacks set in motion an investigation that led to the dissolution of the Virginia Company of London. In 1624 James I assumed direct Crown control of the colony. The decade-long war also led to the concentration of wealth and political power in the hands of a small group of men whom some historians have characterized as warlords. Virtually all of the men who led expeditions against the Indians served on the governor’s Council. They decided when to raid Powhatan Indian fields, and as commanders kept much of the plunder for themselves, which they then sold at inflated wartime prices or fed to their servants and slaves so that they could produce more tobacco rather than wasting their labor on food crops. Not coincidentally, every councilor who led a military expedition between 1622 and 1625 ranked among the fifteen colonists controlling the greatest number of laborers—the real key to wealth in seventeenth-century Virginia.

In the aftermath of the Second Anglo-Powhatan War, an immensely powerful elite continued to flex its muscles, going so far as to eject the king’s appointed governor, the relative outsider Sir John Harvey, in 1635. The war also promoted the expansion of English settlements and tobacco production, to the point that by early in the 1640s the colonists were once again encroaching on Powhatan communities. By then the Powhatan Indians, still numerous, independent, and led by Opechancanough, were prepared to fight another war against the English: the Third Anglo-Powhatan War (1644–1646).

April 5, 1614

On or about this day, Pocahontas and John Rolfe marry in a ceremony assented to by Sir Thomas Dale and Powhatan, who sends one of her uncles to witness the ceremony. Powhatan also rescinds a standing order to attack the English wherever and whenever possible, ending the First Anglo-Powhatan War.

March 1617

After two months of delay due to bad weather, Pocahontas, her husband John Rolfe, Uttamatomakkin, and the rest of their traveling party embark from England on the Virginia-bound George. Pocahontas soon takes ill, however, and is taken ashore at Gravesend, where she dies.

May 15, 1617

On about this day, John Rolfe, Pocahontas's Indian companions, and Samuel Argall arrive in Jamestown. Uttamatomakkin delivers a scathing report to Opechancanough on what he learned while in England.

April 1618

The death of Powhatan, paramount chief of Tsenacomoco, is reported to the English colonists.

Summer 1621

Opechancanough requests from Esmy Shichans, the Accomac weroance, large quantities of the poisonous plant cowbane to be used against the English in an attack. Shichans, a trading partner of the English, informs the colonists of Opechancanough's plans.

Autumn 1621

The redisposition of Powhatan's bones is to be the occasion for a massive attack against the English, but Opechancanough calls it off when his plans are revealed.

January 1622

The Jamestown colonists report that Opechancanough has expressed interest in converting to Christianity. They also note that Opitchapam (Otiotan) and Opechancanough have changed their names to Sasawpen and Mangopeesomon, respectively. The change may suggest some kind of military preparation.

March 22, 1622

Indians under Opechancanough unleash a series of attacks that start the Second Anglo-Powhatan War. The assault was originally planned for the fall of 1621, to coincide with the redisposition of Powhatan's bones, suggesting that the attack was to be part of the final mortuary celebration for the former chief.

Summer 1622

Governor Sir Francis Wyatt takes refuge on the Eastern Shore for six weeks while ships are sent out to establish alliances with Virginia Indian weroances, or subchiefs, who live on the edges of Tsenacomoco and to trade for grain to feed the colonists.

Autumn 1622—Spring 1623

English colonists attack Powhatan Indian villages to "surprize their corne," or steal their crops. A temporary truce is signed in the spring intended to last until the end of the harvest season.

September 1622

Powhatan Indian warriors and English colonists skirmish. Four colonists are killed.

May 22, 1623

Opitchapam and Opechancanough host the English on the Pamunkey River, but they are treated to tainted wine and then ambushed. Opechancanough is apparently seriously injured and disappears from English records for seven years.

May 24, 1624

Following a yearlong investigation into mismanagement headed by Sir Richard Jones, justice of the Court of Common Pleas, the Crown revokes the Virginia Company of London's charter and assumes direct control of the Virginia colony.

July 1624

In the only full-scale battle of the Second Anglo-Powhatan War, Powhatan Indians and English soldiers fight to a standstill near a Pamunkey town. A contingent of Englishmen destroys the Indians' crops in the field.

1630

By this year, Opechancanough succeeds Opitchapam as paramount chief of Tsenacomoco.

1632

An agreement between the English colonists and the Powhatan Indians ends the Second Anglo-Powhatan War. There is no indication that it contains any humiliating provisions or admissions of defeat.

May 7, 1635

The General Assembly meets to state its objections to Governor Sir John Harvey and to restate its objections to the royal monopoly on tobacco. The governor's Council elects one of their own, John West, as governor.

ca. 1640

For the first time, the English population in Virginia exceeds the population of the Algonquian-speaking Indians of Tsenacomoco.

Early 1640s

English colonists take up lands between the north shore of the York River and the south bank of the Potomac River, in territories still inhabited by large numbers of Virginia Indians.

April 18, 1644

Opechancanough and a force of Powhatan Indians launch a second great assault against the English colonists, initiating the Third Anglo-Powhatan War. As many as 400 colonists are killed, but rather than press the attack, the Indians retire.

  • Fausz, J. Frederick. “Merging and Emerging Worlds: Anglo-American Interest Groups and the Development of the Seventeenth-Century Chesapeake.” In Colonial Chesapeake Society. Edited by Lois Green Carr et al., 47–98. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989.
  • Gleach, Frederic W. Powhatan’s World and Colonial Virginia: A Conflict of Cultures. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1997.
  • Rice, James D. “Escape from Tsenacommacah: Chesapeake Algonquians and the Powhatan Menace.” In The Atlantic World and Virginia. Edited by Peter Mancall, 97–140. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, 2007.
  • Rountree, Helen C. Pocahontas’s People: The Powhatan Indians of Virginia Through Four Centuries. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1990.
  • Vaughan, Alden T. “‘Expulsion of the Salvages’: English Policy and the Virginia Massacre of 1622.” William & Mary Quarterly 3d. ser., 35 (January 1978): 57–84.

APA Citation:Rice, James. Anglo-Powhatan War, Second (1622–1632). (2021, February 17). In Encyclopedia Virginia. //encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/anglo-powhatan-war-second-1622-1632.MLA Citation:Rice, James. "Anglo-Powhatan War, Second (1622–1632)" Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities, (17 Feb. 2021). Web. 11 Aug. 2022

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