My early education was growing up in Virginia and Europe at an American school, except a couple of years in New Mexico. Consequently, I was seeped in Civil War and Revolutionary War history. There wasn't much about the Indians, but the usual myths and growing corn, etc. in school. It was all about white colonists. I've casually picked up just a few things since on Eastern Native Americans.
There was much more of each American regions tribes taught in third grade in New Mexico, where we would find Indian pottery shards while at play. There was that time when some a bozo in the Little League, slid into FIRST base and uncovered human remains, turning the ballpark fields into archeological excavations of a burial ground for the rest if the season. So, there was the limited foundation of knowledge for me.
Residing in the southwest, for all of these years, I'm orientated to the local history and culture and the great plains where I have some ancestry. So, to read of documented historical information is a surprise and a treat. It is a very different place back east, but when I read such things, I am awash in associations sights, smells and running in the forests and tide waters as a kid, imagining what it was like. Fun. Gotta get back east again and spend some time exploring anew, reminiscing and reacquainting...naked when possible. I do that out here; I hang out naked in ruins, trails and habitat and project.
There is also interest in the world of my white family arriving in the east from 1642 and greater interaction through to the revolution through family stories. Thanks for the link to play with this morning. Piece by piece, it is fun.
Individual rights, and written documents may have been foreign, not possessing land may be a spiritual concept for some, but I have to question sources like Eyesup's. I'm jus' sayin', and definitely am not taking a stance, but it would seem that there is a strong dependence on this idea that all Native Americans didn't know how to own land. I do see documentation and circumstantial surmising, suggesting that there was a strong tribal possession concept in the understanding of the concept of ownership of land. There is a strong indication of a concept of being of and a part of the Earth, for many, much more humble than the Europeans. This not possessing or controlling land makes sense in the plains in a nomadic state of say chasing Buffalo, but back east, considering diversity and dense populations, agriculture, I gotta have some doubts of the accuracy. So, an individual claim to possession as ownership would conflict, but tribal, group territories and trading trinkets for control could be in the realm of understanding for both parties. Delineation of rivers and mountains existed.
And then for example, my ancestors moved into the plains in the early 1830's and built sod homes, raising grain, which they turned into bread, which they then traded with the locals for meat. They didn't own the land, but there was a "my stuff and your stuff," a place to be without hassle and there was abundance.
Jbee