OVERVIEW
The Haudenosaunee people whos name translates to " people of the long house" are an Algonquian
based nation who inhabited and migrated through the east coast for thousands of years in America.
Migrating thru modern day New York to the Carolinas even as far Tennessee & Ohio region since
ancient times. Currently located in New York , Quebec, & Montreal region of Canada they are one of
the most dominant nations in the world today misnomered as "Iroquois Indians" .
The Haudenosaunee people speak dialects of the Eastern Algonquian language. The war and conflict
between European contact and other tribes changed the make up of tribes later during the eighteenth
and nineteenth century. The Haudenosaunee is broken into six bands known as: the Seneca, Tuscarora,
Cayuga, Oneida, Onondaga, and Mohawk Tribes. During war with Europeans the numbers dwindled at
contact. Tuscarora after 1722 migrated from North Carolina to New York to join the nation. As it is
cited in the text of "The Indian Slave Trade by Alan Gallay" that the Tuscarora people are ethnically
linked and of the same linguistic stock of the Seneca (Seneques). In the beginning we see an natural
order of different families & clans living in long wooden houses along upstate New York. Tuscarora are
Skarù·ręʔ translated to "people of the shirt" , the Oneida are Onᐱyoteʔa·ká (people of the standing
stone) , Mohawks are Kanien’kehá:ka "people of the flint" , Seneca are Onödowa’ga (people of the great
hill) , Cayuga are Gayogo̱hó:nǫ ’ "people of the great swamp" , and Onondaga are Onoñda’gega’ (people
of the hills).
Excerpt from "Iroquois : People of the Long house" by Michael G. Johnson. With a chart on the
breakdown of the Haudonosaunee linguistic family amongst the people of the east.