This light and beautiful fabric was peculiar to the Algonkin tribes.
2
The Algonkin tradition has often been referred to.
3
Yet this is not Algonkin theology; nor is it at all related to that of the Iroquois.
4
Above the Chaudière Champlain met the Algonkin chief, Tessouat, and thus described the burial places of his tribe:
5
Many fragments of tribes of Algonkin lineage-Delawares ,Nanticokes ,Mohegans ,Mississagas-soughtthesame hospitable protection, which never failed them.
6
One of the Algonkin tribes told how the queen of heaven, Atahensic, had a grievous quarrel with her lord, Atahocan.
7
In these cases the hypothesis of borrowing breaks down, and still more does it break down over the Algonkin deity Atahocan.
8
Mr. Leland, in his Algonkin Tales, prints the same story, with the names altered to Glooskap and Malsumis, from oral tradition.
9
New York, before its occupation by the Iroquois, seems to have been a part of the area of the Algonkin tribes.
10
On the whole, the Iroquois and Algonkin myths agree in finding the origin of life in an upper world beyond the sky.
11
Whereby critics may remark that learning French and Algonkin runs in our blood, and that my proclivity for Indians is legitimately inherited.
12
Unfortunately, as is well known, this precaution, and even the aid of their Algonkin and French allies, proved inadequate to save them.
13
Therefore it is impossible to assign to it other than an indigenous and spontaneous origin in some remote period of Algonkin tribal history.
14
The sun was glowing on the peaks of Pluto Pyramid and the Algonkin Terraces far above them on the opposite side of the gorge.
15
The extraordinarily rich synonomy of some American tongues, notably the Algonkin, the Aztec, and the Qquichua, attests how sedulously their resources have been cultivated.
16
ALGONQUIN, or ALGONKIN (a word formerly regarded as a French contraction of Algomequin, ''those on the other side'' of the river, viz.