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- Flemish_Bastard abstract "Chief Canaqueese (Cangueese) was a Mohawk war chief and intercultural mediator who lived in the 17th century. Due to his multitude of connections between settler populations, Canaqueese is referred to by various names including The Flemish Bastard, Bastard Flamand, The Dutch Bastard, Smits Jan, and Smith's John. He was an important intermediary between the French, Dutch and Mohawks during the Beaver Wars and participated in numerous attempts to reach a peace agreement between the Mohawks and the French.European sources refer to him as Canaqueese, Smits Jan, Smits Jon and the Flemish Bastard. He was given these different names by the various nations he interacted with. Canaqueese was his Mohawk name. Smits Jan was his Dutch name, one that he was probably given at his baptism or while visiting Dutch settlements in New Netherland. Smits Jon was an anglicized version of his Dutch name. It was given to him by the British after they conquered New Netherland and renamed it New York in 1664. Finally the Flemish Bastard was the name given to him by French Jesuits who saw him as "an execrable issue of sin, the monstrous offspring of a Dutch Heretic father and a pagan woman."There is limited information about his early life since he first appears in the historical records in 1650, while leading a band of Mohawk warriors in an attack on the French settlement at Trois Rivières. However, we know that he was born in the Dutch village of Schenectady to a Mohawk mother and a Dutch father.It would seem that he was brought up by his mother and her relatives in a Mohawk village and considered fully Mohawk. This possibility can be explained by the fact that the matrilineal Mohawks saw individuals born of Mohawk women and European men as fully Mohawk. European sources further point to this, since Dutch sources do not mention his Dutch background, suggesting that he appeared Mohawk in dress and in custom. Only the records of the French Jesuits describe Canaqueese as an individual of partially Dutch descent.Canaqueese probably participated in the Mourning Wars of the late 1640s. In these wars, the Seneca and Mohawk allied to attack, and eventually destroy, the Huron Confederacy of Southern Ontario. There are no records that prove Canaqueese was involved in these wars. However, the fact that Irroquois warriors were promoted based on merit, and that he was referred to as a war chief in the Jesuit Relations detailing the Iroquois attack on Trois-Rivières of 1650, strongly suggests that Canaqueese had proven his skill in previous battles, most likely the Mourning Wars.".
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageID "21830101".
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageLength "14349".
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageOutDegree "31".
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageRevisionID "666924801".
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Baptism.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Beaver.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Beaver_Wars.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Beverwijck.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Canada.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Category:17th-century_Canadian_people.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Category:17th-century_indigenous_people_of_the_Americas.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Category:Canadian_Mohawk_people.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Europe.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Orange_(New_Netherland).
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Great_Britain.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Imprisonment.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Intermediary.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Interpret.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Iroquois.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Language_interpretation.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Matrilineality.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Military.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Mohawk_people.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Monopolization.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Netherlands.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink New_Netherland.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Onondaga_people.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Peace_treaty.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Schenectady,_New_York.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Seneca_people.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Simon_Le_Moyne.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Trois-Rivières.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Trois_Rivières.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLink Wyandot_people.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageWikiLinkText "Flemish Bastard".
- Flemish_Bastard hasPhotoCollection Flemish_Bastard.
- Flemish_Bastard wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Flemish_Bastard subject Category:17th-century_Canadian_people.
- Flemish_Bastard subject Category:17th-century_indigenous_people_of_the_Americas.
- Flemish_Bastard subject Category:Canadian_Mohawk_people.
- Flemish_Bastard hypernym Chief.
- Flemish_Bastard type Person.
- Flemish_Bastard comment "Chief Canaqueese (Cangueese) was a Mohawk war chief and intercultural mediator who lived in the 17th century. Due to his multitude of connections between settler populations, Canaqueese is referred to by various names including The Flemish Bastard, Bastard Flamand, The Dutch Bastard, Smits Jan, and Smith's John.".
- Flemish_Bastard label "Flemish Bastard".
- Flemish_Bastard sameAs m.05p5xhv.
- Flemish_Bastard sameAs Q5458633.
- Flemish_Bastard sameAs Q5458633.
- Flemish_Bastard wasDerivedFrom Flemish_Bastard?oldid=666924801.
- Flemish_Bastard isPrimaryTopicOf Flemish_Bastard.