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- Title
Commemoration, Community, and Colonial Politics At Brothertown.
- Authors
Cipolla, Craig N.
- Abstract
The essay discusses archaeological excavations at the site of the Brothertown Indian community in Wisconsin. The collaborative nature of this historical archaeology project, called the Brothertown Archaeology Project, is emphasized. The community was made up of a number of Algonquian tribes seeking to avoid colonial U.S. land regulations. Analysis of headstones, coffins, and inscriptions attest to the group's embrace of Christianity over time.
- Subjects
BROTHERTOWN Indian Reservation (Wis.); WISCONSIN; BROTHERTON Indians (North American people); ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations; ALGONQUIANS (North American peoples); NATIVE Americans; RELIGION; MATERIAL culture
- Publication
Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.), 2011, Vol 36, Issue 2, p145
- ISSN
0146-1109
- Publication type
Essay
- DOI
10.1179/mca.2011.008