The WabanakiConfederacy Wabenaki, Wobanaki , as it is known in English, was a historical confederation ... of the WabanakiConfederacy the Wabanaki peoples were located in, and named for, the area they called Wabanaki Dawnland . This area was known to European settlers as Acadia and is now most of Maine ... people Wyandot . The WabanakiConfederacy disbanded in 1862, but the five Wabanaki nations still exist, and they remain friends and allies today. In 1993, the Council fire of the WabanakiConfederacy ... this auspicious and historical event and witnessed the rebirth of the WabanakiConfederacy which brought ... Nation. ref http www.woodstockfirstnation.com honorourpast.htm ref WabanakiConfederacy in various indigenous languages The term WabanakiConfederacy in many Algonquian languages literally means Dawn Land People. WabanakiConfederacy as called by the members of the confederation is Mi kmaq ... in 1689, members of the WabanakiConfederacy of Acadia participated in six major wars before the British ... U Manitoba Press 2002 360 378 Walker, Willard. The WabanakiConfederacy. Maine History 37 3 1998 ... WabanakiConfederacy http abbemuseum.org Timeline 20Curriculum Table 20of 20Contents.html Wabanaki ... locations of areas occupied by members of the WabanakiConfederacy from north to south ... Abanaki were located in New Hampshire , Vermont , and into Massachusetts . Members of the WabanakiConfederacy were Western Abenaki Eastern Abenaki M kmaq Mi kmaq people Mi kmaq or Micmac Penawapskewi ... War 1754 1763 References reflist Further reading Frank G. Speck. The Eastern Algonkian WabanakiConfederacy . American Anthropologist, New Series , Vol. 17, No. 3 Jul. Sep., 1915 , pp. 492 508 McBride, Bunny. 2001 Women of the Dawn Mead, Alice. 1996 Giants of the Dawnland Eight ancient Wabanaki legends Prins, Harald E.L. The Crooked Path of Dummer s Treaty Anglo Wabanaki Diplomacy and the Quest ... www.wabanaki.com Harald Prins.htm Storm Clouds Over Wabanakiak Confederacy Diplomacy Until Dummer ... more details
br nominative Dawn Land br locative Dawn Land Person br Dawn Land People br or the WabanakiConfederacy ...Cleanup date September 2008 Wabanaki , Wabenaki , Wobanaki , etc. may refer to In geography area referred as the Dawn land by many Algonquian languages Algonquian speaking peoples to describe the Eastern region of the North American continent , generally described as being New England in the United States, plus Quebec and the Maritimes in Canada. First nations peoples. In ethnology people located in the Wabanaki region, used to mean either dawn land people or easterner. people speaking one of the Eastern Algonquian languages synonym for the WabanakiConfederacy , a Indigenous peoples of the Americas Native American alliance located in the northern Wabanaki region members of the WabanakiConfederacy, consisting of Abenaki Penobscot people Penobscot Maliseet Passamaquoddy Mi kmaq people Mi kmaq In history The Wabanaki ancestral homeland stretches from Newfoundland, Canada, to the Merrimack River valley in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. Following the European invasion in the early 17th century, this became a hotly contested borderland between colonial New England and French Acadia. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the Wabanaki defended their homeland in many bloody wars see the four French ... because of famines and devastating epidemics. ref For a freely accessible digital text on Wabanaki culture and history, see Asticou s Island Domain Wabanaki Peoples at Mount Desert Island 1500 2000 ... ethnography.htm ref In culture the term Abenaki is often misused to mean Wabanaki. Abenakis are just one member of the Wabanakis. Camp Wabanaki , a YMCA camp Wabanaki Campground in New Hampshire Wabanaki Area Scouting , New Brunswick Wabanaki in various indigenous languages Expand section date June 2008 Depending on the literature and the reference language the author speaker uses, the term Wabanaki ... and Wabanaki literally Dawn land person are used synonymously by some Algonquian languages Algonquian ... more details
Wiktionary confederate confederacy Confederate ConfederacyConfederacy may refer to A Confederation , an association of sovereign states or communities. Examples include Confederate States of America , eleven southern states of the United States of America between 1861 and 1865. Confederacy may also reference the military armed forces of the CSA, such as Confederate States Army Confederate States Marine Corps Confederate States Navy Confederate Ireland Canadian Confederation Confederation of the Rhine Gaya Confederacy , an ancient grouping of territorial polities in southern Korea German Confederation Iroquois Confederacy , group of united Native American nations in both Canada and the United States of America Maratha Confederacy North German Confederation Peru Bolivian Confederation of 1836 1839 Powhatan Confederacy Sikh Confederacy Swiss Confederation Old Swiss Confederacy Three Confederate States of Gojoseon of the Korean Bronze Age Western Confederacy Fictional confederacies Breen Confederacy , a political entity in the Star Trek universe Capellan Confederation , a political entity in the Battletech universe Galactic Confederacy , part of the Scientology mythos Terran Confederacy , a political entity in the StarCraft universe Terran Confederation , a political entity in the Wing Commander universe Confederation of Planet Omega, from the animated series Once Upon a Time... Space The Confederacy of Independent Systems, a secessionist political entity in the Clone Wars Star Wars Star Wars universe See also A Confederacy of Dunces , a novel written by John Kennedy Toole, published in 1980 Confederates novel Confederates novel , a novel by Thomas Keneally Confederate Motor Company , an American manufacturer of motorcycles 1932 Chevrolet Confederate Series BA, an automobile Federacy , where one or several states or regions enjoy considerably more independence than the majority Federation , a union comprising a number of partially self governing states or regions united ... more details
Infobox VG title Mosby s Confederacy image File Mosby s Confederacy Coverart.png developer Tilted Mill Entertainment publisher Tilted Mill Entertainment genre turn based strategy br real time tactics modes Single player released November 19, 2008 ratings designer Matt Zimmitti platforms Microsoft Windows Windows media Digital distribution requirements input Keyboard computing Keyboard , Computer mouse Mouse Mosby s Confederacy is a 2008 in video gaming 2008 turn based strategy and real time tactics video game by Tilted Mill Entertainment . Overview In Mosby s Confederacy the player commands small bands of skirmishers, scouts and guerilla fighters on opportunistic missions to scout, ambush, steal supplies and harass larger and better armed forces of Union soldiers. Development Mosby s Confederacy was first announced for development on October 6, 2008, with a release date set tentatively for later in the fall. ref http computergames.ro en news viewitem id 6743 name tilted mill announces mosbys confederacy.html Tilted Mill announces Mosby s Confederacy . Computergames.ro. Retrieved on November 11, 2008. ref Tilted Mill stated in an interview that the game would be downloadable in the same vein as their fantasy RPG village building game Hinterland video game Hinterland . ref Callaham, John October 8, 2008 . http news.bigdownload.com 2008 10 08 interview tilted mill talks about mosbys confederacy Interview Tilted Mill talks about Mosby s Confederacy . GameDaily . Retrieved on November 11, 2008. ref References Reflist External links http www.tiltedmill.com mosbys confederacy Mosby s Confederacy official site http computergames.ro en news viewitem id 6743 name tilted mill announces mosbys confederacy.html press release DEFAULTSORT Mosby s Confederacy Video Game Category 2008 video games Category Windows games Category Real time tactics video games Category Turn based tactics video games Category American Civil War fiction Category Video games set in the United States ... more details
The Western Confederacy , also known as Western Indian Confederacy , was a loose confederation confederacy of North American Natives in the Great Lakes region North America Great Lakes region following the American Revolutionary War 1775 1783 . The confederacy, which had its roots in pan tribal movements dating to the 1740s, came together to resist the expansion of the United States into the Northwest Territory after Kingdom of Great Britain Great Britain ceded the region to the United States after the war. The resistance resulted in the Northwest Indian War 1785 1795 , which ended with the U.S. victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers . Although many of the native peoples had fought in the war as British allies, Great Britain made no mention of their allies in the Treaty of Paris 1783 . According to Joseph Brant , a Mohawk chief who was one of the early architects of the confederacy, the British had sold the Indians to Congress. The confederacy first came together in 1786 at a conference at the Wyandot people Wyandot town of Upper Sandusky , with the intention of forming a common front in dealing with the Americans. Members of many different American Indian tribes were involved in the Western Confederacy. The confederacy was sometimes known as the Miami Confederacy because U.S. officials overestimated the influence and numerical strength of the Miami tribe Miami tribe within the confederation. Because most tribes were not centralized political units at the time, involvement in the confederacy was usually a village rather than a tribal basis. The confederacy consisted of members of the following tribes Council of Three Fires Iroquois Confederacy Seven Nations of Canada Wabash Confederacy Wea, Piankashaw, and others Illini Confederacy Wyandot people Wyandot Mississaugas Menominee Shawnee Lenape Miami tribe Miami Kickapoo people Kickapoo Kaskaskia Chickamauga Indian Chickamauga Lower Cherokee Muscogee Creek Upper Muscogee References Allen, Robert S. His Majesty s Indian ... more details
Infobox comic book title Wikipedia WikiProject Comics title Captain Confederacy noimage yes filename format only imagesize default 250 caption schedule Monthly format limited series mini series limited y AltHistory y publisher SteelDragon Press first series br Epic Comics second series date 1986 first series br November 1991 in comics 1991 February 1992 in comics 1992 second series issues 12 first series br 4 second series main char team writers artists pencillers inkers letterers colorists editors creative team month creative team year creators Will Shetterly br Vince Stone TPB ISBN subcat Epic Comics sort PAGENAME Captain Confederacy is an Alternate history fiction alternate history comic book by Will Shetterly and Vince Stone that was published between 1986 and 1992. It tells the story of a superhero created for propaganda purposes in a world in which the Confederate States of America won their independence. Publication history John M. Ford plotted three issues of the first series, and wrote one, issue number 10 s Driving North. Plot The first storyline, published in twelve issues by SteelDragon Press, tells how the first Captain Confederacy, a white man, joins the rebellion against his country. The second storyline, published in four issues by Epic Comics , focuses on the struggle to control the politics of the North American countries, at a world super hero conference in Free Louisiana. The new Captain Confederacy is a black woman, pregnant with the last Captain s baby. References refbegin gcdb series id 4231 title Captain Confederacy comicbookdb type title id 4426 title Captain Confederacy refend External links http captainconfederacy.blogspot.com Captain Confederacy blog , where the comic is being posted in serial format by Will Shetterly, along with related material. http www.toonopedia.com confed.htm Captain Confederacy at Don Markstein s Toonopedia . http www.webcitation.org ... Category Fictional captains Confederacy Category American Civil War alternate histories Category Fictional ... more details
The Miami Confederacy refers to a collection of closely related Native Americans in the United States Native American tribes in 18th century North America. The tribes included the Miami tribe Miami centered in Kekionga modern day Fort Wayne, Indiana and their nearby Eel River Wabash River Eel River band, the Piankeshaw centered near modern day Vincennes, Indiana , the Kickapoo people Kickapoo near modern Terre Haute, Indiana , and the Wea centered near modern day Lafayette, Indiana . ref cite book last Winger first Otho year 1935 title The Last of the Miamis page 5 ref The term Miami Confederacy is also used to refer to the Western Confederacy , an alliance of North American Indians in the Great Lakes region following the American Revolutionary War 1775 1783 . This confederacy, which had its roots in pan tribal movements dating to the 1740s, came together to resist the expansion of the United States into the Northwest Territory after Great Britain ceded the region to the United States after the war. The resistance resulted in the Northwest Indian War 1785 1795 , in which the United States suffered a series of disastrous defeats before finally achieving victory in 1794 at the Battle of Fallen Timbers . References reflist Category Native American history ... more details
Infobox Former Country native name Omu Aro conventional long name Aro Confederacy common name Aro Confederacy continent Africa region Nigeria country Nigeria status Confederation era Early Modern year start 1690 date start year end 1902 date end p1 Aro people flag p1 s1 Colonial Nigeria flag s1 Flag of British Colonial Nigeria.svg national motto national anthem image flag Flag of the Aro Confederacy.svg image map image map caption common languages Igbo language Igbo , Ibibio language Ibibio , Ekoid languages Ekoi , Ijaw language Ijaw , Urhobo language Urhobo , Isoko language Isoko , Itsekiri , etc. capital Arochukwu leader1 Eze Aro government type Constitutional Monarchy currency Manillas , Cowry Cowry shells and African slaves Slaves stat pop1 3,000,000 stat year1 1900 The Aro Confederacy 1690 1902 was a political union orchestrated by the Igbo people Igbo subgroup, the Aro people , centered in Arochukwu in present day Southeastern Nigeria . Their influence and presence was across Eastern Nigeria into parts of the Niger Delta and Southern Igala during the 18th and 19th centuries. It is claimed that their influence extended through parts of present day Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea . The Arochukwu Kingdom was an economical, political, and an oracular center as it was home of the powerful Ibini Ukpabi oracle, High Priests, the Aro King Eze Aro , and Chiefs. The Rise By the mid 18th ... , Abam , Abiriba , Afikpo , Ekoi , etc. , quickly established the Aro Confederacy as a regional economic power. The Confederacy Era Aro activities helped coastal Niger Delta city states grow and become ... , Arondizuogu , and Igbene Kingdoms were the most powerful Aro states in the Confederacy after Arochukwu .... The Aro Confederacy s power, however, was mostly derived from its economic and religious position .... After failed negotiations, the British planned on capturing the Aro Confederacy in 1899. By 1901 ... was captured on December 25, 1901. By Spring 1902, the war was over and the Aro Confederacy collapsed ... more details
The Fante Confederacy can refer either to the loose alliance of the Fante people Fante states in existence at least since the sixteenth century, or it can refer to the briefly lived Confederation formed in 1868 and dissolved in 1874. The Confederation is seen as one of the first self rule movements in Africa. Fante expansion The Fante had long been in the region both in land and on the coast of what ... from foreign invaders. The establishment of the confederacy was a proclamation of the several ... states were forced to form a confederation by the rapid growth of the Ashanti Confederacy ... the increasing unity of the Fante. The Fante united and produced a confederacy to be recognised not only by the people of the Gold Coast, but also by the European powers. The confederacy was headed ... the rival Dutch, who were aligned with the Ashanti. The Fante Confederacy was smaller than the Ashanti ... century the Ashanti were pre occupied with expanding their confederacy to the north rather than against ... harbour to refugees and dissidents fleeing the Ashanti Confederacy. The Fante introduced laws forbidding ... over Fante lands, cutting off supplies to the confederacy. By the early eighteenth century the Ashanti ... scale invasion of the Fante Confederacy. In 1806 the Ashanti Fante War began. The British felt ... relations between the Ashanti and the Dutch. Creation of the Confederacy This led to an 1868 meeting ... to the General Field Marshal and Edu became the sole King President. Fall of the Confederacy ... to collect much of the poll tax, and the British refused to allow the Confederacy to tax lucrative ... , but soon the Confederacy was all but broke. Moreover the fighting with the Dutch and its allies had left the northern part of the Confederacy, on the border with the Ashanti, undefended and these regions ... to the Confederacy was mixed originally the British had little interest in directly administering the region .... More British representatives in the region and in London saw the Confederacy as a dangerous precedent ... more details
The Wabash Confederacy , also referred to as the Wabash Indians or the Wabash tribes , is a term used to describe a number of 18th century Native Americans of the United States Native American villagers in the area of the Wabash River in what are now the U.S. state s of Illinois , Indiana , and Ohio . The Wabash Indians were primarily Wea s and Piankashaw s, but also included Kickapoo people Kickapoo s, Mascouten s, and others. In that time and place, Native American tribe s were not political units, and the villages along the Wabash were multi tribal settlements with no centralized government. The confederacy, then, was a loose alliance of influential village leaders sometimes called headmen or chiefs . In the 1780s, headmen of the Wabash Confederacy allied themselves with a larger, loose confederacy of Native American leaders in the Ohio Country and Illinois Country , in order to collectively resist U.S. expansion after the American Revolutionary War . In 1786, a Wyandot people Wyandot chief named Half King warned Congress that the Wabash, Twightwee, and Miami Nations would disrupt U.S. surveyors, and Congress promised reprisals if that occurred. ref http memory.loc.gov cgi bin query r?ammem hlaw field DOCID lit jc030146 Journals of the Continental Congress . Monday, July 24, 1786, pg 429. ref This resistance movement culminated with the Northwest Indian War . Notes reflist Indiana history Category Indiana in the Northwest Indian War Category Native American history of Indiana Category Native American history of Ohio Category Native American history Category Northwest Indian War NorthAm native stub it Indiani Wabash ... more details
. It would have been neighbored by the Byeonhan confederacy on the southwest, and by the much larger Mahan confederacy on the west. On the north it would have been bounded by the Chinese commanderies ... topics History of Korea DEFAULTSORT Jinhan Confederacy Category Ancient peoples Category Early ... more details
Infobox museum name Museum of the Confederacy native name native name lang image Museum of the confederacy ... curator publictransit network website http www.moc.org The Museum of the Confederacy is located in Richmond, Virginia . The museum includes the former White House of the Confederacy and maintains a comprehensive ... of the Confederacy Infobox NRHP name White House of the Confederacy nrhp type nhl image LC B815 911 Rt side stereoview 1865 LOC.JPG caption White House of the Confederacy, 1865, Library of Congress location ... Building title White House of the Confederacy accessdate 2008 06 27 work National Historic Landmark ... 2008a ref governing body Private refnum 66000924 The White House of the Confederacy is a gray stuccoed .... The Davis family was quite young during their stay at the White House of the Confederacy. When they moved ... Portico of the White House of the Confederacy, 1865, Library of Congress During Reconstruction Era of the United States Reconstruction , the White House of the Confederacy served as the headquarters ... for many years in the former White House of the Confederacy. The Museum of the Confederacy ... by Ann Crenshaw Grant , and Isobel Stewart Bryan . Isabel Maury was the founder of the Museum of the Confederacy ... House of the Confederacy on a daily basis. It was in this house that Matthew Fontaine Maury ... of the Confederacy. The Museum houses the largest and or most comprehensive collection of artifacts, personal effects, and other memoriabilia related to the Confederacy. Among the thousands of other ... Constitution and the Great Seal of the Confederacy are also housed there. Of particular note ... and the Confederacy A Quadricentennial Perspective . Location near Virginia State Capitol The Museum and White House of the Confederacy are located two blocks north of the Virginia State Capitol ... 3 1 4 07.JPG thumb White House of the Confederacy as it appeared in January 2007 It is, however, completely ... of the Confederacy, a National Historic Landmark 1963 and Virginia Historic Landmark 1966 , will not be moved ... more details
to Burebasaga as a Confederacy http books.google.com books?id 1O7o71 7sckC&pg PA202&dq Burebasaga&sig ... Page 202, by Atsuko Ichijo, Gordana Uzelac 2005, reference to Burebasaga Confederacy and its composition ... more details
Islands in the Twentieth Century Page 233, by Brij V. Lal 1992, Reference to Tovata as a Confederacy ... Tovata as a confederacy and how it was formed Further reading Tovata I & II By AC Reid, Printed ... more details
Orphan date March 2011 The Central Confederacy was a proposed nation made up of American states in the Mid Atlantic States mid Atlantic region of the country. The plan was discussed in the Border states American Civil War border and middle state s prior to the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861. Background Due to concerns about the Federal government s perceived growth during the Presidency of Abraham Lincoln Lincoln administration , and federal policy involving the institution of slavery , states located in the southern region of the United States , discussed and eventually withdrew from the union after the United States presidential election, 1860 1860 election of Abraham Lincoln , forming the Confederate States of America . ref name real cite book last DiLorenzo first Thomas title The Real Lincoln publisher Three Rivers Press location New York, New York year 2002 isbn 0 7615 2646 3 ref Many prominent speakers from both the North and Middle States expressed a desire to allow the southern states to secede peacefully. In the middle states, there also existed a sentiment to actually join the Southern Confederacy. ref cite web url http www.lewrockwell.com dilorenzo dilorenzo42.html title The Northern States Rights Tradition last DiLorenzo first Thomas J. date March 1, 2003 publisher LewRockwell.com accessdate 17 January 2010 ref But other individuals, including former United States House of Representatives Congressman John Pendleton Kennedy and Governor of Maryland Governor Thomas Holliday Hicks Thomas Hicks , both of Maryland , drew up plans to form a Central Confederacy composed of the states of Delaware , New York , Pennsylvania , New Jersey , Virginia , Missouri ... title The Proposed Central Confederacy date June 24, 1900 publisher New York Times accessdate 17 January 2010 format PDF ref As the southern Confederacy peacefully formed ... York were at its highest for the formation of a Central Confederacy. ref cite book title Southern ... more details
stat pop5 footnotes Accepts wikilinks The Thinite Confederacy in speculative Egyptology was a tribe ... Confederacy were most likely tribal chief tribal nobles . Based at the city Thinis , the Thinite Confederacy would later be incorporated into the combined Kingdoms of Upper Egypt Upper and Lower Egypt . The evidence of the Thinite Confederacy is mostly speculative and in part relies on Manetho ..., Egypt Abydos Thinis area and may correspond to a theoretical Thinite Confederacy . ref van ... campaigns is to build a city to house the capital of the Thinite Confederacy. References ... more details
In the Church of Scientology mythos , the fictional Marcab Confederacy is said to be one of the most powerful galactic civilizations still active. Church founder L. Ron Hubbard describes it as blockquote Various planets united into a very vast civilization which has come forward up through the last 200,000 years, formed out of the fragments of earlier civilizations. In the last 10,000 years they have gone on with a sort of decadent kicked in the head civilization that contains automobiles, business suits, fedora hats, telephones, spaceships a civilization which looks almost an exact duplicate but is worse off than the current US civilization. ref Hubbard, SHSBC 291, Auditing Comm Cycles , August 6, 1963 ref ref Hubbard, Dianetics and Scientology Technical Dictionary, 1st edition, pg. 243. ref blockquote The capital of the Confederacy is said to be one of the tail stars of the Big Dipper , probably Eta Ursae Majoris Alkaid , a star 108 light year s distant from Earth. The Marcabians used to rule Earth at some point in the past but lost control of it due to losses in war and other things . Marcabians The Marcabians had an oppressive political system if a person was considered to be in contempt of court or anything like that, he was simply fried since there was a curtain of radioactive material which went clear across the front of the bench anywhere that a witness or anybody would ... said the Marcab Confederacy are still headquartered today. Hubbard said that the Marcab Confederacy ... Bomb, etc. Hubbard stated that the Marcab Confederacy was now using Earth as a prison planet . When ... Confederacy, in his critical book on the man, entitled Bare faced Messiah Bare faced Messiah The True ... the Marcab Confederacy , ref name washpost99 in a report on John Travolta . ref name washpost99 ... described the Marcab Confederacy as an invader force . ref name reitman Rolling Stone said that it was explained ... Confederacy . Similarly, there is a race of aliens known as the Marcabians featured in The Secret ... more details
mr Kaya History of Korea Gaya was a confederacy of territorial polities in the Nakdong River basin .... 228 229. Penguin, London. ref growing out of the Byeonhan confederacy of the Samhan period. The traditional ... in the third and fourth centuries some of the city states of Byeonhan evolved into the Gaya confederacy ... that made up the Gaya confederacy have been characterized as small city states. ref Barnes, Gina ... of the ancient Byeonhan confederacy Byeonhan , one of the Samhan confederacies. The loosely organized ... of rule. The Gaya Confederacy disintegrated under pressure from Goguryeo between 391 and 412 ... Gaya . The various Gaya polities formed a confederacy in the 2nd and 3rd centuries that was centered around the heartland of Geumgwan Gaya in modern Gimhae . After a period of decline, the confederacy ... category Gaya confederacy List of Korea related topics History of Korea List of Korean monarchs Gaya confederacy Three Kingdoms of Korea Crown of Gaya References Reflist coord 35 09 36 N 128 13 48 E region KR type country source kolossus dewiki display title DEFAULTSORT Gaya Confederacy Category 562 disestablishments Category States and territories established in 42 Category Gaya confederacy Category ... more details
Infobox book name A Confederacy of Dunces image Image Confederacy of dunces cover.jpg 200px author John ... , Audio book isbn 0 8071 0657 7 oclc 5336849 dewey 813 .5 4 congress PS3570.O54 C66 1980 A Confederacy ... appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunce s are all in confederacy against ... in 1962. ref name NMAL Patteson, Richard F. Ignatius Goes to the Movies The Films in Toole s A Confederacy .... Confederacy and New Orleans File CanalStreetPostcardIgnatiusEraHolmses.jpg right thumb Canal ... books.google.com books?id MIR9mPrOdPsC&pg PA181&dq yat confederacy dunces&cd 2 v onepage&q yat 20confederacy ... Lucky Dogs . Structure The structure of Confederacy of Dunces reflects the structure of Ignatius s favorite book, Boethius Consolation of Philosophy . Like Boethius book, the Confederacy of Dunces ... with Meter poetry metrical verse. In Confederacy, such narrative interludes vary more widely in form ... surely it was not possible that it was so good. ref from Walker s preface to A Confederacy of Dunces .... ref name manuscript cite web url http www.themillions.com 2012 03 the lost manuscript to a confederacy of dunces.html title The Lost Manuscript to A Confederacy of Dunces publisher The Millions .... ref name slate cite web url http www.slate.com id 2155500 title The development hell of A Confederacy ... 2 and a confederacy of dunces title Will Ferrell Talks Land of the Lost, Old School 2, Elf 2 and A Confederacy ... will ferrell talks land of the lost old school 2 elf 2 and a confederacy of dunces archivedate 24 January ... colwidth 60em Toole, John Kennedy. A Confederacy of Dunces , LSU Press. 1980 ISBN 0 8021 3020 8 Refend Scholarly studies Clark, William Bedford. All Toole s children A reading of A Confederacy of Dunces ... of Humor in John Kennedy Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces. Southern Quarterly 37.3 4 1999 283 ... of influences on John Kennedy Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces, including Geoffrey Chaucer . Version 2.0 July 1, 2011 . Lowe, John. The Carnival Voices of A Confederacy of Dunces. Louisiana Culture ... more details
Iloilo was from the Burebasaga Confederacy Burebasaga and his predecessor, Kamisese Mara Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara from Tovata Confederacy Tovata , the current Vice President should be from Kubuna. References ... more details
ref Under continuous pressure from Baekje, only 20 statelets of Mahan confederacy ... . Saro , , present day Hongseong . ref Not to be confused with Silla Saro in Jinhan confederacy ... also History of Korea References Reflist DEFAULTSORT Mahan Confederacy Category Ancient peoples ... more details
Image Tecumseh02.jpg thumb Tecumseh , by Benson Lossing in 1848 based on 1808 drawing. Tecumseh s Confederacy was a group of Native Americans in the Old Northwest that began to form in the early 19th century around the teaching of Tenskwatawa The Prophet . ref name o211 The confederation grew over several years and came to include several thousand warriors. Shawnee leader Tecumseh , the brother of The Prophet, developed into the leader of the group as early as 1808. Deemed a threat to the United States, a preemptive strike against the confederation was launched resulting in the 1811 Battle of Tippecanoe . Under Tecumseh s leadership, the confederation went to war with the United States during Tecumseh s War and the War of 1812 . Following the death of Tecumseh in 1813 the confederation fell apart. Background Image Shawnee Prophet, Tenskwatawa.jpg thumb right 125px Tenskwatawa, by Charles Bird King Following the 1795 Treaty of Greenville , the Native American tribes in the Northwest Territory began to move out of the lands ceded to the United States. Many of the Natives, including the Lenape and Shawnee , moved westward at the invitation of the Miami tribe Miami tribe to settle in land ... , were removed from power following the war, that large confederacy of villages in the region began ... to work with the Americans. His goal was to create a pan tribal confederacy powerful enough to counter and resist the United States. His travels caused the largest growth yet in the confederacy as numerous ... to meet with leaders of the Five Civilized Tribes in the hope of uniting them with him in the confederacy ... of 500&ndash 700 warriors in the Battle of Tippecanoe . The defeat was a terrible blow for the confederacy which never fully recovered. Tecumseh returned and began to rebuild the confederacy. Allying ... a second campaign, destroying Prophetstown a second time. Overall, Tecumseh s Confederacy played ... of Tecumseh had a demoralizing effect on his Aboriginal allies and his Confederacy dissolved ... more details
2010 ref Early years The present confederacy, which dates to 1880, includes six eastern Yoruba people ... Life accessdate 6 October 2010 ref The communities that formed the confederacy had suffered during the 19th ... forces of Ijesha and Ekiti in 1879 they were forced to ask for help from Ibadan , and formed the confederacy ... more details
The Iowa Baseball Confederacy is a novel written by W. P. Kinsella and was published in 1986. References Kinsella, W. P. 1986 . The Iowa Baseball Confederacy . New York ISBN 0 395 38952 6 W. P. Kinsella Category 1986 novels Category Baseball novels Category Novels by W. P. Kinsella Category Novels set in Iowa DEFAULTSORT Iowa Baseball Confederacy 1980s novel stub ... more details