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Скачать с ютуб Cross Country Skiing in New Hampshire | Nordic Skiing Workout Scenery | GoPro Hero10 POV в хорошем качестве

Cross Country Skiing in New Hampshire | Nordic Skiing Workout Scenery | GoPro Hero10 POV 1 год назад


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Cross Country Skiing in New Hampshire | Nordic Skiing Workout Scenery | GoPro Hero10 POV

Jackson XC lies on the ancestral homelands of the Abenaki people, a group that has lived in present-day Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts and Quebec for 11,000 years. Until today, the Abenaki have never obtained federal recognition as a sovereign tribe, and currently the state of New Hampshire does not recognize any tribes. The Abenaki tribe is an Algonquin-speaking group whose ancestral homelands lie in present-day northern New England, southern Quebec, and the Canadian maritimes. Linguistically, the Abenaki people are split into two groups, the Eastern Abenaki in Maine, east of New Hampshire’s White Mountains, and the Western Abenaki from the Connecticut River Valley in Vermont, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts. Both French and English colonists settled in Abenaki lands. The Abenaki traditionally allied with the French. During Queen Anne’s War, the Abenaki fought alongside the French, raiding English settlements. For much of the Colonial period, the the French used the Abenaki and the rest of the Wabanaki Confederacy to which the Abenaki belonged, as a buffer to slow English expansion to the North and to the West. In Father Rate’s War, also known as Dummer’s War (1722-1725), the Abenaki raided the settlements of Brunswick and Arrowsick based on French Jesuit missionary Sébastien Rale’s encouragement. The war served as a border dispute between New France and the English colonists. In 1675, The Abenaki allied with the Wampanoag in what became known as King Philip’s War, a war between a Native alliance and English settler militias that was fought throughout New England. Attacks by colonists and disease decimated the Abenaki population which at the time of colonial contact reached 40,000. Today, 2,000 self-identifying Abenaki remain, and tribal organizations continue to articulate Abenaki sovereignty and cultural unity. Further reading: Heald, Bruce D. - A History of the New Hampshire Abenaki Morrison, Kenneth M. - The Embattled Northeast: The Elusive Ideal of Alliance in Abenaki-Euramerican Relations https://www.concordmonitor.com/State-... Cowasuck Band of the Pennacook Abenaki People - https://www.cowasuck.org/ “We Have Always Been Here” Series: Concord Monitor - https://www.concordmonitor.com/-We-ha... Rashad Goes Outside connects you to the outdoors and encourages you to find the beauty in all places. Relax, be fit, and explore as I travel through the world, telling you the stories of the people and places I visit.

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