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Algonquian

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Algonquian Village in VirginiaAlgonquian Village in Virginia

Algonquian, most populous and widely distributed of the Native North American linguistic stocks, originally comprising several hundred tribes who spoke nearly 50 related languages. The Algonquian people occupied most of the Canadian region south of Hudson Bay between the Rocky Mountains and the Atlantic Ocean and, excluding certain territory held by Siouan and Iroquoian peoples, that section of what is now the United States extending northwards from North Carolina and Tennessee. Algonquian peoples inhabited various isolated areas to the south and west, including parts of what are now South Carolina, Iowa, Wyoming, and Montana. The best-known Algonquian groups include the Algonquin, from which the stock takes its name, Amalecite, Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Conoy, Cree, Delaware, Fox, Gros Ventre, Kickapoo, Massachuset, Miami, Micmac, Mohegan, Montagnais, Musi, Narragansett, Naskapi, Nipmuc, Ojibwa, Ottawa, Pequot, Potawatomi, Sauk (or fox people), Shawnee, Tête de Boule, and Wampanoag. Some of the principal Algonquian confederacies were the Abenaki, Pennacook, and Illinois.

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