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  1. Weetamoo, intentando escapar de una batalla perdida, falleció ahogada en el río Taunton el 6 de agosto de 1676. Le temían tanto los soldados ingleses que mutilaron su cuerpo y su cabeza fue exhibida en un poste en Taunton, Massachussets como prueba que había sido derrotada. La visión de su cabeza llevó a los guerreros nativos a un ...

  2. By writing Weetamoo as a symbolic victim who died in her own homeland, by depicting her kin’s mourning as inhuman, “horrid and diabolical,” and by celebrating the violence her body, Hubbard and Mather engaged in the production of the “warlike savage” stereotype of Native peoples. [i] For Mather and Hubbard, writing at the war’s end ...

  3. Weetamoo's father, Corbitant, is sachem, or chief, of the Pocassets. He is mistrustful of the colonists and imparts his beliefs about them to his daughter, who is next in line to become chief. Weetamoo must learn the fundamental values and disciplines of a true Pocasset chief, but she must also be prepared for

  4. Weetamoo was a military and political leader in her own right. However, Rowlandson defines her social standing by her husband and brother in law, Metacom. The Squaw Sachem is depicted as a spoiled European gentlewoman, preening over her face paint and beads and ill-treating her servants (Rowlandson) rather than as an important woman in her own right.

  5. 29 de mar. de 2021 · Weetamoo (c. 1635-1676, también conocida como Namumpum, Tatapuanunum, Wattimore, Weetthao) fue una jefa de la tribu pocasset wampanoag, así como jefa de guerra en la Guerra del Rey Felipe (1675-1678), durante la cual se estableció como una gran guerrera y, además, fue una muy apreciada tejedora de abalorios y bailarina ritual.

  6. 27 de ago. de 2001 · Weetamoo meets an immigrant woman who kindly shares a sprig of lavender with the 'little savage' and Weetamoo returns the favor by showing her which plants will keep mosquitoes away. This and other exchanges reinforce Weetamoo's confusion - clearly, there is no right answer for how to deal with the immigrants as they are just as much a collection of individuals as the natives are.

  7. Weetamoo (l. c. 1635-1676, also known as Namumpum, Tatapuanunum, Wattimore, Weetthao) was a female chief of the Pocasset Wampanoag tribe as well as a War Chief in King Philip's War (1675-1678), during which she established herself as a great...