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Opechancanough, successor to paramount chief Powhatan, deserves to be remembered as one of the great indigenous leaders in American history, on the same rank as Massasoit, King Philip, Pontiac, Logan the Orator, Joseph Brant, Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and Geronimo. His biography, the important prerequisite to his war on the English in 1622, is nothing less than astonishing.
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Selected references for this episode
James Horn, A Brave and Cunning Prince: The Great Chief Opechancanough and the War for America
Carl Bridenbaugh, Early Americans
Anna Brickhouse, The Unsettlement of America: Translation, Interpretation, and the Story of Don Luis de Velasco, 1560-1945
Charlotte M. Gradie, “Spanish Jesuits in Virginia: The Mission That Failed”
William R. Gerard, “The Tapehanek Dialect of Virginia,” American Anthropologist, April – June 1904.