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Group: Wyandot, or Wendat, or Huron people (Amerind tribe)
People: Abdullah al-Mahdi Billah
Topic: Affair of the Poisons
Location: Strasbourg Alsace France

Wyandot, or Wendat, or Huron people (Amerind tribe)

Years: 1396 - 2057

The Wyandot people or Wendat, also called Huron, are indigenous peoples of North America.

They traditionally speak the Wyandot language, an Iroquoian language.

By the fifteenth century, the pre-contact Wyandots settle in the area of the north shore of present-day Lake Ontario, before migrating to Georgian Bay.

Later in that location they first encounter the French explorer Samuel de Champlain in 1615.The modern Wyandot emerge in the late seventeenth century from the remnants of two earlier groups, the Wendat or Huron Confederacy and the Tionontate, called the Petun (tobacco people) by the French because of their cultivation of the crop.

They sre located in the southern part of what is now the Canadian province of Ontario around Georgian Bay.

Drastically reduced in number by epidemic diseases after 1634, they sre dispersed by war in 1649 from the Iroquois, the Haudenosaunee, then based in New York.Today the Wyandot have a First Nations reserve in Quebec, Canada.

They also have three major settlements in the United States, two of which have independently governed, federally recognized tribes.

Due to differing development of the groups, they speak distinct forms of Wendat and Wyandot languages.