Everything about Malecite totally explained
The
Maliseet (or
Wolastoqiyik) are a
Wabanaki Native American/
First Nations people who inhabit the
Saint John River valley and its tributaries, between
New Brunswick,
Quebec, and
Maine.
Name
The Maliseet are also known as
Wolastoqiyik,
Malecite, and in French also as
Malécites or
Étchemins (the latter collectively referring to the Maliseet and
Passamaquoddy.)
Wolastoqiyik is the proper name for the people and their language. They named themselves after the
Wolastoq river, now commonly known as the
St. John River, on which their territory and existence were centered.
Wolastoq means "bright river" or "shining river" ("wol-" = good, "-as-" shining, "-toq" = river; "-iyik" = people of, equivalent for example of "-ians" or "-ites").
Wolastoqiyik therefore simply means "People of the Bright River," in their own language.
Maliseet is the name by which the
Mi'kmaq described them to early Europeans. "Maliseet" was a Mi'kmaq word meaning "broken talkers" or "lazy speakers"; the Wolastoqiyik and Mi'kmaq languages are fairly closely related, but the name reflected what the Mi'kmaq perceived to be a sufficiently different dialect to be a "broken" version of their own language.
History
In the
Jay Treaty of
1794, the Maliseet were granted free travel between the
United States and
Canada because their territory spanned both sides of the border. During the 1800s, intermarriage between the Maliseet and Passamaquoddy and European settlers wasn't unusual, particularly among the growing community of Scottish Canadian frontiersmen. When the
Treaty of Ghent was signed, ending the
War of 1812, a significant portion of the Maliseet/Passamaquoddy territory was ceded from British Canada to the United States, in what is now northern Maine.
Culture
The Maliseet customs and
language are very similar to those of the neighboring
Passamaquoddy (or
Peskotomuhkati), and largely similar to those of the
Mi'kmaq and
Penobscot tribes, although the Maliseet are considered to have pursued a primarily
agrarian economy. They also shared some land with those peoples. The Maliseet and Passamaquoddy languages are similar enough that they're properly considered slightly different dialects of the same language, and are typically not differentiated for study.
Several French and English words made their way into Maliseet from the earliest European contact. One Maliseet word also made its way into English: "Mus", or
Moose, for the unfamiliar creature the English speakers found in the woods where the Maliseet lived and had no name for in their own language.
Before contact with the Europeans, the traditional culture of both the Maliseet and Passamaquoddy generally involved travelling downstream on their rivers in the spring, and back upstream in the autumn. When they'd finished travelling downstream in the spring, they congregated in larger groups near the ocean, and planted crops, largely of corn (maize), beans, squash. In the autumn, after the harvest, they travelled back upstream, taking provisions, and spreading out in smaller groups into the larger countryside to hunt game during the winter. Fishing was also a major source of resources throughout the year.
Current Situation
Today, within New Brunswick, approximately 3,000 Maliseets currently live within the
Madawaska,
Tobique,
Woodstock,
Kingsclear,
Saint Mary's and
Oromocto First Nations. There are also 600 in the Houlton Band in Maine and 200 in the
Viger First Nation in Quebec.
There are about 650 remaining native speakers of Maliseet and about 1,000 of Passamaquoddy, living on both sides of the border between New Brunswick and Maine; most are older, although some young people have begun studying and retaining the language, and the numbers of speakers is seen to have potentially stabilized. An active program of scholarship on the Maliseet-Passamaquoddy language takes place at the
Mi'kmaq - Maliseet Institute at the
University of New Brunswick, in collaboration with the native speakers, particularly
David Francis Sr., a Passamaquoddy elder living in
Sipayik,
Maine. The Institute actively aims at helping Native American students master their native languages. Linguist
Philip LeSourd has done extensive research on the language.
Ceremonies and Beliefs
Interesting Facts
Further Information
Get more info on 'Malecite'.
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