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The 'Onondaga' (''Onundagaono'' or ''the People of the Hills'') are one of the original five constituent tribes of the
Iroquois (''Hodenosaunee'') Confederacy. Their traditional homeland is in and around
Onondaga County, New York. Being centrally located, they were the keepers of the fire in the figurative
longhouse, with the
Cayuga and
Seneca to their west and the
Oneida and
Mohawk to their east. For this reason, the League of the Iroquois historically met at Onondaga, as indeed the traditional chiefs do today.
In the
American Revolutionary War, the Onondaga were at first officially neutral, although individual Onondaga warriors were involved in at least one raid on American settlements. The Onondaga later sided with the majority of the League and fought against the
United States in alliance with the British Crown, after an American attack on their main village on April 20, 1779. Many Onondaga therefore followed
Joseph Brant to
Six Nations,
Ontario after the United States was accorded independence. Those remaining in New York are under the government of traditional chiefs nominated by
clan mothers, rather than elected.
On November 11, 1794, the Onondaga Nation, along with the other Haudenosaunee nations, signed the
Treaty of Canandaigua with the United States.
On March 11, 2005, the Onondaga Nation of Nedrow, New York, filed a land rights action in federal court, seeking acknowledgement of title to over 3,000 square miles of ancestral lands centering in
Syracuse,
New York. In doing so they hope to obtain increased influence over environmental restoration efforts at
Onondaga Lake and other EPA
Superfund sites in the claimed area. This lawsuit is facing a motion to dismiss based on the precedent established in the
Cayuga nation's land claim
[1] and other defenses.
Notable Onondaga
Modern-day
★
Oren Lyons
Onondaga bands today
★
Onondaga Nation in
Nedrow, New York outside
Syracuse
★
Onondaga Clear Sky and
Bearfoot Onondaga, both at
Six Nations of the Grand River
Other spellings encountered
★ ''Onoda'gega''
★ ''Onontakeka''
★ ''Onondagaono''
See also
★
Onondaga language
References
★ Calloway, Colin G. (2004). ''First Peoples'' (2nd Ed.). Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-39889-1.
★
Onondaga Reservation, New York United States Census Bureau
External links
★
Onondaga Nation web page