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The eclipse that marked the start of the Iroquois Confederacy

Drawing: 3 men in Native American garb, 2 standing and 1 seated wrapped in snakes.
Original Iroquois League was known as the Five Nations.

My wife Alice regularly brings home the Indian Time news journal, a publication from the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation Territory in northern New York. It was with great interest that I came across an article titled Dating the Iroquois Confederacy by Bruce E. Johansen.

What really attracted my attention was that a total, or near total, solar eclipse marked the beginning of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy, the oldest living democracy in North America and possibly on Earth. American democracy is said to have been modeled upon the democratic ideals of the Iroquois Confederacy, which originally consisted of five nations (Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca). The sixth nation – the Tuscarora – joined the Iroquois Confederacy in the early eighteenth century (1701-1800).

Total solar eclipse of the sun on July 2, 2019

Map of New York state region and Lake Ontario with tribal areas defined.
Map of the New York tribes before European arrival. Lavender indicates Iroquoian tribes. Orange indicates Algonquian tribes. Image via Wikipedia/Smithsonian Institution.
Bronze statue of crouching Native American man in loincloth clutching a stick.
Iroquois, one of the historical figures of the Maisonneuve Monument, by Louis-Philippe Hébert, 1895, Place d’Armes, Montreal. Photo via Wikimedia Commons.

Bruce E. Johansen refers to the research done by Barbara A. Mann and Jerry L. Fields, which uses eclipse data as well as oral history to challenge the common notion that the Iroquois Confederacy or Iroquois League started in the fifteenth (1401-1500) or sixteenth (1501-1600) century. They state:

We know this much: During a ratification council held at Ganondagan (near modern-day Victor, New York) the sky darkened in a total, or near total, eclipse. The time of day was afternoon, as Councils are held between noon and sunset. The time of year was either Second Hoeing (early July) or Green Corn (late August to early September). Thus, we must look for an eclipse path that would totally cover Ganondagan between July and September, in mid-afternoon.

Mann and Fields settled upon the total solar eclipse of August 22, 1142, as satisfying the stated criteria. Bruce E. Johansen even pinpoints where the ratification of the Iroquois League took place:

The ratification council convened at a site that is now a football field in Victor, New York. The site is called Gonandaga by the Seneca.

Structure about twice man-height, 1 door, smoke rising from holes in roof.
Traditional Iroquois Longhouse. Image via Wilber F. Gordy.

I looked up the August 1142 total solar eclipse at the NASA Eclipse Web Site. You can see this map for yourself by clicking here.

Map showing Victor, New York, and August 1142 eclipse path

Map of Finger Lakes region with diagonal blue line across it.
Map via NASA Eclipse Web Site.

For the fun of it, I zoomed into the August 1142 eclipse map until I found Victor, New York. Looking along the zoomed-in eclipse path above, you can see Victor a short way to the north of the northern limit of the total solar eclipse path (in blue). Nonetheless, it would have been very close to a total solar eclipse at greatest eclipse. Rounding off to the nearest minute, the partial eclipse started at 19:29 Universal Time (2:29 p.m. Eastern Standard Time), maximum eclipse arrived at 20:40 UT (3:40 p.m. EST) and the partial eclipse ended at 21:45 UT (4:45 p.m. EST).

diagrams of sun and moon's shadow & circles showing types of eclipse.
Contrasting a total solar eclipse (A) with an annular eclipse (B) Image via Wikimedia Commons.

Other proposed dates include June 28, 1451, and June 18, 1536. But the total solar eclipse of June 28, 1451, did not swing as close to Victor as did the one on August 22, 1142 . The path of the June 18, 1536, eclipse didn’t pass particularly close to Victor either, and moreover, it came at the wrong time of day, and was an annular eclipse, rather than a total eclipse of the sun.

See the diagram above to contrast a total solar eclipse with an annular eclipse. During a total solar eclipse, the new moon totally covers over the solar disk; during an annular eclipse, the new moon lies too far from Earth to completely cover over the sun, so a thin annulus – or ring – of sunshine circles the new moon silhouette.

Could it have been an annular solar eclipse that convinced the Seneca to join the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy at Gonandaga (Victor, New York)? If so, the formation of Haudenosaunee (Five Nations) might go all the way back to the annular eclipse of August 18, 909. The middle of the eclipse path (in red) on the below chart almost exactly crosses Victor, New York!

Map showing Victor, New York, and August 909 eclipse path

Map of Rochester New York region with diagonal red line.
Map via NASA Eclipse Web Site.

These web pages can help you search out eclipse history in more detail: Major Solar Eclipses Visible from New York, New York and Five Millennium Catalog of Solar Eclipses.

Eclipses are a great way to document history. But the real item of importance, as far as I’m concerned, is the acceptance of the Peacemaker and the democratic ideals of the Iroquois Confederacy.

Bottom line: Research suggests the total solar eclipse of August 22, 1142, coincided with the birth of the Iroquois (Five Nations) Confederacy, near modern-day Victor, New York.

Posted 
July 15, 2019
 in 
Human World

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