The 1646 Treaty of Peace with Necotowance in Virginia
fundamentally changed relationships between Native Americans and
the English settlers of Virginia. Virginians were unique in their
interaction with Native peoples in part because of their tributary
system, a practice that became codified with the 1646 Treaty of
Peace with the former Powhatan Confederacy. This book traces
English establishment of tributary status for its Native allies and
the phrasing and concept of foreign Indians for non-allied
Natives.
Kristalyn Marie Shefveland examines Anglo-Indian interactions
through the conception of Native tributaries to the Virginia
colony, with particular emphasis on the colonial and tributary and
foreign Native settlements of the Piedmont and southwestern Coastal
Plain between 1646 and 1722. Shefveland contends that this region
played a central role in the larger narrative of the colonial
plantation South and of the Indian experience in the Southeast. The
transformation of Virginia from fledgling colony on the outpost of
empire to a frontier model of English society was influenced
significantly by interactions between the colonizers and
Natives.
Many of the powerful families that emerged to dominate Virginia’s
history gained their start through Native trade and diplomacy in
this transformative period, particularly through the Byrd family,
whose members emerged as key figures in trade, slavery, diplomacy,
and conversion. By the second half of the seventeenth century, the
transformation of Virginia set forth political, economic, racial,
and class distinctions that typified the state for the next three
centuries.